Kéré Architecture在德國慕尼黑工業大學打造全新幼兒園,透過室內木製滑梯與螺旋樓梯,以垂直遊樂場概念登場!
Kéré Architecture在德國慕尼黑工業大學打造全新幼兒園,透過室內木製滑梯與螺旋樓梯,以垂直遊樂場概念登場!
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總部位於柏林的 Kéré Architecture 建築師事務所,在德國慕尼黑工業大學 (Technical University of Munich) 校園內,完成了一座耐候鋼包覆的幼兒園「Kinderoase an der TUM」,是校方為了支援年輕專業人員(特別是女性教職員)平衡工作與家庭責任所設立的托兒設施。
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設計團隊將整棟樓地板面積 1540 平方公尺的建築定義為「垂直遊樂場」,串聯起行政辦公室、遊樂區與屋頂露台,透過環狀樓梯與一系列室內滑梯連結各樓層。
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事務所創辦人法蘭西斯·凱雷 (Diébédo Francis Kéré) 表示,玩耍是設計的核心,五層樓高的幼兒園意在為大人與小孩提供服務,打造讓孩子能奔跑、探索與共處的空間。
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幼兒園座落在大學主校區與食堂之間,基地原本是停車場;為了應對鄰近喧囂街道的噪音問題,設計團隊將多層次的遊樂場配置在建築前方,作為後方教室的隔音屏障。
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建築主體幾乎完全由木材建造,外牆經過黑化處理,並包裹著耐候鋼製成的懸掛板條,屋頂露台被稱為「天空草甸」 (Himmelswiese),為孩童創造更多的玩樂場域,並擁有俯瞰整座城市的絕佳視野。
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建築師凱雷強調,由於大學校園密度高且基地狹小,必須向高處發展,室內充滿了木製滑梯等遊樂設施,並搭配工作室自行設計的家具;中央設有採光充足的圓形樓梯,將底層的接待區與上方的托育空間串聯。空間依幼兒年齡進行劃分。中高樓層則設有共同用餐區、遊樂區以及運動室。
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與奧地利 HK Architekten 事務所合作設計的木造結構在室內完全裸露沒有貼皮,凱雷 選擇木材是因為其具備良好的觸感、溫暖的色調,且有助於自然通風。
在密集的校園建築環境中,種種特質創造出一種開放且寬敞的氣氛,非常適合幼兒成長。
#KereArchitecture #TechnicalUniversityOfMunich #德國建築 #幼兒園 #木構
#WeatheredSteel #SustainableDesign #MunichArchitecture #ChildcareFacility #EducationalArchitecture
#KereArchitecture #慕尼黑工業大學 #幼兒園設計 #垂直遊樂場 #木造建築
#耐候鋼 #永續設計 #慕尼黑建築 #托兒設施 #教育建築
### Threads 貼文
慕尼黑工業大學裡竟然有「垂直遊樂場」!由柏林事務所 Kéré Architecture 設計的 Kinderoase 幼兒園,是一棟五層樓高的木造建築。
為了幫助教職員兼顧工作與育兒,這棟建築被設計成一個超級好玩的冒險空間。建築外層覆蓋著充滿工業風的耐候鋼板,內部則大量運用溫暖的實木,室內甚至還有直接穿梭樓層的「木製溜滑梯」!
設計團隊把遊樂場放在建築前方當作隔音牆,後方則是安靜的學習空間。最頂樓還有一個被暱稱為「天空草甸」的露台,孩子們可以在校園高處俯瞰整個城市。這種把校園狹小基地向上發展,又同時保有開放感的設計,真的太適合大學校園了!
Berlin studio Kéré Architecture has added a weathered steel-clad kindergarten to the Technical University of Munich campus in Germany, complete with a three-storey playground.
Named Kinderoase an der TUM, the kindergarten is an on-site childcare facility to support young professionals, particularly women, at the university in balancing work and family responsibilities.
Kéré Architecture designed the building as a "vertical playground", connecting its 1,540 square metres of administrative offices, play areas and roof terrace with a circular stairwell and series of internal slides.
"Play is the core of this design," studio founder Diébédo Francis Kéré said.
"This is a building about movement, fun and adventure," he added. "We thought of it as a five-storey kindergarten, a vertical playground, providing an essential service for both adults and children in this historic city."
"Our goal was to create a space where children can run, play, explore and be together."
The kindergarten sits on the site of a former parking lot between the university's main campus and its cafeteria.
To address its position overlooking a noisy street, Kéré Architecture placed the multi-level playground at the building's front to act as an acoustic buffer for the learning rooms behind it.
The kindergarten's top-heavy volume is built almost entirely from timber, which has been blackened externally and wrapped in an angular facade with suspended slats of weathered steel.
At roof level, a terrace – nicknamed "Himmelswiese" or "meadow in the sky" – serves as an additional play area backed by an expansive view over the city.
"The Technical University campus is dense, and the site is small, so we had to go up," Kéré explained.
Inside, play features include wooden slides that punctuate the floors, complemented with furniture pieces designed by the studio.
A skylit circular stairwell connects the ground-floor reception and administrative areas with the childcare spaces above, which have been organised by age.
Other facilities across the middle and upper floors include communal areas for eating and playing, and a sports room.
The building's timber structure, designed alongside Austrian studio HK Architekten, is left exposed throughout and was chosen by the studio for its material properties.
"As a material, wood has a wonderful haptic; it is warm, reflects light well and encourages natural ventilation," Kéré said. "These qualities, within a dense built environment, create a space of generosity and openness, which is great for children."
The photography is by Iwan Baan.