The Aga
Khan Award for Architecture 2004
The Ninth
Award Cycle, 2002-2004
Primary School, Gando, Burkina Faso
| Client: |
The community
of Gando Village, Burkina Faso |
| Architect: |
Diébédo
Francis Kéré, Burkina Faso |
| Completion: |
October 2001 |
Description
This school is the result of one man’s mission
to improve conditions in his village. Not only
did he design the school and raise the funds to
build it; he also secured government support to
train people in building with local materials,
and drew on the strong tradition of community
solidarity to engage all of the villagers in the
construction of this school for their children.
Gando, with a population of 3,000, lies
on the southern plains of Burkina Faso, some 200
kilometres from Ouagadougou, the capital. Diébédo
Francis Kéré, the first person from
Gando to study abroad, was convinced that education
was the cornerstone of his people’s advancement.
As an architecture student in Berlin, he took
upon himself the cause of ensuring that his village
would not be deprived of a school, and with a
group of friends in Germany, Kéré
set up a fund-raising association, Schulbausteine
für Gando (Bricks for the Gando School).
The idea met with a positive response and, having
secured finance through the association, Kéré
also obtained the support of LOCOMAT (a government
agency in Burkina Faso) to train brickmakers in
the technique of working with compressed stabilized
earth. Construction of the school began in October
2000, carried out largely by the village’s
men, women and children. After the school was
completed in July 2001, construction of buildings
for resident teachers began along similar principles.
To achieve sustainability, the project was based
on the principles of designing for climatic comfort
with low-cost construction, making the most of
local materials and the potential of the local
community, and adapting technology from the industrialized
world in a simple way. It was also conceived as
an exemplar that would raise awareness in the
local community of the merits of traditional materials.
Climatic considerations largely determined the
building’s form and materials. Three classrooms
are arranged in a linear fashion and separated
by covered outdoor areas that can be used for
teaching and play. The structure comprises traditional
load-bearing walls made from stabilized and compressed
earth blocks. Concrete beams run across the width
of the ceiling, and steel bars lying across these
support a ceiling also of compressed earth blocks.
Climatic comfort is also ensured by the overhanging
roof, which shades the façades, by the
raising of the corrugated metal roof on a steel
truss, allowing cooling air to flow freely between
the roof and the ceiling, and through the use
of earth blocks for the walls, which absorb heat,
moderating room temperature.
The roof form was dictated by practical considerations:
it was not possible to transport large elements
to the site from afar, nor economically viable
to use lifting machinery such as cranes. Instead,
the architect devised a process whereby common
construction steel bars were used to create lightweight
trusses, with corrugated metal sheeting laid on
top to form the roof. All that was necessary was
to teach people how to use a handsaw and a small
welding machine.
All the people involved in the project management
were native to the village, and the skills learned
here will be applied to further initiatives in
the village and elsewhere. The way the community
organized itself has set an example for two neighbouring
villages, which subsequently built their own schools
as a cooperative effort. The local authorities
have also recognized the project’s worth:
not only have they provided and paid for the teaching
staff, but they have also endeavoured to employ
the young people trained there in the town’s
public projects, using the same techniques.
Jury Citation
This project has received an Award for its elegant
architectonic clarity, achieved with the most
humble of means and materials, and for its transformative
value. Located in a remote settlement of Burkina
Faso, the school is the result of a vision that
was first articulated by the architect and then
embraced by his community. The first person from
his village with access to higher education, while
studying architecture in Berlin he became determined
to design and build the school. Securing funding
for materials from supporters in Germany, he mobilized
the men, women and children of the village to
erect the building. The result is a structure
of grace, warmth and sophistication, in sympathy
with the local climate and culture. The practical
and the poetic are fused. The primary school in
Gando inspires pride and instils hope in its community,
laying the foundations for the advancement of
a people.
Project
Data
| Client |
The community of Gando Village, Burkina
Faso |
| Sponsors |
Schulbausteine für Gando e.V. –
Bricks for a School in Gando Association,
Germany |
| Architect |
Diébédo Francis Kéré,
Burkina Faso |
| Site Coordination |
Wénéyda Kéré,
Burkina Faso |
| Craftsmen |
Sanfo Saidou (‘Baba’) and Oussmane
Moné, master masons; Minoungou Saidou,
welder. (All from Burkina Faso.)
|
| Consultant |
Issa Moné, technical officer,
LOCOMAT, Burkina Faso, training in brick
production |
| Commission |
1998 |
| Design |
1999-2000 |
| Construction |
October 2000–July 2001 |
| Occupation |
October 2001 |
| Site area |
30,000 m2 |
| Built area |
526 m2 |
| Cost |
CFA Francs 22,750,000 (US$ 29,830) |
Project
Photography
Watch the Slide Show
or click on one of the high resolution images to download
it to your computer.
If you require TIFF images of this project, please contact
The Aga Khan Award for Architecture.
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