17 January 2013

Case studies

SPSU | Freedom By Design | Devereux Outdoor Classroom 





The design intent for the project is to design an exterior space for the Deveroux Georgia Treatment Facility which can house a variety of activities including: A performance space, classroom space, and a social space uniquely integrated into a cohesive whole.

 Location:
 1291 Stanley Road Kennesaw,
 Georgia 30152
 United States


Outdoor Classroom Project Wins ACSA Award





Designing and building this outdoor classroom at Washington Elementary School in Fayetteville exposed students to the act of construction as a fundamental component of critical design practice. (Photo courtesy of Michael Hughes.)

The Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture recently recognized Michael Hughes, an associate professor, with its 2009-10 Collaborative Practice Award. This honor for school-based community outreach programs recognizes Hughes’ Tectonic Landscapes project, an outdoor classroom for Washington Elementary School in Fayetteville (pictured above). With a stage, pavilion, story area and benches, the roughly 2,000-square-foot space is intended to expand learning opportunities and promote physical activity. A gateway opens onto Maple Street, inviting after-hours use by the neighborhood. Hughes and a group of 32 undergraduate students completed the design-build project over 11 months in 2007-08. The project was presented at the 98th annual ACSA meeting March 4-7 in New Orleans, where Hughes also accepted the award.

From: source



Big Net, Yuyu-no-mori Nursery School, Environment Design Institute, 2007





"This big net play feature is provided in the centre of the building and connects the second and third floors. Children enjoy sliding, climbing, jumping and lying down on the net with slope and that helps children’s development such as physicality and sociability. The net has become the school’s symbol."



Chop-Stick, VisionDivision, Indianapolis, USA, 2012




Playscapes correspondent applicant Sarah Carrier sent this project to me amongst the things she is interested in corresponding about, and I just couldn't wait to share it! 

Stockholm-based VisionDivision was commissioned to build a concessions stand by the Indianapolis Museum of Art  for the 100 Acres: The Virginia B. Fairbanks Art & Nature Parka project that was realized in a beautiful and playful way--and almost entirely from a single tree.   They called it Chop Stick.   

Basing their design on "the universal notion that you need to sacrifice something in order to make something new. Every product is a compound of different pieces of nature..." they selected a 100-foot yellow poplar tree, the state tree of Indiana.  "Our goal was to make the best out of this specific poplar tree, from taking it down and through the whole process of transforming it into a useful building that is now part of one of the finest art parks in the United States. As the project proceeded, we continued to be surprised by all of the marvelous features that where revealed in refining a tree into a building; both in the level of craftsmanship and knowledge of woodworkers and arborists, and also of the tree itself." 


 


The first step was simply to suspend the tree as a great horizontal beam for the new structure.  Bark was removed and fashioned into shingles, and also into lanterns for illuminating the structure at night.  Pieces of wood were carefully extracted from the suspended tree and used for each of the design components:  the stand itself, the structural supports, pillars and studs, the swings, the chairs and the tables.  Pressed leaves and flowers were used to ornament the front glass of the kiosk, and yellow poplar syrup was even made from the bark, "thus meaning that you could actually eat a part of the building."





This project should remind us that making innovative play spaces requires a commitment far greater than a one-day installation of pre-fabricated components.  Listen to what VisionDivision says about the process, which sounds itself like a piece of performance art:

"The delicate balance act of the risk of weakening the hovering tree with taking cuts from it versus having to have a certain amount of wood to stabilize and construct the kiosk and carrying the load from the tree itself was very challenging.  Many days was spent with the structural engineer trying different types of cuts in a computer model to optimize the structure. To be able to fit all pieces that needed to be taken from the tree into the actual cuts we needed to make drawings for every single piece taken from the tree. We also needed to optimize the kiosk both in size and in its constructions since it would take a lot of weight from the hovering trunk. The kiosk got a truss frame construction with two larger pieces of wood that are right under the tree. Using the schematics from our engineers force diagram program, we concluded that the wall closer to the end of the tree was taking more load, thus we sized up the two larger pieces of wood in that specific wall. All these alterations really just made the project more beautiful since the design became more refined in terms of more balanced proportions." 



Some might say that such attention is a waste of time and money, but if this was going up in my community I'd stop by every day to see the hovering tree and the careful extraction of its wood.  Imagine the community commitment to the space that could be developed through the performativity of the build.  Similarly, realizing  the Woods of Net by Toshiko Horiuchi MacAdam (the most popular ever post here at Playscapesand now receiving well-deserved and overdue worldwide acclaim)  required a devotion to the invisible structural engineering that make her pieces possible...architectural (Tezuka Architects) and engineering (TIS and Partners) collaborators are an integral part of that design's success, which was three years in the making.   



Dymaxion Sleeps, or a Natural Playground on two levels






If you ever thought you didn't have space for both a garden AND a climbing net think again...

Most natural playscapes seek to combine elements of the garden with elements of the traditional playground, but I don't think I've seen one that did so on two levels quite like the 'Dymaxion Sleep' installations by Jane Hutton and Adrian Blackwell for the International Garden Festival atJardins de Métis/Reford Gardens.  Inspired by both the geometries and the wacky sleep regimen of Buckminster Fuller, they installed triangular circus nets in frames over plantings of aromatic, relaxing plants like lemon geraniums, lavenders, peppermints and catmints.

The garden was so popular that it remained for the 2010 and 2011 festivals, and for 2012 they added a portion of the structure that rolls up to provide a shaded nook. 





I really love this playscape--such a simple combination of elements, and yet it's far more visually appealing (and frankly looks way more fun) than many 'traditional' playgrounds.  It accommodates both group or individual play, across a range of ages, and the more vertical triangles add a nice element of risk to be approached as you wish (see the boy in the final photo) or not!  It would be great adapted with say, ticklish grasses interspersed with crawling paths underneath the nets.






image via sparklingadventures

image via sparklingadventures


More Playful Knitting: Giant Knitting Nancy, Superblue Design, London, 2010








http://sesoutdoorclassroom.blogspot.sg/
http://www.imahnahome.com/home-full-color/residential-full-color-and-fun-for-our-baby.html
http://www.imahnahome.com/design-schools/interior-design-concepts-preschool-with-full-color-by-pizzaro-rueda.html
http://www.imahnahome.com/design-schools/2011-school-of-public-minimalist-modern-building-design-with-green-wall-sturdy.html 

Case Studies

  

 Mueller Park Universal Playspace by Ecoscape (Australia) Pty Ltd
2012 AILA National Landscape Architecture Award: Design

 Client: City of Subiaco
Partners: Water Features By Design


Mueller Park represents a promising progression in the development of all-abilities playgrounds. Rather than the primitive response of including one or two pieces of segregated and disability-specific equipment, modern playgrounds allow children of all abilities to play together.

This project goes a step further with the use of high-quality play equipment, carefully designed to suit the site and respect its context. Natural and reclaimed materials feature in a well resolved combination of off-the-shelf and custom-designed elements. The result is an intriguing and engaging playground which reflects an Australian commitment to social inclusion.

From: source

Eco Architecture: Denmark’s greenest childcare center will protect natural resources

Eco Factor: Sustainable architecture designed to be powered by renewable energy.
Children in Hørsholm, north of Copenhagen, will soon have the greenest childcare center in Denmark. The center, which is due to be completed by November 2010, will be energy-efficient and generate more energy that what it actually consumes using renewable sources of energy.

hrsholm childcare center 2

Commissioned by Hørsholm Council in cooperation with VKR Holding and designed by Christensen & Co. Architects, the center will be home to state-of-the-art energy saving and generating technologies that promise to protect natural resources. 

hrsholm childcare center 3


The 4300-square-meter facility will feature low rise cedar-clad houses around its perimeters and an angular roof that rises and falls like a series of waves. This unique construction will allow generous amounts of natural light and ventilation to enter the perimeter to reduce the building’s overall energy demands. 

hrsholm childcare center 4

The concrete to be used for the floors and walls of the structure will optimize the performance of the building by serving as heat mass to store solar heat during the day to heat the interiors after dark. Moreover, the building will also include generous amounts of insulation to ensure that the complex consumes less energy than the maximum set by the 2015 Danish building regulations.

hrsholm childcare center 5

The facades of the roof are equipped with 50-square-meters of solar collectors that provide heating and hot water and 250-square-meters of photovoltaic panels that produce about 8KWh per square meter, which is much more than the energy requirements of the building. The childcare center will sell excess renewable energy to the grid during eight months of the year and buy renewable energy during the four dark months.

hrsholm childcare center 6






Custody Children with Unique Design by Stein Halvorsen

A child care that allows it you can learn to design the right thing, I’ve visited the Gumnut day care but I’ve never witnessed anything like Solrosen daycare center. Your day care center is absolutely amazing. It amazes us using the spaces use and how they’ve created separate zone with specific content. Diversity in the daycare center interior design can be seen and you should have seen how happy the kid faces were throughout the day. The architect who designs this attractive daycare center design was Stein Halvorsen Civil Architect MAL from Norway. The idea of your day care center architectural design was from the marigold flower and it’s amazing because the center could be accessed from a multitude of locations. We simply love the clean and spacious feeling given only at that modern day care center design.

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Footage of grandparents and grandchildren

Watch this footage to see how grandparents and grandchildren enjoy playing together.