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Click
on images at left for larger color views.
What's in a name? Though officially called the Modern Educational
and Training Institute (METI)
in Rudrapur, Bangladesh, this project is known as Handmade
School, a name that means a lot. With the school's goal "to
gain and disseminate knowledge and information for optimizing
the use of locally available resources," the building
becomes not only an expression but a means of achieving this
goal. Through the process of building
the school, local craftsmen are able to train other local
workers, eventually leading to improved standards of construction,
particularly in housing.
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The Handmade School is the design
of Berlin-based architects Roswag
& Jankowski Architekten Partnerschaft and Anna F.
Heringer. In plan the building
is a simple rectangular bar building. The ground floor is
built of mud walls made of
local earth mixed with rice, straw, and jute. These classrooms
are accessed directly from the outside via openings
highlighted by brightly-colored panels that contrast with
the dried-earth walls. The character of the ground floor is
cave-like, stemming from its construction and recalling OMA's
single-family house
in Bordeaux. |
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The upper floor is comprised
of two classroom spaces divided by the vertical circulation,
allowing for cross-ventilation in the classrooms. Where the
lower floor is earth and cave-like, the floor above is made
of bamboo and relatively open.
The mud construction of the lower floor extends past the top
floor to create a sill for operable bamboo screens. Bamboo
also structures the top floor and clads the exterior walls;
only the corrugated metal roofing strays from this simple
though effective material palette. |
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The character of the school is
created by the materials used (mud and bamboo), its construction,
and its response to local climate. This last consideration
gives the school's external appearance is most over expression,
as the roof extends to provide shade and keep water away from
the building exterior. This extension is supported by a bamboo
armature that gives the exterior a rhythm and depth it might
otherwise miss. Combined with the colored panels and playful
apertures below, the design takes the vernacular and makes
it into something unique. It makes it into something memorable,
a building that can sit beside some of the best contemporary
architecture.
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Handmade School in Rudrapur, Bangladesh by Roswag & Jankowski
and Anna F. Heringer |
2007.05.14 |
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Click
on images below for larger views.
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