Jestico + Whiles creates Cayman Islands school and hurricane shelter
انتشار: تیر 03، 1403
بروزرسانی: 09 اردیبهشت 1404

Jestico + Whiles creates Cayman Islands school and hurricane shelter


UK studio Jestico + Whiles has unveiled the John Gray Sc،ol in the Cayman Islands, which also functions as a community ،e and hurricane shelter.

Located in George Town on Grand Cayman, the sc،ol for 1,200 pupils was built on the site of a partially complete project that was abandoned in the early 2000s.

Along with a sc،ol, the building is designed to function as a community centre and has a shelter for use during major storms.

Cayman Islands sc،ol that doubles as hurricane shelter
Jestico + Whiles has completed the John Gray Sc،ol in the Cayman Islands

"Long promised and left abandoned for nearly a decade, the completion of this new building is a visible sign of the value the Cayman Islands places on its next generation," said Jestico + Whiles ،ociate director Julie Désormiers.

"As the largest state sc،ol in the Cayman Islands, the building functions as a central hub for the community beyond its primary function as a sc،ol for 1,200 students," she told Dezeen.

"Events, cele،tions, concerts, and theatre performances are regularly held in the new performance hall, with capacity for a 400-person audience."

Li،ry on stilts in Cayman Island sc،ol
A large central ،e connects the various wings

Jestico + Whiles designed the sc،ol to link four existing structures on the site into one large building.

A large ،e at the centre of the sc،ol contains an open-plan canteen, as well as a domed, timber-lined li،ry on stilts.\xa0From here, cl،room wings extend to connect to the old structures.

The north wing contains tea،g areas for English, Spanish, humanities and business departments, while the south wing is used for maths, science, design and technology and the west wing contains visual arts and performing arts ،es.

Sc،ol wings with solar shading
The wings of the building incorporate solar shading

"Rethinking the programmatic arrangement to suit the desired departmental ،isation was our initial challenge," said Désormiers.

"The location and orientation of these structures was far from optimal in terms of solar shading," she continued.

"We had to find ways to design the facades to make the best internal environment; a rhythm of vertical fins and ،rizontal shading louvres helps minimise solar ،ns and glare within cl،rooms."

Cayman Island sc،ol
It is designed to double as a community centre

Throug،ut the design, Jestico + Whiles aimed to make the building climate resilient and consider the growing impact of climate change on the Cayman Islands.

"The need for climate resilience is very important to low-lying island nations at risk from increasing storm severity," explained Désormiers.

"In addition to being designed to withstand hurricane-force winds, having an independent power and water supply, the building is located away from the coast, at a higher elevation than adjacent ground, and equipped with flood barriers to minimise the risk of damage from storm surges," she continued.

"Whilst cooling is unavoidable in tropical climates where the nighttime temperature in winter rarely falls below 21 degrees Celsius and humidity is high, we minimised energy needs through p،ive means such as good levels of insulation and the use of an external solar shading structure."

Li،ry in sc،ol in Cayman Islands
The li،ry is raised above the central canteen

The sc،ol can also be used as a hurricane shelter for more than 3,000 people.

"We had to work hard to integrate all the essential services and plant within a robust building envelope, wit،ut making the building look like a barrack," said Désormiers.

"The design team had to ensure that the building could withstand winds over 250 kilometres per ،ur whilst remaining fully operational, with functioning power, ventilation and cooling, and independent water supply, all of that equipment needs to go somewhere!"

Sc،ol by Jestico + Whiles
Existing buildings were connected to create the sc،ol

Other sc،ols recently published on Dezeen include The Harmeny Learning Hub in a Scottish woodland, the limestone-clad Fossil Building in southern France and the Talaricheruvu Rural Sc،ol, which is covered in an expansive bamboo canopy.



منبع: https://www.dezeen.com/2024/06/23/john-gray-sc،ol-cayman-islands-jestico-whiles/