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Steiner Academy Project Team Visit Norway |
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Written by Administrator
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Friday, 24 March 2006 |
The design for the Hereford Steiner Academy must reflect the uniqueness
of its location, its curriculum and the communities it serves in the
21st century. This was the clear outcome of the flying visit to Norway to see the Stavanger Steiner School and meet its
architect, Espen Tharaldsen and members of the school’s staff.
Twelve members of the project team including the project manager,
architects, environmental engineer, landscape architect, and
representatives from the Steiner Schools Fellowship and HWS arrived in
snowy Stavanger to a very warm welcome from Espen and his colleague
Svera. Four members of the teaching staff generously gave up two days
of their half term break to show us round the school, share their
experience of using the buildings. They also fed us and made us feel
very welcome and at home.
The Stavanger school was designed 20 years ago but has yet to be completed. Although the State contibutes 85% of the running cost of the school it provides no capital funding so the school has to raise funds for new buildings. Like so many Steiner schools it lacks a
Hall and has its fair share of temporary buildings (although these were
palaces compared to our portakabins!)
The school is a bold architectural statement. Espen explained that his
aim was to avoid the iconic gestures which have characterised Steiner
schools, particularly in Europe. He had set out to design a building
specific to its time and place which met the pedagogical and wider
needs of the school community. He talked in depth about the evolution
of ‘anthroposophical architecture’ and how this influenced his design.
He emphasised the importance of expressing the ‘universal’ as well as
responding to local forces.
The Stavanger school includes design motifs which, in a very literal
way, are a celebration of local history, including battlefields and
Viking ships. They also convey a strong and defiant sense of the
building setting its jaw against the harsh external environment. (This
includes the architectural quality of neighbouring buildings as much as
the weather!) But the building opens its arms to the unspoilt natural
landscape. The use of a repeating structural module has economic
advantages but leads to a rather rigid building form. However, the
individual modules are differentiated by varying window forms, internal
colour schemes and other subtle details.
The second day of the trip was spent discussing the Hereford project
and the architects introduced some tentative ‘first thoughts’ about the
siting of the new buildings. The visitors came
home with much to think about but with the conviction that the project
is heading in the right direction and that we have the capacity to come
up with the goods. Watch this space!
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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 01 May 2007 )
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