Working in partnership with the charity Mothers Of Africa (MoA), CAUKIN Studio spent 3 months in rural Zambia constructing 4 classrooms and a teacher’s office for Evergreen School. The charity organization MoA was set up in 2004 with the aim of improving maternal health, reducing maternal mortality and achieving access to reproductive health for all women.

-Text provided by the authors

MoA quickly realised that by improving the education of the village children they could make a long term contribution to the charity’s overall objective. Children in Zambia are often only educated to the age of 14; with schools often oversubscribed and in poor conditions. 

Evergreen classrooms had around 150 students per class, making it very difficult to effectively teach the curriculum and provide enough space for the students to learn successfully. The addition of 4 classrooms will bring class sizes down to 40 pupils each and will provide a brighter, more spacious classroom to learn within. 

MoA employed over 30 local workers, managed by CAUKIN Studio for the duration of the build, over 50% of which were female. With unemployment rates in Zambia being so high, it was important that this project also became a vehicle to teach workers new skills increasing their opportunity for future employment. 

COPYRIGHT KATIE EDWARDS
COPYRIGHT KATIE EDWARDS

The design takes from the local vernacular, using materials all sourced within 2 hours of the site and wraps around the existing classrooms to create a large central courtyard within the school. Each block of two classrooms is offset to create a layered facade adding interest and breaking up the masses. 

COPYRIGHT KATIE EDWARDS
COPYRIGHT KATIE EDWARDS
COPYRIGHT KATIE EDWARDS

The roof sits on steel trusses high above the classrooms to increase the airflow through the spaces below, venting through the hit and miss brickwork under the roof. The spacious volumes are flooded with light through the fully adjustable window shutters which can be locked down after school hours. 

The landscaping utilises small, half-height walls which dictate movement around the site and create informal breakout spaces for students to eat their lunch or complete their homework after school. To ensure all materials were utilised effectively, maximising the charity’s budget, all landscaping elements were made from offcuts or excess materials, meaning that wastage across the whole project was kept to a minimum. Brick rubble was cast into the floors and the timber form work was used to make the doors. 

COPYRIGHT KATIE EDWARDS

In total, over 9000 local bricks, 4000 concrete blocks, 2000 tonnes of sand and 50,000KG’s cement were used, with all of the concrete being mixed entirely by hand!

We would like to say a huge thank you to all those that contributed to this project by way of donation, supply of materials or just a helping hand! A special mention to Ed Dalton and the team at ARUP Cardiff for the structural design, Kieron Tarrant for his insights and Mothers Of Africa for their forward thinking and dedication to the project.

Facts & Credits

Project Title Evergreen School 
Architecture Firm CAUKIN Studio
Firm Location  London, Cardiff
Completion Year   2019
Gross Built Area   400m2
Project location   Chongwe, Zambia
Photo credits   Katie Edwards, Paul Crompton, CAUKIN Studio
Clients  Evergreen School Community & Mothers Of Africa
Engineering ARUP Cardiff
Consultants   Kieron Tarrant
Collaborators   Samantha Litherland, Alden Ching, Ayman Khan, Hannah Beard, Richard Rothwell, Jess Simpson, Rufaro Natalie Matanda, Mu-Heng Tsai, Andrew Downey, Sara House, Tomos Rees, Blanca Obrador, Kelci Vittachi, Charlotte McConkey, Luke O’Brien, Niall Bennett, Alexander Welford, Zhanet Mishineva.


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