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The
following text and images are courtesy John
Wardle Architects, excerpted from their monograph Volume,
this week's book review. Click on images for larger color
views.
A prominent Melbourne secondary school for boys occupies
the site surrounded by important landscapes. The school
itself is sparsely built around lush sporting fields, where
the character of students is forged in competition. Several
historic trees along its main orientation preface the original
bluestone Quadrangle building. Across Domain Road, the Domain
Gardens surround The Royal Botanic Gardens. History is highlighted
by the silhouette of the Shrine of Remembrance visible from
the site along its ceremonial civic axis. The brief for the
building is to create a new campus entry, consolidate the
school’s library facilities and provide supporting lecture
theater and seminar room spaces to forge a new campus heart
focused on learning.
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The design is for a series of
inter-linked pavilions so
that the scale and rhythm of the school’s frontage to
Domain Road is continued. Each link is glazed encouraging
visibility through to the campus interior. The main
entry frames a view of the Quadrangle building weaving
the old and new together visually. Each pavilion has its own
individual expression to the public on Domain Road. The seminar
rooms cantilever toward the street and reflective glass louvers
allow cinematic views to the gardens from the interior whilst
providing some privacy from the street. |
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The main active body of the library
comprises a series of giant over-sized steel framed windows
of varying shapes with a series of overlaid
patterns to glass within. The patterning alludes to the
random ashlar block work of the historic buildings on site,
while from the interior, the various windows
frame differing views to the greenery of the historic
gardens beyond. The book stack pavilion stores the main book
collection and is clad in a burnished healer brick with its
own bond specifically designed for this component of the project.
The bond includes several vertical bricks stacked on end and
the main wall folds back to highlight these book-like bricks
set into the surface. |
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The design goes to great lengths
to capture the multitude of landscape and contextual views
available and so becomes an outward focused learning environment
orienting its students toward the city, its history and beyond.
Internal campus views are also not forgotten. The book stack
pavilion opens with a massive window toward the main sporting
field. The main library areas wrap around an enormous historic
elm tree. A glass link for administrative functions brushes
close to the intricate roof pediments and quoining of the
original quadrangle building.
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Melbourne Grammar School in South Yarra, Victoria, Australia
by John Wardle Architects |
2009.06.08 |
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Click
on images below for larger views.
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