ArchShowcase Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal loves modern architecture. He comes from a family of builders who have built more than 20 projects in the last ten years near Delhi in India. He has recently started writing about the architectural projects that catch his imagination. Jåttå Vocational School In Stavanger, Norway by Henning LarsenJanuary 21st, 2011 by Sumit Singhal
Article source: Henning Larsen Architects Jåttå Vocational School is designed as a small ‘town within the city’ featuring a vibrant double-high central street surrounded by individual ‘urban quarters’, each with their own teaching environments and lecture rooms.
The heart of the school – the central street with the main hall, canteen and resource centre – forms an active and vibrant gathering point with view of all the building’s green patios and roof landscapes as well as view of the school’s workshops and working areas. The course of ramps and stairs leads further away from the entrance up through the house and through the auditorium until it reaches the roof landscape with a view of the landscape and fjord. With its minimalist, almost floating architecture, Jåttå Vocational School forms the entrance to Stavanger’s new urban quarter by the fjord. The concentrated design enhances the way the building interacts with its surroundings and thus underlines its proximity and transparency. The double high windows allow daylight into the building, stimulating the learning process. With a capacity of 1600 students the school offers among others several subjects within service and technique. The 2,700 m2 sports centre is located in connection with the school and is designed by Henning Larsen Architects in 2006. The school opened in 2007. The School as a Learning EnvironmentAs one of Norway’s most modern school buildings, Jåttå Vocational School is an example of how architecture can influence an active and instructive learning environment. The school is based on, and innovates, the perception of fruitful learning methods and constitutes an active and modern working space with zones for immersion and zones for social interaction. The open and varied spatial sequences provide the opportunity for differentiated learning adapting to different situations and different styles of learning. In this way the school functions like a modern place of work with large open teaching environments and workshops for special subjects. Due to its strong pedagogical qualities the projects was nominated as one of the world’s six best university buildings by World of Architecture News 2009. Floor plan 1 & 2: ProcessJåttå Vocational School is planned and built with regard to meeting the latest pedagogical principles of individualised learning. The school was designed in close and intensive collaboration with the client, Rogaland Municipality, the school principal, user groups, engineer and architect. It was crucial in the process to involve the future users of the school, and throughout the entire planning process the cross disciplinary working team maintained the pedagogical ambition integrating it in the building’s architecture – from spatial organisation to the tactile, physical appearance.
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