This modular treehouse is a sustainable school designed for the new normal!

Remember that sweet childhood memory of spending summer afternoons in the treehouse playing pretend games with your friends? Something I believe everyone has been a part of is the classroom game where you set up a mini chalkboard and have a little class with your friends but we obviously loved that more than real school because it was in a treehouse! Well, designer Valentino Gareri took those nostalgic childhood moments and turned it into a Tree-House School and while this is obviously an architectural upgrade, the best part is that it is sustainable and modular! It is highly adaptable, reduces the load on urban areas, and features outdoor spaces which we value so much more after quarantine – the Tree-House is a blueprint on how one can use this breathing hub to rebuild communities outside the city.

At the conceptual school design’s core is the bond between children and nature – we are inherently more connected to our surroundings when we are younger, maybe because there was more outside playtime or just plain curiosity about the world and the Tree-House School brings that relationship back to life. The modular educational building also highlights the different details that need to be incorporated in the post-pandemic era where we need more spaces that blend the indoors and outdoors. The design has been created for remote areas which are now becoming popular as people move away from cities. It will include all the phases of education right from kindergarten to secondary schooling. Every phase fits into two massive interconnected rings. The unique shape of the structure also allows for two courtyards and a functional roof for plenty of activities. The classrooms can host up to 25 students at a time and are located in the two rings which keeps them connected to the outdoor landscape.

“The schools of the future will have to be designed under a new point of view: rather than just considering criteria of sustainability, they will have to embrace the ability-to-sustain the new condition where the pandemic put the entire society in. The connection to nature is physically and visually increased thanks to the faceted façade, made by the alternation of solid timber panels and glazing panels. The circular perimeter allows to block the direct sunlight with the opaque panels, and get diffuse light and free view through the transparent ones.” says Gareri. Being modular, it allows for future school extension to incorporate more programs and classrooms. It can also be adapted to serve different purposes like a disaster relief shelter, medical center, or residential units – just like you could turn your treehouse into anything you wanted, a spaceship or a mansion, with your imagination.

Designer: Valentino Gareri

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This infinity track topped school is a vertical forest that reduces air pollution!

It is 2020 and we have to get with the green program. Indian architecture studio Nudes, known for its unconventional innovative creations, has designed a school with an exterior wrapped in a forest-y cover and an infinity-shaped cycling track for its crown. Forest School was an idea that was born as an entry for a design competition and it is now a possibility to change Indian architecture to suit the environment.

Nudes was founded by Nuru Karim in 2007 with a mission to focus on sustainability and learning. The Forest School was designed for Pune which is a popular student city that has seen dramatic urban growth in the last decade. Due to this boom, the air pollution in Pune was four times higher than the safe standard set by the World Health Organisation. Nudes wanted to create a structure that served a purpose complemented by design – a healthy school environment, with opportunities for hands-on learning about the environment and climate change.

“The ‘green living skin’ serves to purify the air from pollutants and related challenges affecting the health of the inhabitants of a city,” says Karim. The plants are crucial in creating a healthy environment for breathing as they remove pollutants from the air through phytoremediation and the increased oxygen levels are beneficial too. Certain plants even absorb toxic chemicals via their leaves or roots which helps to maintain the health of the space and environment. Plants also help in keeping the building cool and also naturally reduces the city sounds.

The plan for the school is to build a conjoined pair of 32 meter high cylindrical towers with a lush green exterior cover and the infinity loop track on the top. There are six floors that will include a double-height auditorium at ground level with five floors of classrooms above it. To maintain the plants there is a service track accessible on each floor for professional horticulturists to access the plants anytime without disturbing classes. “A cycling track for a city starved for pedestrian walkways and cycling lanes,” says the team about the addition of the uniquely shaped track on top that also bridges the two towers. Additionally, a swimming pool and tennis courts will be built at the basement level. Green architecture, may you go to infinity and beyond!

Designer: Nudes

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