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Bang Nong Saeng Kindergarten - INDA Experimental projects
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DCC Projects 2018
Instructors :

Pau Sarquella
Carmen Torres
Tanskul Suwannakudt (Teaching Assistant)

Sponsors :

Mitsubishi Elevator (Thailand) Co.,LTD.
Chaiwetch Thanapaisal, Director of Chiang Rai Prachanukroh Hospital
Udomsri Siriboonma
Luacha Po-op, Managing Director of MECT Company Limited
Banyat Pimproa, Managing Director of Plutotech Company Limited
Tanin Sajjaboribun, CEO of Bangkok Sheet Metal Public Company Limited
Thanakorn Wongwises, Vice President, Partner Project & Eco Building Business (Thailand & Laos) of Schneider Electric Thailand
Chanisa Ngamapichon
Boonsak Kiatjaroonlert, Managing Director of Kumwell Corporation Limited
Orunuma Xuto
Korachapol Khutrakul
Pakawipa Charoentra
Nonthapat Khutrakul
Toyota Motor Corporation Thailand

Contractors :

Siroj Tungkahotara, Ph.D


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This project combined the tenacity of the director of Dum Yai School, the inventiveness of students and instructors, and the resilience of the construction workers into a 300-square-meter kindergarten. The school is located in a 500-person town in eastern Thailand surrounded by rice plantations, and it provides access to proper education as well as quality meeting and playing spaces.

To make this possible, students questioned the brief and the available resources. By clarifying the educational and recreational needs, the group redefined the spatial requirements and expanded the scope from what is commonly requested to what is socially rewarding.

The building uses a modular system that can exist as a partial building and can also grow in the near future. It is composed of four identical roofs, which represents an upgrade from the initial budget constraints. 

Rethinking the construction techniques and aesthetics, students reinterpreted the colorful context and the everyday mechanisms of the extended roof and eaves seen in vernacular and endemic architecture. They manufactured a colorful, easy-to-assemble awning system that increases the area of the kindergarten by 50% with minimal added cost. Beyond the required classroom space, this intermediate space is vital to the everyday social and recreational activities at the school.

The kindergarten also employs a passive ventilation system through the use of solar chimneys and uses the tropical climate to its advantage as it blurs the boundaries between interior and exterior.

By living on site during the construction, workers and students fostered an intimate creative environment that encouraged social bonding between people of different classes, generations, and backgrounds. With city students, international instructors, village kids, and rural workers sharing and learning from each other, the process has proven to be just as valuable as the final result.

Student :

Chanai Chaitaneeyachat

Chanin Homdee

Napassorn Charoentra

Natchaluck Radomsittipat

Natchapongtorn Gaesornsuwan

Natthida Mongkonsiri

Noppanut Bovornratanavech

Nutnicha Attawutinun

Palakorn Guagulpipat

Panat Triwattana

Parisorn Itsarapanich

Phannarath Siritantipat

Phannita Jiravatsatith

Pongtrust Patcharapond

Pornphat Bejrananda

Prompruit Snitwongse-na-Ayudhya

Proud Danpoe

Rasa Shirdel

Thanakarn Srathongin

Wasutop Viriyasuebpong

Yada Chatavaraha

Related Projects:

2023 Design-Build Projects

Rebirth

Rebirth is a lighting design project that explores revivalism by transforming plastic waste from a paint factory into a captivating sculpture. Musashi Paint Co.,Ltd. provided the plastic waste in the form of colored plates, which were assembled to depict dynamic movements of ascent or descent. The arrangement appears random, with clusters varying in dimensions. Embracing non-linearity and freedom, the composition aligns with the revivalist theme. While materiality plays a role, the focus lies on light and its configuration. The weaving and spiraling of light among clusters infuses the sculpture with a sense of life and rebirth. Pulsing and fading in rhythmic velocity, different parts of the composition come back to life, symbolizing rejuvenation. This sequence, combined with the physical structure, embodies the journey of rebirth and purpose within the realm of lighting design.

2019 Design-Build Projects

Ephemeral Events

This design-build project focused on the production of a single pop-up event held in the Nang Loeng district. Students became both designers and organizers, curating a public event and the infrastructure needed to support that event, such as urban furniture, market stalls, public amenities, and artist installations. During the development of the project, students conducted a series of community engagement meetings and mapping workshops, understanding the identity and values embedded in the neighborhood. Taking on the role of festival organizers, the students independently coordinated the design and promotion of media content, met with the district office and police to establish site permissions, and prepared the site for all of its potential infrastructural needs. Throughout the month-long process, students worked directly with community leaders, market vendors, arts and crafts specialists, and local cultural hubs to curate a series of interactive workshops, where the public was invited to learn about the identity of Nang Loeng through participatory events. These workshops included desserts made from banana leaves, sewing methods with Ban Narasilp, dancing workshops with Khon performers and ballroom instructors, Thai chess instructions with local champions, and other food-related crafts. During the opening, the public was invited to participate in a live “memory wall” where responses to a series of questions on the past, present, and future of Nang Loeng were displayed for collective reflection.

experimental projects