Learning Hub at Nanyang Technology University by Thomas Heatherwick
UK
designer Thomas Heatherwick has released images of a technology
education building under construction at Nanyang Technology University
in Singapore. - See more at:
http://www.iam-architect.com/learning-hub-at-nanyang-technology-university-by-thomas-heatherwick/#sthash.vbefJrKp.dpuf
UK
designer Thomas Heatherwick has released images of a technology
education building under construction at Nanyang Technology University
in Singapore.
Resembling
a cluster of elongated bee hives, the Learning Hub at Nanyang
Technology University explores new ways of teaching at a time when
computers and the internet are challenging the rationale of learning
institutions.
In response, the university
wanted to dissolve the traditional relationship between the tutor and
the student, to encourage a new kind of collaborative studying. “They no
longer want the model of a master at the front of the class,” said
Heatherwick in his lecture. “[That] is something that they want to move
away from completely.”
The building consists of
several 8-storey towers containing stacks of tutorial rooms, but avoids
using traditional circulation and room layouts. The rooms are
corner-less, to dissolve the standard classroom hierarchy where the
tutor is at the front and the students all face towards him or her.
Instead of corridors, each
level features open galleries where students can circulate and meet. And
instead of a conventional entrance, the building is porous at ground
level, meaning people can approach and enter from any direction.
“So the building has no one
door, it’s all porous,” said Heatherwick. “You can just walk into one
big shared space that links the whole thing together.”
Nanyang Technology University
was masterplanned by Japanese architect Kenzo Tange in the 1980s and
features buildings set in lush gardens. Heatherwick’s design reflects
this by placing plants and trees on the roof and on some of the
circulation levels.
Images are courtesy of Heatherwick Studio. Here’s more information from the studio:
Heatherwick studio has won a
competition to design a Learning Hub for a university in Singapore. The
hub will be part of a £360 million scheme which Nanyang Technological
University is undertaking, and is the first redevelopment of its campus’
in twenty years.
It was clear to us that since
the advent of the internet and low cost computers that there has been a
distinct shift in how students approach educational facilities.
University buildings have ceased to be the only site where students are
able to source educational texts, and have become unappealing spaces
with endless corridors, no natural daylight and only hints of other
people’s presence.
The studio’s approach was to
redefine the aspiration of a university building, and to once again make
it an essential part of the tertiary education experience. Within this
new context the purpose of a university is to foster togetherness and
sociability, so that students can meet their fellow entrepreneurs,
scientists or colleagues in a space that encourages collaboration.
The hub’s form is dictated by
its function, and brings together 55 tutorial rooms into a structure
without conventional corridors, which have traditionally created social
separation and isolation. The learning hub has no one door, it is
porous. Students can enter from 360 degrees around into a large central
space which links all the separate towers together. Each tower is made
up of a stack of classrooms which build up gradually, with gardens on
selected floors.
Another inspiration for the
hub was a wish to break down the traditional square forward-facing
classrooms with a clear front and hierarchy, and move to a corner-less
space, where teachers and students mix on a more equal basis.
In this model, students work
together around shared tables, with teacher as facilitator and partner
in the voyage of learning, rather than ‘master’ executing a top-down
model of pedagogy.
Each of these tutorial rooms
faces the large shared central space, allowing students to continually
feel connected to all the other activities going on in the building.
In 2013 the learning hub was
awarded the BCA Green Mark Platinum Award for sustainability by the
Singaporean government. The award is a benchmarking scheme which
incorporates internationally recognised best practices in environmental
design and performance.
- See more at:
http://www.iam-architect.com/learning-hub-at-nanyang-technology-university-by-thomas-heatherwick/#sthash.vbefJrKp.dpuf
In response, the university
wanted to dissolve the traditional relationship between the tutor and
the student, to encourage a new kind of collaborative studying. “They no
longer want the model of a master at the front of the class,” said
Heatherwick in his lecture. “[That] is something that they want to move
away from completely.”
The building consists of
several 8-storey towers containing stacks of tutorial rooms, but avoids
using traditional circulation and room layouts. The rooms are
corner-less, to dissolve the standard classroom hierarchy where the
tutor is at the front and the students all face towards him or her.
Instead of corridors, each
level features open galleries where students can circulate and meet. And
instead of a conventional entrance, the building is porous at ground
level, meaning people can approach and enter from any direction.
“So the building has no one
door, it’s all porous,” said Heatherwick. “You can just walk into one
big shared space that links the whole thing together.”
Nanyang Technology University
was masterplanned by Japanese architect Kenzo Tange in the 1980s and
features buildings set in lush gardens. Heatherwick’s design reflects
this by placing plants and trees on the roof and on some of the
circulation levels.
Images are courtesy of Heatherwick Studio. Here’s more information from the studio:
Heatherwick studio has won a
competition to design a Learning Hub for a university in Singapore. The
hub will be part of a £360 million scheme which Nanyang Technological
University is undertaking, and is the first redevelopment of its campus’
in twenty years.
It was clear to us that since
the advent of the internet and low cost computers that there has been a
distinct shift in how students approach educational facilities.
University buildings have ceased to be the only site where students are
able to source educational texts, and have become unappealing spaces
with endless corridors, no natural daylight and only hints of other
people’s presence.
The studio’s approach was to
redefine the aspiration of a university building, and to once again make
it an essential part of the tertiary education experience. Within this
new context the purpose of a university is to foster togetherness and
sociability, so that students can meet their fellow entrepreneurs,
scientists or colleagues in a space that encourages collaboration.
The hub’s form is dictated by
its function, and brings together 55 tutorial rooms into a structure
without conventional corridors, which have traditionally created social
separation and isolation. The learning hub has no one door, it is
porous. Students can enter from 360 degrees around into a large central
space which links all the separate towers together. Each tower is made
up of a stack of classrooms which build up gradually, with gardens on
selected floors.
Another inspiration for the
hub was a wish to break down the traditional square forward-facing
classrooms with a clear front and hierarchy, and move to a corner-less
space, where teachers and students mix on a more equal basis.
In this model, students work
together around shared tables, with teacher as facilitator and partner
in the voyage of learning, rather than ‘master’ executing a top-down
model of pedagogy.
Each of these tutorial rooms
faces the large shared central space, allowing students to continually
feel connected to all the other activities going on in the building.
In 2013 the learning hub was
awarded the BCA Green Mark Platinum Award for sustainability by the
Singaporean government. The award is a benchmarking scheme which
incorporates internationally recognised best practices in environmental
design and performance.
- See more at:
http://www.iam-architect.com/learning-hub-at-nanyang-technology-university-by-thomas-heatherwick/#sthash.vbefJrKp.dpufRERERE
designer Thomas Heatherwick has released images of a technology
education building under construction at Nanyang Technology University
in Singapore. - See more at:
http://www.iam-architect.com/learning-hub-at-nanyang-technology-university-by-thomas-heatherwick/#sthash.vbefJrKp.dpuf
UK
designer Thomas Heatherwick has released images of a technology
education building under construction at Nanyang Technology University
in Singapore. - See more at:
http://www.iam-architect.com/learning-hub-at-nanyang-technology-university-by-thomas-heatherwick/#sthash.vbefJrKp.dpuf
UK
designer Thomas Heatherwick has released images of a technology
education building under construction at Nanyang Technology University
in Singapore. - See more at:
http://www.iam-architect.com/learning-hub-at-nanyang-technology-university-by-thomas-heatherwick/#sthash.vbefJrKp.dpuf
UK
designer Thomas Heatherwick has released images of a technology
education building under construction at Nanyang Technology University
in Singapore. - See more at:
http://www.iam-architect.com/learning-hub-at-nanyang-technology-university-by-thomas-heatherwick/#sthash.vbefJrKp.dpuf
Comments
Post a Comment