Rural Education

30. April 2012

Qinmo Primary School
Community Center
and Demonstration Eco Household

2010
Qinmo, Huaiji, Guangdong Province

Architects
John Lin (Primary School)
Joshua Bolchover and John Lin
(Community Center and Demonstration Eco Household)

Project Team
Abdul Yeung
Gary Chan
Tammy Chow
Kenneth Lau
Hugo Ma
Tim Mao
Danny Tang
and students from Sacred Heart
Canossian College

Project Administration
Community Projects Workshop
The University of Hong Kong

Research
Joshua Bolchover and
John Lin with Christiane Lange

Donors
Matthew Cheng and Peggy Young
Green Hope Foundation
Lucy Tsai, Chinese Culture Promotion Society
Luke Him Sau Charitable Trust
Hope Education Foundation
Kadoorie Farm and Botanic Garden

Quinmo Primary School
Size: 1200 sqm
Total Cost: 150,000 usd
Unit Cost: 125 usd/sqm

Community Center and
Demonstration Eco Household

Size: 450 sqm
Total Cost: 22,500 usd
Unit Cost: 50 usd/sqm

Qinmo Village in the Northwest of Guangdong Province, with about 1,800 villagers, is based on growing rice, keeping pigs and chickens. The income of the migrant workers is invested in bigger houses and decoration. With a project by John Lin and Joshua Balchover the education of the local community in many aspects is aided to shift towards economic self-sufficiency.

The two architects run the firm rufwork (rural urban framework), who takes care of such projects between self-help and strategic conceptions for needed infrastructure. The strategy in Qinmo is supported by a network of stakeholders, like the University of Hong Kong, Green Hope Foundation, Chinese Culture Promotion Society, Luk Him Sau Charitable Trust and others, including the local government bureaus of education and construction.

The new school building was designed by John Lin and takes the form of a terraced landscape, which forms a public space. This public space is used for communal festivities and sports events. The seating is constructed to allow ventilation for the classrooms below.

The building was constructed with the cheapest material available, concrete beams and columns with brick infill. The villagers painted the bricks with bright blazing colours and constructed the building in self-help

 The library in the building is designed as a landscape of cut out islands within the raised floor, forming void areas for sitting and reading. The roof carries a series of community gardens, for which the kids below have to care and were they learn new aspects of gardening. The playground in front of the terrace, with a basketball field, connects directly to the village. 

The new primary school left the old school building vacant and without use. The Hong Kong based charity organisation of Lucy Tsai commissioned John Lin and Joshua Bolchover to work with the agricultural organisation Kadoorie Farm and Botanic Garden, on the re-use of the building. It became a teaching eco-household and education centre for agricultural techniques.

With a greenhouse and kitchen garden as well as experiments with economically profitable products – premium chicken and tea-tree oil – the villagers learn how to live from their land within an changing economy and a improving market for quality products. Again, very little money was available for the renovation. A concrete screen with two patterns was locally produced and used for the gallery in the courtyard. The old school became the new informal community centre, where charity organisations from Hong Kong organize education camps for children.

With little means, goodwill and the enthusiasm on all sides, the village schools in Qinmao became new focal points in the life of the citizens. With self-confidence and new pride the village can show that development is no longer depending only on money, but also on knowledge. Such projects will not change the development on a big scale, but they put a new aspect on the village life, to keep up with the challenge of economic dependence.

Conceptually, the two schools create new public platforms for experiment and discussion – what can be achieved more with architecture. The integration of the villagers in the building process and continuing support with workshops, gives hope that new things are possible, also in the rural hinterland.
Eduard Kögel

Construction process
Axonometry
Detail screen
Diagram

Qinmo Primary School
Community Center
and Demonstration Eco Household

2010
Qinmo, Huaiji, Guangdong Province

Architects
John Lin (Primary School)
Joshua Bolchover and John Lin
(Community Center and Demonstration Eco Household)

Project Team
Abdul Yeung
Gary Chan
Tammy Chow
Kenneth Lau
Hugo Ma
Tim Mao
Danny Tang
and students from Sacred Heart
Canossian College

Project Administration
Community Projects Workshop
The University of Hong Kong

Research
Joshua Bolchover and
John Lin with Christiane Lange

Donors
Matthew Cheng and Peggy Young
Green Hope Foundation
Lucy Tsai, Chinese Culture Promotion Society
Luke Him Sau Charitable Trust
Hope Education Foundation
Kadoorie Farm and Botanic Garden

Quinmo Primary School
Size: 1200 sqm
Total Cost: 150,000 usd
Unit Cost: 125 usd/sqm

Community Center and
Demonstration Eco Household

Size: 450 sqm
Total Cost: 22,500 usd
Unit Cost: 50 usd/sqm

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