When Joseph Mizzi asked the architect Annabelle Selldorf if she would consider designing a primary school in rural Zambia pro bono for his nonprofit, the 14+ Foundation, she remembers replying, “Hello? Yes, obviously!” The response from her New York office was equally enthusiastic. “The need and desire to do something that changes the paradigm was on everyone’s mind,” she says.

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Largely designed at the Manhattan architecture studio of Selldorf's eponymous firm and managed on the ground by 14+, the Mwabwindo School—which opened in May—serves around 250 students from preschool through 7th grade, with a curriculum supplemented by arts- and Montessori-based programs. Located seven miles from 14+’s first project in Zambia, the Chipakata Children’s Academy, Mwabwindo is reducing the overcrowding at two nearby government schools.

To respond to the local climate—intensely hot and dry except in the rainy season, from November to April—Selldorf and her team devised a 23-by-23-foot grid, covered by a corrugated-metal roof canopy supported by a steel superstructure. Underneath this giant shade tent, inspired by the trees dotting the Central African Plateau, the architect placed five classroom and administration buildings, made from mud bricks fabricated on-site by local masons. The classroom buildings are arranged around courtyards and an internal “street.” A covered assembly area allows the entire school and larger community to gather for meals, performances, and other occasions. Here, the corrugated roof is slightly higher, signifying the entrance to the school. A bar-shaped building to the east of the classrooms contains storage and a kitchen. To the north are a soccer field, community gardens, and a cluster of six housing units for teachers.

The steel shade structure, designed by Silman engineer Nat Oppenheimer, was built first, shielding workers during the rainy season while the classrooms were constructed beneath it. “The shade tent wanted to be as light and plain as possible,” says Selldorf. “It wasn’t meant to be an attention-grabbing gesture.” Its beauty is in its seemingly weightless elevation, and its connection to thin shade structures seen in almost every culture, including the wood barns of the American west.

A lattice pattern in some of the brick walls allows daylight to penetrate and air to circulate, as do operable clerestory classroom windows. Mwabwindo is off the electrical grid and uses 100 percent renewable energy, including solar panels, and a windmill to pump well water. Toilets are dry composting.

Mizzi, the president of Sciame Construction, founded 14+ with Nchimunya Wulf in 2012 after a trip as a volunteer for World Bicycle Relief to landlocked Zambia. There he learned that children were walking up to nine miles a day to get to school, and he returned to the States inspired to use his connections in the architecture, engineering, and construction professions to create better access to education, health care, and local services. Chipakata Children’s Academy opened in 2015, a pro bono design by Susan Rodriguez, then a partner and design principal at New York–based Ennead Architects, Frank Lupo, and Randy Antonia Lott. Chipakata now serves 250 primary school children.

Mwabwindo School completes an educational network that includes more than 20 staff members between the two institutions. “Our schools now allow students to walk much shorter distances, which is central to the founding mission,” says Mizzi. Chipakata was the Foundation’s “three-dimensional business card,” he adds, establishing trust, along with the peripheral projects Mizzi’s team built in the area—roads and a grinding mill, for example. He sees the success of a rural school as intimately tied to the health and vitality of the larger community. “The one obvious new idea that came out of our experiences at Chipakata is the integration of a dormitory building for grade eight and nine students, starting with the girls,” says Mizzi. “We believe this will improve and help stabilize their learning environment.” To that end, Selldorf—who visited the site during construction—is now designing student housing for Mwabwindo.

While the school is one of Selldorf’s most remote projects, the design process solidified the architect’s thinking about the importance of good architecture in education everywhere. “In some ways, I wish I could do a school like that here in a America,” she says. “The conditions and circumstances may be a little different, but the thinking should be the same—the experience of daylight and designing for seasonal change. The quality of the architecture will help inspire kids and make them feel safer and more welcome. It reminded me why I wanted to be an architect.”


Credits

Architect:

Selldorf Architects

860 Broadway, 2nd Fl

New York, NY 10003

212.219.9571

www.selldorf.com

 

Personnel in architect's firm who should receive special credit:

Principal:

Annabelle Selldorf, FAIA

Partner-in-charge:

Sara Lopergolo, AIA

Project Manager(s):

Oliver Link, RA; John Spencer

Project Architect:

David Bench

Project Team:

Michael Baskett, Laura Bown, Ger Brennen, Jonathan Chesley

Dionisio Cortes-Ortega, Jeanie Fan, Sondra Fein, Mary Hohlt, James Jarzyniecki, Jaehyun Lee, Kristine Makwinski, Jonathan Pohl, Zachary Rousou, Cillian Sheehan, Molly White

 

Engineers:

Structural: Silman; Nat Oppenheimer

Daylighting: Renfro Design Group, Richard Renfro, Jenny Stafford

Director of Design and Construction: Fabian Bedolla

 

Photographer:

Chosa Mweemba

Specifications

Structural System

Painted Steel

 

Exterior Cladding

Red Brick Handmade on Site

 

Roofing

Painted Corrugated Metal

 

Windows

Metal Windows: Amalgamated

 

Interior Finishes

Floors: Concrete

 

Energy

Solar: Davis & Shirtliff