Although the solution seems obvious now, the idea of the commons took time to emerge. To help give shape to the teachers’ vision, our design team took a cue from active learning’s open-ended, hands-on approach. We spent a week embedded in the classroom observing teachers and students at work and asking questions along the way. Through this process we defined the central problem: How can an environment promote active learning with an age group that still needs a lot of coaching and supervision?
The breakthrough came during an exercise using blocks and bubbles representing typical uses, such as classrooms, storage, and support space. As the teachers moved around the blocks, testing relationships between uses, it became clear what was needed was a hybrid environment of generous, flexible, in-between space and more formal classrooms that allowed the classes to work as a connected community.
Connecting inside and out
The commons are nested between four bars containing classrooms and other uses—slightly offset and splayed to capture campus views and add a sense of dynamism within the building. Class cohorts are organized in affinity groups around the commons to strengthen camaraderie: students and teachers always have a view to what others are doing. The spaces are light-filled and finished in pragmatic materials like concrete floors that invite experimentation, creativity, and messiness. The three-story building is nestled into the sloping landscape with entries and exterior stairs positioned to strengthen connections with the campus. Designed for optimal natural ventilation and daylight, the than its predecessor and enhances water and wetland conservation.