Pop-up Schools
- Pop Up
Following the latest announcement from the UK government on its plans to allow primary schools in England to reopen to some year groups from June, we have developed a new design concept to address the challenges which many schools in the UK and beyond will face when they reopen in maintaining the necessary social distancing among pupils and staff.
Our idea sees a series of pop-up, tent-like structures, each of which is arranged to follow the two-metre social distancing rule between pupils, with the adaptability to host different classroom setups. We propose reusing resources such as marquees and portable bathroom facilities from outdoor festivals that would otherwise be dormant during the current pandemic. Where appropriate, renewable energy sources can also be provided on site in the form of PV arrays and solar evacuated tubes for hot water heating. Clockwise movements within and outside the structures will be encouraged, in a similar approach to Buddhist stupas to avoid crossing over between individuals. This temporary provision will help liberate existing internal school space taking the pupil load off restricted circulation areas, but also enhance air-flow contributing to individuals’ wellbeing.
Simple and adaptable, the concept can be applied to different outdoor settings; from football pitches to pedestrianised areas and neighbouring parks. It also suggests opening up and using public spaces in unconventional ways that might not be thought of previously; for example, maximising the use of closed residential streets and encouraging safe community integration as lockdown eases.
Wayne Head, Director, CLTH, said:
In contemplating with our children on how schools might return to normal after the lockdown, my partner Marianne Christiansen inspired me to consider outdoor learning, something that schools in Denmark have already adopted for their classes using tent-like structures.
Our education design team then carried out a series of studies and came up with the idea of transferring a proportion of teaching provision into temporary structures, using large-scale tents typically seen at festivals.
This is by no means our answer to what classrooms should look like in the future. We wanted to use this as a catalyst for further discussions, to rethink how schools can be designed and used beyond COVID-19.
We have produced a mailer on Pop-up schools for leaders in education across the country, explaining how our concept supports a safe return to school. This has already led to several schools commissioning prototypes that provide a rapid expansion in classroom provision to enable socially distanced learning over the coming months.
The flyer can be viewed digitally here.
For related enquiries please contact: [email protected]