'Built-in variety': David and Mary Medd and the Child-Centred Primary School, 1944-80
Author(s): |
Geraint Franklin
|
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Medium: | journal article |
Language(s): | English |
Published in: | Architectural History, 2012, v. 55 |
Page(s): | 321-367 |
DOI: | 10.1017/s0066622x00000149 |
Abstract: |
Children are the basis of school design. Connections between ideas of ‘child-centred' primary education and the design of schools were arguably closer in post-war Britain than any period before or since. These relationships provide a commentary on the role of public architecture within a British post-war social democracy that combined the social objectives of architectural Modernism with an awareness of, and continuity with, preceding reformist movements for the advancement of public health and education. The ‘social' aspect of the post-war school-building programme stemmed not so much from the application of labour or technology to processes of building, nor even the equitable distribution of common resources, but rather from the ability of the designer to shape and articulate processes of teaching and learning within the locus of the welfare state. Social and pedagogical ends were often pursued to the almost total exclusion of architectural self-expression. If this ‘humane functionalism' was rooted in an understanding of the activities and experiences of learning, it was dependent on a multi-disciplinary, investigative and creative collaboration between architect and educational ‘client'. |
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10307700 - Published on:
01/03/2019 - Last updated on:
09/08/2019