South Harbour School is The Municipality of Copenhagen’s new public school with a maritime and science profile. The School invites its neighborhood in and reaches out to the city. It’s more than a school: Its an active and socially sustainable part of its community. Located in Copenhagen, Denmark where the population is currently growing at a fast pace of over 1,000 new citizens a month, the city needed to look at increasing its school facilities. The result is South Harbour School.
Schools as places for learning and social development
South Harbour School is designed pursuing a vision of schools as spaces for learning and social development. Hence surprises and new experiences are central concepts for the school. On each floor, plan layout changes and the heights of the floors vary throughout. The concept of social space addresses everything from an overall school community to group assemblies to one-on-one meetings between classmates. This results in tailor-made meeting places that accommodate specific needs and abilities of the students.
Spaces adjusted to pupils needs
It is a partly age-divided school with the junior classes at the bottom, while the upper floors, that house the older pupils, are prepared for age-division as well as age-integration. This way the internal and external spaces take into account what pupils at different stages of their lives are capable of handling and what makes them feel at home and safe. In order to provide a safe environment for the younger children the smaller classes have their own home area with small clysters that are separated from the other pupils. Their home area is located at the heart of the school in connection with indoor and outdoor facilities and underpine the more restricted movement radius. The older pupils share a large, age integrated home area spread over two floors where the pupils become part of a larger community across age differences – these areas can easily be adjusted to become age differentiated.
The water as an extra classroom
Three large staircases support the different functions: The large staircase towards the water connects the school and the city, the staircase in the atrium gathers the whole school, while the smaller staircase functions a as meeting place for the 4th – 9th graders. The large staircase makes the water an extra classroom: In gymnastics pupils sail out in canoes and catch a fish that they study in science class and afterwards might prepare in cooking class. The space underneath the large staircase is a craft classroom, where the close connection to the waterfront makes it possible to take boats in and repair them as part woodwork or crafts education classes.
Providing an alternative to physical inactivity
The landscape at South Harbour School is designed out of respect for the pupils: Studies show that pupils learn more if they are physically active during the day. Easy access to outdoor areas and spaces for physical activities is a therefore a fundamental part of the project. When we design schools, we feel it is our duty to provide the best possible physical frames for learning and social development – but also help pupils with healthy habits from an early age. The landscape at South harbour School supplies them with an alternative/or addition to their physically inactive lives – an alternative where the use of the body and a tactile engagement becomes a natural part of their daily lives. All roofs are activated, they enhance movement, play and sports. This way the landscape nudges pupils to be active and orchestrate meetings with their fellow students during the day.
Sustainability
In sustainable terms the South Harbour School follows the parameters in the DGNB-approach. The use of the school building after school hours extends the sustainable approach that is furthermore underpinned by the incorporation of solar panels and the chosen isolation materials. A major part of the sustainable approach is the social aspect of the project. The outdoor areas are more than traditional school yards – they are part of a green ledge that is stretched throughout most of Sydhavnen. Rather than isolating the school it is opened up and the green ledge is extended so that the schoolyard functions as a public park.
Price winning project
Besides providing the pupils and employees with active outdoor areas the school has also lifted the urban qualities of the former industrial area that is currently undergoing a transformation. South Harbour school has won two WAN Education Award 2016, two Danish national architecture prices, has been part of the Danish contribution to the Architecture Biennale in Venice and is a Mies van der Rohe Award 2017 nominee.