Christ’s College

Prue Chiles

Description

At Christ’s College, a 700-pupil newly built secondary school completed in 2009, three large atrium-type spaces have been incorporated within the school building; two with dedicated uses (a sports hall and a theatre) and a third space, a multi-purpose atrium situated at the heart of the building. Every morning the school’s 700 pupils arrive in this space, pause and view the day’s announcements on television screens before dispersing to one of the surrounding classrooms via the circulation spaces that wrap the atrium. In the meantime staff might be wheeling out two trampolines from a nearby store into the atrium for a PE lesson that can be overlooked by accidental spectators passing along one of the corridors above. By lunchtime the space will have seen yet another transformation; each day the kitchen servery at one end of the atrium opens up and the atrium is furnished with a series of long white mobile canteen tables. And the activity does not stop at the end of the school day; during out of school hours the atrium along with the rest of the school is available for hire for conferences, local sports practices and public events.

It is easy to see that the atrium is the most vibrant space in Christ’s College, but what makes it so? Firstly, the spatial planning is very well-considered. On a practical level, storage and circulation are key to making a space like this work; if it is too difficult to set up a new activity in the space staff will not use it. Acoustics and lighting are also critical especially in a location internalised within the plan. The walls and ceiling of the atrium are lined in narrow timber cladding which serves to absorb sound, but also sets this space apart from other parts of the school which are largely finished in fair-faced blockwork and concrete. Sculptural skylights draw daylight down into the space, but also into the circulation zones that surround it whilst elongated pendant lights accentuate the height and drama of the space. The importance of this space within the school is further strengthened by its relationship to the school chapel, a double-height space sitting above one end of the atrium, an ever-present reminder of the school’s Christian roots right at the centre of the school.

Drawings

This browser does not support PDFs.Ground floor

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Photos

Interior view of multipurpose atrium, which provides a grand entrance
space while accommodating multiple functions throughout the school
day, such as sporting activities


Originally published in: Prue Chiles (ed.), Leo Care, Howard Evans, Anna Holder, Claire Kemp, Building Schools: Key Issues for Contemporary Design, Birkhäuser, 2015.

Building Type Educational Buildings

Morphological Type Solitary Building, Solitary/Big Box

Urban Context Campus, Suburbia

Architect DSDHA

Year 2009

Location Guildford

Country United Kingdom

Geometric Organization Linear

Building Area 7,350 m²

Average Size of Classroom 16.9 m²

Pupils 678

Height Low-Rise (up to 3 levels)

Load-Bearing Structure Column-and-Slab, Solid Construction, Wide-Span Structures

Access Type Atrium/Hall, Comb/Grid Systems

Layout Atrium Plan, Street Plan: Matrix

Parking Open parking lot

New Building, Refurbishment or Extension New Building

Abstract The section through the school shows the relationship between the central atrium and surrounding spaces

Program Secondary Schools

Map Link to Map