Presentation 19
Presentation 19
Basic Information
• The Schools seven buildings house nine classrooms and a library on a sloping site.
• Unique settings for education have been created to occur within a mix of interior rooms, exterior
teaching areas - some of which are covered by sloping roofs
• Terraced play spaces for children.
Site and Site Access
• The Umubano School is located in an area called Kabeza close to the main road to the airport.
• The precise location is the former village of Nyarurembo, which has become an integrated
neighborhood of the city of Kigali.
• The school is built on a hillside.
• The slope is pretty steep (more than 45° in some places so the architects had to find a solution to
cope with the difficult topography.
• Access is very difficult because of the steep slope of the hill of Kabeza . The school can be
accessed by cars, "moto-taxis" and foot.
Surroundings
• The neighborhood is composed of individual houses located on single pieces of land of different
sizes, most of them over 300 square meters.
• These houses have an individual design but all of them relate to architectural references close to
cottages and housing that can be found in the Western world.
• A small bridge has been built that allows direct connection between this area and the school
• There is no sewerage system in the neighborhood.
Building Description
• The school is composed of seven buildings with nine classrooms, an administrative block and a
library that is designed to accommodate a computer center, for a total area of 900 square
meters.
• The computer center will be functional only when the school can buy or is offered computers. For
the moment that place is used as a storage room.
• The massing is designed over five platforms that solve the steep slope issues. Each platform is
dedicated to a specific group of children or to a specific activity
• This made it possible to retain the slope and thus continue to merge into the general image of
the neighborhood.
• Sewerage is not provided in the area. The latrine blocks have "individual" sewerage systems.
Design Features (Response to physical constraints)
• The outdoor space for need to adapt the school to the topography of the site led to the definition
of platforms, each of them designed to accommodate two or three classrooms, with a specific
platform for the administration and the library.
• These platforms are linked by a walkway that communicates smoothly with the different "levels"
of the project.
• In addition, these platforms constitute both separate "courtyards" and play areas (to reduce the
risk occurring from mixing children of different ages in the same area) and extra tuition.
Design Features(Response to users requirement)
• The landscaping is an essential part of this project. Outdoor space is used by the children during
breaks and every now and then by the professors during their classes.
• The organization of the space as "stages" allows the outdoor space to be used a bit like an
amphitheater. materials and the greens of the space help create a continuity of the outside space
with a central "flow" of nature that makes the landscaping a very important part of the project.
• The vegetation on the slopes helps stabilize the hillside and prevents serious mudslides after
rainfalls.
• Organizing the area into platforms also cleverly diminishes the quantity and speed of water
directly flowing down the slope
Construction And Materials
• A breast wall is set at the top of the site for general stabilization. As for all foundation walls, this
structure is drained. Retaining structures and foundations are made of stone and cement.
• The vertical structure is a combination of concrete poles and beams (against the slope, which
form part of the retaining structure), steel structures (for the outdoor overhangs of roofs) and
structural walls.
• The roof structure is made of single steel tubes, and the roof itself is made of corrugated metal
sheets.
• The infill walls also play a structural role. They are made of stabilized-earth
bricks. • Doors are made of metal frames with thatching infills.
• Reed ceilings are installed in every room.
• Most of the walls are not plastered and are similar to the majority of
unplastered walls in Rwanda.
Lighting And Ventilation
• Lights used to penetrate through the brick hollows and also make interesting effect at afternoon.
Also penetrate through the ceiling and window
• Though the ventilation was tough due to the hill against north-east wall of the building and slope
of the site. So direct cross ventilation can not be provided
Climatic Performance
• Though it was difficult to ensure cross ventilation because of the slope and the fact that the walls
"against" the slope were used as retaining structures, the difference of height between the top of
the two pitches that constitute the roof allow upper ventilation.
• That gap is protected by a corrugated plastic clerestory, which adds to the quality of the light
inside.
• Thatched doors increase the ventilation of the classrooms, as do the "holes" in the walls created
by the areas of brick patterning.
• Kigali suffers heavy rainfalls.
• Therefore the site design was planned to limit erosion of the hill since the different platforms will
slow the flow of rainwater.
• The walkways were another response to this problem as they create a less sloppy way down the
hill
Conclusion
• The school is mainly built as a low cost school so that they can reduce the
illiteracy.
• Creative uses of exterior teaches space and interior space is visible in the design.
• Local materials and natural ventilation is also there to balance the design.