The
Heron Pond Elementary School was designed to bring some of the advantages
of team teaching found in middle schools to the elementary level.
The 700 student school is broken down into six suites of classrooms,
each containing five regular classrooms, a corridor "common
area", a staff workroom and a resource room. This allows each
group of 115 students and their teachers to have an identity.
The
core spaces, including the gym, office, cafeteria, and media center,
are able to be isolated from the classroom areas for community night
use. To keep all classrooms close to the common spaces, a courtyard
and circular corridor layout were used. The courtyard also allows
light into the heart of the building, resulting in a bright, airy
school.
The
building massing is broken down into several smaller units, each
with its own pitched roof. This gives the relatively large structure
a scale more inviting and comforting to a 3rd grader. The overall
impression of the school is that of a village of houses, not an
impersonal institutional structure. This theme is carried through
to the two story classroom wings with dormers and double hung windows.
The
building committee requested a school with sloping roofs wherever
possible. We took advantage of this opportunity to open up the ceilings
to the high roof planes, creating groups of 2nd floor classrooms
that are connected visually at their upper level, with concrete
block below to focus student attention inside the classroom. Ridge
skylights at the center of these classroom clusters allow natural
daylight to stream into all the classrooms from above. Colorful
acoustic panels, ductwork, hollow metal frames, and swooping kites
installed by our office complete what are some of the most interesting
teaching spaces we've designed. |