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3 Sep 2008
PLANNING SECURED FOR ALSOP'S MICHAEL FARADAY COMMUNITY SCHOOL MARKS IMPORTANT
MILESTONE FOR AYLESBURY ESTATE REGENERATION
Planning permission has just been granted by Southwark Council for the
SMC Alsop designed Michael Faraday Community School - the first primary
school to be transformed under the Southwark Schools for the Future programme.
Replacing the existing cramped and inflexible 1970s buildings located
at the centre of the Aylesbury estate, the new Michael Faraday School
is a flagship project for the regeneration of the estate, the largest
social housing complex in Europe.

Councillor Lisa Rajan, Southwark Council's executive member for children's
services and education, said: "Southwark Council is committed to
placing education for all at the heart of the Aylesbury regeneration project.
Michael Faraday provides an outstanding education for local children and
young people, and this redevelopment will make it an even better school
for our young children and learning environment for the whole community.
Working closely with the architects, school and community representatives,
we are committed to creating a cutting edge building that will be seen
nationally as an exemplary model for community engagement, offering best
practice at all levels."
Following an extensive consultation process with the head teacher, staff
and pupils at the existing school and the Aylesbury New Deal for Communities
who are partly funding the project, SMC Alsop has created an innovative
school design that takes the form of a distinctive circular building.
Will Alsop said of the project: "It is a true delight to be working
in Southwark again, and particularly on a school. Schools prepare our
young people for life and we have found a very lively group of staff and
pupils who have contributed to the evolution of the design. The design
process is part of the curriculum, which brings the school closer to the
world of work. The school will be an amalgam of spaces that will be both
flexible and yet particular enough to give a sense of identity. The external
appearance of the building is recognised as being important for all the
pre-school children living in the area and will represent a place of intrigue,
curiosity and delight which represents a place that they will spend a
lot of time in the future. I applaud the Borough of Southwark in its continuing
commitment to new and quality design."

The new school will provide nursery, primary school, adult education and
community facilities in 3021 sqm (gross internal floor area) over two
floors. It features open-plan learning spaces, flexible and adaptable
classrooms that are capable of supporting a range of teaching and learning
styles, and covered external spaces for outdoor learning.
In the circular main building teaching space is arranged as a ring of
cellular accommodation around the 'Living Room' - a large open-plan flexible
learning environment. A continuous external balcony provides external
teaching spaces to the upper classrooms and also provides cover to the
outdoor learning spaces at ground level.
To achieve maximum adaptability the design works with the building's structural
and façade grid to create classrooms that can be subdivided and
partitions that can be taken down and relocated. Adjacent to the 'Living
Room', an enclosed area, 'The Rock', designed for performance and presentation
has been created to allow noisy activity to take place without disrupting
activity in the Living Room. Administration and adult learning are clustered
around the main entrance.
The main building is linked by a canopy to a smaller stand-alone pavilion,
'The Ballroom', which contains the school's dining and main hall facilities
and is available for community use.
The main building will create a strong visual impact by virtue of its
coloured facade and balcony cladding of black and white vertical fins.
In contrast to the colourful main building, the Ballroom pavilion is clad
in silver metal panels. Inspired by period ballrooms, a finer decorative
metal relief breaks up the mass to create an attractive and distinctive
façade.
The school grounds will be extensively landscaped providing hard and soft
play areas together with growing gardens, natural habitat and a 'Dry River
Bed'. A new Multi-Use Games Area (MUGA) will be shared with the local
community and bore holes beneath the pitch will form the Ground Source
Heat Pump that contributes to the building achieving a predicted 20% carbon
reduction and BREEAM 'very good' rating.
Project Director, Jonathan Leah said "It is a privilege to be working
on a project where we know that our contribution and that of the rest
of the project team will make a major difference to the lives of so many
of the children and families living on the Aylesbury Estate. It has been
a challenge and a rewarding experience to date and would not have been
possible without the dedication of the head teacher and her team who have
quite rightly demanded the best all the way through the design process
including the initial RIBA competition."
SMC Alsop was appointed to design the new Michael Faraday Community School
following an open design competition in 2007. The project continues SMC
Alsop's long-standing and highly successful relationship with Southwark.
The practice has previously contributed to the borough's evolving, dynamic
landscape through the completion of the Stirling prize winning Peckham
library in 1999, developments in Peckham square and the Palestra building
opposite the new Southwark tube station.
The project is due to start on site in 2009 and is due for completion
in 2010.
Michael Faraday Community School Southwark images / text from Stratton
& Reekie 030908
PROJECT TEAM:
Client: London Borough of Southwark
Architects: SMC Alsop
Structural and Services Engineers: Buro Happold
Landscape Architects: The Landscape Partnership
CDM Coordinator: Turner & Townsend Management Solutions
Acoustic Consultant: Cole Jarman Associates Ltd
Flood Risk Assessment: Scott Wilson
SMC Alsop
Tate Modern
One Blackfriars Road
Southwark Building
World Architecture : e-architect
- a guide to key buildings across the globe
Southwark Public Baths
Will Alsop
Southwark Architecture
- South Bank
London Buildings
Buildings / photos for the Michael Faraday Community School Southwark
London page welcome: info@e-architect.co.uk
Michael Faraday Community School
Building - page: adrian welch / isabelle lomholt
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