Exupery International School / 8 A.M.


© Indrikis Sturmanis

© Indrikis Sturmanis


© Indrikis Sturmanis


© Indrikis Sturmanis


© Indrikis Sturmanis


© Indrikis Sturmanis

  • Architects: 8 A.M.
  • Location: Piņķi, Babīte parish, LV-2107, Latvia
  • Architects In Charge: Juris Lasis, Laura Pelse, Eduards Beernaerts
  • Area: 6570.0 m2
  • Project Year: 2016
  • Photographs: Indrikis Sturmanis

© Indrikis Sturmanis

© Indrikis Sturmanis

Uniting school and kindergarten in one complex, it comes with a new educational model – directed towards the child and encouraging creativity, which is also reflected in the architecture of the building.


© Indrikis Sturmanis

© Indrikis Sturmanis

The basic idea that kindergarten is already a school (pre-school) pervades volume of the  house.


© Indrikis Sturmanis

© Indrikis Sturmanis

The ground floor of the kindergarten is a circle around which four age groups are located, starting with the youngest and ending with the older groups from which the children proceed further to school. In each age group, children learn several pieces of world literature that help them to understand the surrounding world. Successively the children till their school age live in several environments: forest, village, town, world – the Universe. These literary works and their themes are reflected in interior solutions as well as utilities of the courtyard: mosses and trees, meadow,lawn and yard, sand – the dust of Universe.


© Indrikis Sturmanis

© Indrikis Sturmanis

Ground Floor Plan

Ground Floor Plan

© Indrikis Sturmanis

© Indrikis Sturmanis

On the first floor of the same building the general classrooms of the school – verandas are built. They form a continuous relationship and development bond between the youngest and already older students. From the corridor of the first floor, the playground of the little children is open to the view, as well as the little ones can see the bigger children’s school activities.


© Indrikis Sturmanis

© Indrikis Sturmanis

© Indrikis Sturmanis

© Indrikis Sturmanis

On the ground floor of the school volume, there is the public part of the school life; events- the large hall, sports, wardrobe for children, meanwhile the first floor is for specialized classes – languages, art, craft, computers, chemistry, physics, as well as the library. Both volumes are connected by “a dream bridge”. The school has its own entrance, and it is emphasized by a large opening in the facade, which gives the opportunity to gather outside the school under the roof, as well as run 100 meters during the sport classes running through the school.


© Indrikis Sturmanis

© Indrikis Sturmanis

Both while designing the building and creating the concept of interior and furnishing, the main aim was that the children should feel themselves at home and free. Both the younger and the older students are the main in this house. The buildings an interior are designed attractive but ‘light’, putting the main emphasis as it was already mentioned, on the inhabitants of the house, so that it is convenient, comfortable and also interesting to study and work at International School Exupery.


© Indrikis Sturmanis

© Indrikis Sturmanis

The volume of the building A is designed circular in order to create a patio for kindergarten to play and walk, where the children are protected from wind as well as the noise from the highway. In its turn the volume of building B is designed as a marking off  barrier between the highway and kindergarten thus creating a large courtyard between the two buildings with amphitheatre. The construction of large sides of the roof, which copy the passing of the sun around the perimeter and passively protect the rooms from overheating under direct rays of the sun.


© Indrikis Sturmanis

© Indrikis Sturmanis

Product Description.

1. The vertical constructions of the aluminum constructions of the facades act alike – permitting the sun to shine for a moment directly into some of the glass segments of the façade. In South Façade of the school volume the higher glass have higher reflection of the sun light (warmth) inside creating the feeling of partly closed blinds.

2. White and isn’t transparent, but at the same time lets light in.


© Indrikis Sturmanis

© Indrikis Sturmanis

3. Wooden decoration in facades is Siberian larch which is best suited for this latitude in usage of authentic material and sustainability.

4. In decoration of interior, a lot of birch plywood is used, which characterizes the mentality of this land.


© Indrikis Sturmanis

© Indrikis Sturmanis

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Mallinson Ltd and BEaM Studio Come Together to Create a Treehouse in the Forests of West Dorset, England

The Woodman's Treehouse by Mallinson Ltd & BEaM studio (1)

Have you always dreamed, since you were just a little kid, of living in a tree house like Robinson Crusoe? We have too! We spent countless days wishing we had a massive tree house in our backyard so we could run around high up in the trees, enjoying the view from above and breathing in the fresh air. Well, some little kids grow up to be designers, and some designers..

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💙 Dying Sun on 500px by Nikola Peise, Limburg,……

💙 Dying Sun on 500px by Nikola Peise, Limburg,… http://ift.tt/2bizuAP

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Purple reflection in Tri Bowl Cultural Center by thomaskong78 by thomaskong78

It was taken at Tri Bowl Cultural Center in Songdo, Korea on Sept, 2016.

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Russia. Moscow GUM by AndreyGlushenko by AndreyGlushenko

With the facade extending for 794 ft (242 m) along the eastern side of Red Square, the Upper Trading Rows were built between 1890 and 1893 by Alexander Pomerantsev (responsible for architecture) and Vladimir Shukhov (responsible for engineering). The trapezoidal building features a combination of elements of Russian medieval architecture and a steel framework and glass roof, a similar style to the great 19th-century railway stations of London. William Craft Brumfield described the GUM building as “a tribute both to Shukhov’s design and to the technical proficiency of Russian architecture toward the end of the 19th century”.
The glass-​roofed design made the building unique at the time of construction. The roof, the diameter of which is 46 ft (14 m), looks light, but it is a firm construction made of more than 50,000 metal pods (about 819 short tons (743 t), capable of supporting snowfall accumulation. Illumination is provided by huge arched skylights of iron and glass, each weighing some 820 short tons (740 t) and containing in excess of 20,000 panes of glass. The facade is divided into several horizontal tiers, lined with red Finnish granite, Tarusa marble, and limestone. Each arcade is on three levels, linked by walkways of reinforced concrete.

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Reflection of Skyscraper by woosra by woosra

Dongbaik island in Busan. Korea
ⓒWoosra Kim

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