Although
the school district wished to house its 1,250 middle school students
in one building, it was concerned that such a large school would
necessitate an impersonal learning environment. While providing
such big-school amenities as a 600 seat auditorium, double-court
gym, and five athletic fields, every aspect of the design seeks
to minimize the apparent size of the student body.
The
50 classrooms are broken down into five-room teams housing 125 students
each. There is an entry for every four teams, eliminating the mass
entry/exit through a main lobby common in large schools. Classroom
teams consist of a science room with peninsula counters for supervision,
english and social studies rooms divided by a folding wall to allow
full-team meetings in one space, a math room, a language/reading
room, and a team room for teacher meetings and small group use.
Lockers for team members are located in the team areas, each with
it's own color scheme to promote team unity and identity.
The
wooded site selected for the new building offered the opportunity
to incorporate many 24"-40" beech and oak trees into the
school grounds. Through much adjusting of the site plan, we were
able to save more than 60 trees, including a 40" beech in the
central courtyard, which has since become the symbol of the school.
In
a school this large, circulation becomes a major design issue, leading
us to a courtyard layout which minimizes bottlenecks and allows
common use classrooms located around the interior perimeter of the
court to be easily accessible from all teams.
The
cafeteria is divided into two dining rooms seating 160 students
each, with a common kitchen and serving space. The result is a calmer,
more personal dining experience. |