O'Neill Building Nudgee College


Autoria(s): Dawson, Peter; Wright, Natalie; Twarowski, Monica
Data(s)

2008

Resumo

This project involved the complete refurbishment and extension of a 1980’s two-storey domestic brick building, previously used as a Boarding House (Class 3), into Middle School facilities (Class 9b) on a heritage listed site at Nudgee College secondary school, Brisbane. The building now accommodates 12 technologically advanced classrooms, computer lab and learning support rooms, tuckshop, art room, mini library/reading/stage area, dedicated work areas for science and large projects with access to water on both floors, staff facilities and an undercover play area suitable for assemblies and presentations. The project was based on a Reggio Emilia approach, in which the organisation of the physical environment is referred to as the child’s third teacher, creating opportunities for complex, varied, sustained and changing relationships between people and ideas. Classrooms open to a communal centre piazza and are integrated with the rest of the school and the school with the surrounding community. In order to achieve this linkage of the building with the overall masterplan of the site, a key strategy of the internal planning was to orientate teaching areas around a well defined active circulation space that breaks out of the building form to legibly define the new access points to the building and connect up to the pathway network of the campus. The width of the building allowed for classrooms and a generous corridor that has become ‘breakout’ teaching areas for art, IT, and small group activities. Large sliding glass walls allow teachers to maintain supervision of students across all areas and allow maximum light penetration through small domestic window openings into the deep and low-height spaces. The building was also designed with an effort to uphold cultural characteristics from the Edmund Rice Education Charter (2004). Coherent planning is accompanied by a quality fit-out, creating a vibrant and memorable environment in which to deliver the upper primary curriculum. Consistent with the Reggio Emilia approach, materials, expressive of the school’s colours, are used in a contemporary, adventurous manner to create panels of colour useful for massing and defining the ‘breakout’ teaching areas and paths of travel, and storage elements are detailed and arranged to draw attention to their aesthetic features. Modifications were difficult due to the random placement of load bearing walls, minimum ceiling heights, the general standard of finishes and new fire and energy requirements, however the reuse of this building was assessed to be up to 30% cheaper than an equivalent new building, The fit out integrates information technology and services at a level not usually found in primary school facilities. This has been achieved within the existing building fabric through thoughtful detailing and co-ordination with allied disciplines.

Formato

application/pdf

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/47751/

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/47751/3/47751a.pdf

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/47751/4/47751b.pdf

http://www.architecture.com.au/i-cms?page=1.18.3145.12440.12808.12843

Dawson, Peter, Wright, Natalie, & Twarowski, Monica (2008) O'Neill Building Nudgee College. [Design/Architectural Work]

Direitos

Copyright 2008 The Authors

Fonte

Faculty of Built Environment and Engineering; School of Design

Palavras-Chave #120101 Architectural Design #120106 Interior Design #Interior Design #Built Work #Architecture #Learning Environment #Primary School
Tipo

Creative Work