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learning to let go: chonggu experimental school
INNS images

LEARNING TO LET GO: Chonggu Experimental School

Archi-Relevant as Media

The following content is provided by BAU Brearley Architects+Urbanists (Melbourne-Shanghai) and authorized to share.

photo_credit INNS images
INNS images

not factories

Public schools in Shanghai are conservative in their pedagogy and factory-like in their architecture. The new Chonggu Experimental School however provides the potential for a shift in pedagogy from the traditional disciplinary model to less formal, enquiry-based approaches. It also presents a paradigm shift in formal expression – a design shaped for joy, play and dreaming.

photo_credit INNS images
INNS images

daydreaming

Inspired by the site’s canal and by the lyrical drawings of late architect, Zhang Zai Yuan, the formal language of the school is dream-like, another world, a world of innovation, creativity, and difference. The familiar school typology of slab with external corridor is increasingly distorted toward the school interior courtyard. Observed at first by a crank in the slab, then by a bent window, then by parabolic bay windows, and soon by lines of balconies vibrating with movement. As if reality has been shaken — like a rope held at one end, with waves of different sizes hurtling along its length, suddenly stopped in a frozen moment. 

photo_credit INNS images
INNS images

not spoon-fed but student-driven

Academics remain split on the effectiveness of formal vs informal pedagogic models. China remains at one extreme, the teacher as the font of all knowledge, and students rote learning correct answers. Schools such as those applying Reggio Emilia philosophy are at the other, where students, and teachers, have significant degrees of autonomy over their curriculum. Traditional classrooms are well known to us. They are usually boxy and have an array of desks facing the front. Informal teaching spaces on the other hand are larger rhizomatic, flowing field conditions where teams of teachers oversee students working independently or in small groups. The student-teacher ratio is high in China, with large classes of 40-50 students the norm. With this ratio it is difficult to manage any but the traditional pedagogic model and its requisite multitude of classrooms. Team-teaching, enquiry driven approaches require a greater number of teachers; and corresponding higher wage bill.

photo_credit INNS images
INNS images

At the current declining birth rate, China anticipates a dramatic drop in the number of school students. This will free space, and teachers, in existing schools and create opportunities for experimentation with pedagogies. New school architecture needs flexibility to adapt to the space requirements and enable these progressive initiatives. 

photo_credit INNS images
INNS images

if not less, then at least more engaging

Chinese students are extremely highly educated; this is due to the arduous hours of study as much as to the style of teaching. Competition for good university places begins in kindergarten. The issue of children heavily burdened with study is acknowledged by authorities but has proven impossible to alleviate. A more student-centered pedagogic model could be one solution to creating a more varied, fulfilling, and enjoyable curriculum, without reducing the required learning intensity. It might also prepare students to be nimbler for an AI future. 

photo_credit INNS images
INNS images

future proofing

Chonggu Experimental School can be transformed from a traditional teaching model to one that suits student centered learning in a number of ways. Firstly, the walls between each pair, or group of three, classrooms can be replaced by operable walls, enabled by the column structure. This enables team teaching. Secondly the classroom corridors, running the length of the slab building, can become enclosed with glazing to create a generous internal street suitable for programs such as exhibitions. Thirdly the rooms at the knuckles in the slab building are designed to be used as student study and project space. Finally, the large meandering corridor network within the two-story extra-curricular buildings are wide and designed with bulges to accommodate all manner of study and nooks and pods. Peer to peer learning, digital-based learning, project-based learning, student enquiry, and STEAM learning can be supported in these informal spaces.

photo_credit INNS images
INNS images

look out

The site is adjacent one of Qinpu’s hundreds of canals. Gymnasium, library, auditorium, music school, art school, and various special functions are placed here with windows, verandas and terraces overlooking the canal. At a future date the existing public canal fence should be removed and a landscape developed to integrate the school with the canal. The taller classroom building’s balconies overlook the green roofs of the specialized buildings and the canal. 

photo_credit INNS images
INNS images

bleachers and pitches

The sports hall and canteen are located adjacent to the sports grounds. Grandstand seating connects the rooftop and second floor level with the sports fields and provides a place for students to hang out. The canteen is located to enable further view sharing from the adjacent taller teaching wing. Along with its terrace the canteen hall has broad views over the sports fields, activities, and beyond. 

photo_credit INNS images
INNS images

pre-fab

Despite the curved edges of the floor slabs, the buildings adopt a standard structural grid to facilitate the assembly of prefabricated components. The external walls, columns, floor slabs and staircases are rationalized to enable a minimum 40% prefabrication rate for both the overall construction and for each individual building. Prefabrication reduces cost, time, wastage, and urban disruption.  It also enables a higher quality of construction and finish.

photo_credit INNS images
INNS images

summer smart

To counter Qingpu’s notoriously hot summers, and to lower carbon consumption and improve comfort levels, passive solar control is employed.  Eaves and fins prevent the majority of summer sun from entering the buildings.  The majority of the site and rooftops are vegetated. This supports sustainable urban drainage systems, sponge city objectives, bio-diversity and the lowering of the urban heat island phenomenon. 

photo_credit INNS images
INNS images

potential filled

The increasingly popular team-teaching pedagogies profess to finding the potential of all students, particularly those who are unmotivated in the traditional system. Chonggu Experimental School likewise provides the opportunity for all manner of educators to fulfill their own potential and engage in other ways of teaching. The architecture supports a traditional pedagogy but importantly it will equally encourage and support alternative methods should an enlightened and adventurous head teacher arrive at the school. 

photo_credit INNS images
INNS images

Project data

Project Status: Completed 2023

Location: Shanghai, Qingpu Distric

Construction Area: 21,425㎡

Construction Cost: ¥145.365 million

Typology: public school

Program: primary school Year 1-6, twenty classrooms; middle school Year 7-9, sixteen classrooms; canteen, gym, lecture hall, theater, library; science classrooms, music rooms, dance rooms, art rooms, sports grounds.

photo_credit INNS images
INNS images

BAU Project Team:

Architecture: James Brearley,Huaili Luo,Wang Liao,Francisco Garcia,He Huang,Zheng Li,Shuangdiao Wang,Xiaohang Qin,Wenxuan Yao

Landscape: Fang Huang,Liexia Guo,Yuqing He,Li Luo,Zhengting Shi

Interior:Mingdong Wang,Jiaming Zheng

photo_credit INNS images
INNS images

Client: Shanghai Qingpu District Education Comprehensive Affairs Centre

Project Management: Shanghai Qingpu Newcity Development (Group) Co.,Ltd.

Engineer & architecture documentation: Shanghai Hanlian Architectural Design Consulting Co. Ltd.

Contractor: China Railway No.4 Engineering Group Co.,Ltd.

Photographer: INNSimages

photo_credit BAU
BAU
photo_credit BAU
BAU
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