Francisco de Arruda School
The clear and direct words of João dos Santos served as a greater stimulus to the project: "If you do not have a village, my son, you have to go in search of it! A boy cannot live without his village."
The original school, built in the 1950’s, was organized around a central patio, spread across three platforms pragmatically modelled on the hillside of Tapada da Ajuda, one of the oldest gardens of Lisbon, overlooking the worker’s district of Alcântara.
The buildings that constituted the original school were taken by us as if they had been built over time, making a little city. Our project quietly continues this process.
As part of the "School Modernization Program" of the Parque Escolar, three new elements were added:
1) a long two-storey building completes the outline of the original patio. It is discovered after a short path through the garden, as the new school entrance.
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Designed as a public gallery, meeting and study space, along the courtyard - as a sheltered stoa - this building contains the new library on the ground floor and the new laboratories on the top floor, facing, eastward, the gardens of the school, the neighbouring fields and the city;
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2) the shower spaces are built under the old Pátio das Caravelas between the existing gym and the new covered sports field that is situated in one of the high platforms of the site;
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3) the original main atrium, never used as one, is now the atrium of a small multipurpose room, designed as a garden pavilion, which the population of the school calls "magic cube".
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For the outdoor areas, of unusually generous dimensions, the project underlines the continuity of the vegetation of the fields through new plantations, in order to emphasize the sense of the site as a public garden.
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The staircase that we designed, opening an existing cul-de-sac to connect the central patio to the old Patio das Caravelas situated on the top platform, as well as the direct connection created between the new library and the sports fields across the covered playground, are both transformations that help to emphasize the sense of the whole as a public garden and profoundly shape the daily living in the school.
The original buildings are restored as well as adapted to new needs, through minimum interventions, particularly in the external form and the finishes of the interior spaces.
José Neves, arquitecto