Kindergarten, daycare centre, tourist office, and village connection
A green bridge
At the southern entrance to the South Tyrolean municipality of Barbian/Barbiano, Roland Baldi Architects have created a remarkable, multifunctional new building. The ensemble, comprising a kindergarten, daycare centre, children’s restaurant, tourist office, and public infrastructure, embodies the desire to rethink rural space in terms of both design and function.
The project is part of Italy’s Recovery and Resilience Plan (PNRR) and was financed by the European Union as part of NextGenerationEU. The new building combines education, mobility, social interaction, and local development in a clearly defined architectural structure. The embodiment of a green landmark that meets the demands of the present and opens up new perspectives for rural areas.
Two buildings, one idea
The complex consists of two separate buildings located on opposite sides of the street: the kindergarten, nursery, cafeteria, and a protected play area are located on the hillside; opposite is the tourist office with public restrooms. Directly adjacent to this is a staircase and elevator tower that provides barrier-free access for visitors and villagers from the underground parking garage directly to the village centre. The entire building volume rests on an existing two-story underground parking garage. The steep slope necessitated a horizontal layering of functions – from technical rooms at the base of the complex to the educational areas and the roof, which serves as a safe outdoor play area for the children. A bridge spanning the street connects the two buildings and forms a functional and design-defining element.
Open spaces for new teaching methods
The architecture supports a teaching concept that focuses on movement, openness and self-directed learning. The classic class room typology has been replaced by permeable, thematically designed functional areas: creative and research zones, quiet rooms and role-play areas structure the building into learning and experience-oriented zones. The corridors repeatedly widen into small meeting islands that are used as lounge and play areas as well as retreat niches – a variety of spaces that enrich everyday teaching. On the first basement level, which is completely open to the valley side and has natural lighting, there are two group rooms and the children’s restaurant with kitchen, which also serves the neighbouring primary school. The ground floor houses another nursery group and the independently organised daycare centre with a group and quiet room, kitchenette, cloakroom, sanitary facilities and an indoor terrace. On the top floor, there is a multifunctional exercise room with direct access to the sheltered playground – exclusively for the children of the facility.
Tourist office, infrastructure and barrier-free connection
Across the street from the nursery, sits a new tourist office, a separate structure that houses not only the information office but also barrier-free toilet facilities for visitors. Directly in front: a newly designed bus station. Two speed bumps slow down traffic and ensure safety for all arrivals and the traffic and pedestrian zones are clearly structured.
Adjacent to the tourist office is the staircase and lift tower, which provides barrier-free access from the underground car park directly into the village centre. A bridge spans the road and leads to the kindergarten, first to the exercise room on the first floor, then to the ground floor.
Landscape as a design generator
A steep slope: a central design motif. Owing to its unique topography, the building is layered horizontally – from the technical rooms at the base of the structure to the educational levels and the play area on the roof. A robust exposed concrete foundation anchors the building to the slope, above which the structure has been developed in a light wood construction. The vertically structured, green-glazed timber façade makes the ensemble recognisable from afar – and gives it a distinctive appearance at the entrance to the village.
Sustainability and architecture
The building was constructed to the Climate House Gold standard. Heating is provided by a heat pump, supported by controlled ventilation with heat recovery. The interiors are characterised by light-coloured materials, consistent daylighting and use of wood: oiled floors, solid wood furniture and acoustically effective wooden ceilings create a calm, child-friendly atmosphere. Architecture and education are seamlessly intertwined.






































