Project Details
- Project Name
- Prestwood Infant School Dining Hall
- Location
- Great Missenden, England
- Client/Owner
- Prestwood Infant School
- Project Types
- Education
- Project Scope
- New Construction
- Year Completed
- 2015
- Shared by
- Selin Ashaboglu
- Project Status
- Built
- Cost
- $223,625
Project Description
FROM THE ARCHITECTS:
Much-loved
children’s author Roald Dahl was the inspiration for a new dining hall and
after school facility in Buckinghamshire’s Prestwood Infant School. The author
– who lived locally – had already apparently based the headteacher Miss
Trunchbull in his popular book Matilda on a former real-life headteacher at the
school.
Architects De
Rosee Sa and PMR turned to the pages of Dahl’s books again for the new dining
hall – and this time drew from the story of Fantastic Mr Fox. The cunning
character inspired them by declaring he intended to make “A little underground
village, with streets and houses on each side – separate houses for badgers and
moles and rabbits and weasels and foxes.” He then added: “And every day I will
go shopping for you all. And every day we will eat like kings”.
The £158,000
colourful new building is called Little Hall and will also be rented out as a
facility for the local community, bringing in much-needed revenue for the
school. It has playful features such as a small one-to-one teaching space and
two WC’s painted to depict a fox’s den, a bush with berries and lastly Mr Fox’s
tail. A large plywood bookcase runs the full length of the front of the
building with window seats for reading.
Each class of
pupils in the building is named after an animal and matched with a window or
doorway, to signify their part in the ‘underground village.’
The dining
hall contains a kitchenette and a servery for the provision of hot school meals
for up to 96 children, as well as refreshment facilities for the after-school
club. The project itself was as a result of the government’s Hot Dinners
initiative.
Little Hall
has six skylights allowing plenty of natural daylight as well as sustainable
internal plywood and concrete flooring. Contractor for the project was RIR
Construction Limited.
Nicola Raher,
head teacher said: "We are absolutely delighted with our new Little Hall,
there was much excitement amongst the children on the first day of term when
they learnt they were going to have their lunch in the new building. The
atmosphere was amazing, and having children in the building made it really come
alive. The Little Hall is exactly as I wanted, a fun building that was
unique and had the WOW factor. De Rosee Sa and PMR were determined to complete
the project within budget without compromising the quality of materials used. I
am delighted that the excitement continues daily, the children love the
building and have found every possible space and area to play in. Children
will always learn more effectively if they are inspired and happy, the
Little Hall truly does this for our children at Prestwood Infant School."
Max de Rosee,
Director of De Rosee Sa said he enjoyed the reaction of the pupils when they
went to explore their new facility. “It has been incredibly rewarding for us as
architects to see the delight on the pupil’s faces,” he said. “Design has great
potential to inspire and it is our job as architects to push that agenda. We
wanted to give the children something really special. Now they can refer to
Roald Dahl when describing their school.
De Rosee
chose simple materials to allow him to deliver a building, which was “clean and
crisp” while also being “playful and visually-stimulating.”
He added: “We
tried as much as possible to use off-the-shelf materials. Where wet trades
could not be avoided, we wanted to use them as the finishes. There were a few
technical issues that had to resolved including how to use the concrete
structural slab as the actual floor finish and how to achieve the colour
graduation on the timber battens with only five base colours.”
The timber
frame construction on the Little Hall is clad on two facades with a white
corrugated polycarbonate from Rockwell and cement board cladding from James
Hardie on the remaining two facades.
The colourful
rain-screen cladding comprises western red cedar battens, which were stained
before being positioned into place. The profile of the rain-screen matches the
roof pitches of the existing school’s buildings to link the new structure to
the old buildings. Internal plywood is sealed with a protective matt coat of
varnish to give the material a durable finish.
The
structural slab was power-floated and polished to create a seamless,
hardwearing floor finish on a small budget, thereby avoiding the need for a
separate floor finish. The insulation runs under the structural slab, allowing
the top edge to be used as the floor finish.
To keep costs
down, a basic exposed plywood interior has been used, while externally, a
colour stained timber rainscreen which playfully references the existing
roofline of the school’s main hall.
The contract
used was a JCT Minor Works Building Contract 2011 with Contractors Design
Portion.