The incorporation of two schools into a residential building in King鈥檚 Cross is an example of how school designers are becoming ever more responsive to the changing physical and political environment they face. But is it any good?

Staircases are configured as bold single flights to aid legibility and accessibility

Staircases are configured as bold single flights to aid legibility and accessibility

According to London Councils, the apolitical representative body that lobbies on behalf of London鈥檚 33 boroughs, 133,000 additional school places will be needed in the capital by 2018, almost a third of the figure required for the whole of the UK. Moreover, it is expected that many of London鈥檚 boroughs will fail to meet demand for school places over the next few years.

This has obviously a placed a huge amount of pressure on school development within London. One consequence has been that schools in the capital are increasingly being procured via Section 106 agreements, with traditional housebuilders now often constructing schools directly in order to satisfy planning gain requirements.

Additionally, with space for new schools being sparse, particularly in dense inner London, planners, developers and designers are being forced to become ever more creative as to where schools are located. As it happens this is a mandate that has received tacit political encouragement with the concurrent expansion of free schools which, with some controversy, has thus far placed schoolchildren in locations as improbable as airbases and fire stations.

But away from the more surrealist occupancies of the free schools programme, even London鈥檚 conventional schools are finding themselves in ever more unconventional locations and configurations. Up until earlier this year Croydon council was progressing detailed plans for the conversion of a six-storey art deco office block in its town centre into a primary school. And nearby Kingston has also been considering plans to open a community school in a converted office block.

And now on the massive King鈥檚 Cross Central regeneration site in central London, the capital鈥檚 latest example of an unusually located school has just been built. The Plimsoll 黑洞社区 occupies a large plot to the north-west of the King鈥檚 Cross Central development close to the Regent鈥檚 Canal and the site鈥檚 iconic gasholders. Like most of the northern segment of the King鈥檚 Cross development, it provides housing, with this block offering 255 luxury and affordable flats designed by David Morley Architects.

But what differentiates the Plimsoll 黑洞社区 from its surrounding residential neighbours is that the bottom two of its 13 storeys are entirely occupied by a primary school. And not just one school but two. Because to complicate matters even further, the smaller of the two schools is a SEN (Special Educational Needs) school for deaf children, with all the onerous technical and spatial specifications that this entails.

The school occupies the bottom two storeys of Plimsoll House

The school occupies the bottom two storeys of Plimsoll House

That both schools have been incorporated into a residential building on a tight inner-city site sets yet another important precedent for how school design is becoming ever more responsive to a changing physical and political environment.

The King鈥檚 Cross Academy is a two-form entry primary and nursery school that will eventually have places for up to 420 pupils. The Frank Barnes School for Deaf Children is a smaller school that caters for children aged two to 11 with a range of hearing difficulties.

Both schools were part of a Section 106 agreement secured when planning permission for the Plimsoll 黑洞社区 was awarded. As such, they were not a later addition to the project but an integral part of the design strategy for the residential development. As David Morley explains, other design options were explored at the start of the project for how the school and housing elements of the development could be configured.

鈥淲e looked at several options for how the school and resi options could be integrated. We looked at freestanding school options as well as the idea of some sort of vertical multi-storey stack. The vertical model provided good adjacencies and opened up the possibility of using the roof as a playground. But in the end, the extent of vertical circulation proved impractical and inefficient.鈥

It was at this point that the idea of placing the school at the base of the residential block was agreed, a solution which, as Morley points out, presented several key advantages. 鈥淚t still provided the good adjacencies prevalent in the vertical model but it also enabled us to place the school on just two storeys, which is a good configuration for a primary school.鈥

Not all the 鈥渁djacencies鈥 Morley refers to are immediately apparent when studying the school鈥檚 location on the King鈥檚 Cross masterplan but they nonetheless proved to be major advantages in terms of the school鈥檚 accessibility and amenity provision.

The ground floor plan shows how the playground occupies the north-west of the deep floorplate. Residential cores are visible along the perimeter

The ground floor plan shows how the playground occupies the north-west of the deep floorplate. Residential cores are visible along the perimeter

The Plimsoll Block is surrounded by three new streets, one of which is defined as a car-free, shared surface 鈥渉ome zone鈥 which provides the sheltered access particularly valuable for the SEN pupils. Additionally, a new park is being built at the base of the adjacent gasholders and the neighbouring residential block incorporates an underground multi-purpose sports pitch. While these facilities are not owned by the school, pupils will have access to them and they will form a crucial part of the school鈥檚 amenity offer.

黑洞社区 two schools at the base of a formidable 13-storey residential building presents inevitable constraints. However, the challenges have been met with innovative design solutions that often progress to become key components of the new schools鈥 unique identity.

One of the first challenges is structural. The layouts of the flats are based on a standard 7.5m structural grid determined by a two-bedroom layout. Altering this grid to accommodate a school on the bottom two storeys would have required significant transfer structure at second floor slab level that would have been complicated, expensive and, crucially, might have jeopardised internal floor-to-ceiling heights due to the building鈥檚 overall height being constrained by the massing plan imposed by the wider King鈥檚 Cross Central masterplan.

But as David Morley assistant director Kristian Marjoram explains, this structural constraint was turned into an advantage. 鈥淚n fact, 7.5m happens to be a good size for a classroom. Moreover, the floor plan often has one-bed flats stacked beside two-bed ones, which means that the grid provides alternate 7.5m and 3m bays. The 3m bay is utilised in the school as smaller, break-out space between the main classrooms. Threading the flats鈥 structural grid down through the school also means that the grid is maintained for the residential car parking in the basement too.鈥

Another obvious constraint is playground space. Although the school will have access to Gasholder Park and the underground sports pitch, its own private playground area is essential. As Morley explains, the building鈥檚 massing is deployed to address this problem.

The residential towers sit above the school, partially separated by a terraced deck that gives way to a tiered playground to the left

The residential towers sit above the school, partially separated by a terraced deck that gives way to a tiered playground to the left

鈥淭he building is expressed as a cluster of towers principally arranged on its northern and eastern sides. This leaves much of the remaining two sides, as well as the centre of the plot open. Within this zone we鈥檝e been able to provide 1,000m虏 of playground space.鈥

In fact, this playground space is ingeniously inserted and provides one of the key design features of the school. While the school occupies a far greater footprint on the site than the residential 鈥渢owers鈥 above, it doesn鈥檛 occupy the entire site. This provides opportunity for daylight to filter down into the school鈥檚 deep plan by means of giant circular skylight shafts cut into its roof deck.

It also enables playground space to be cleverly distributed on a number of stepped terraces that weave over and around the two-storey school deck in what Marjoram describes as a 鈥渢hree-dimensional solution that also provides outside learning spaces鈥. Along the site boundary on the open south-west corner of the plot, this playground space is sheltered by a striking, perforated and planted bronze screen intended to strike a balance between privacy and permeability.

Within a constrained urban site such as this, the permeability from inside to out will be particularly important. Therefore this open south-east corner of the site provides crucial visual connections to a surrounding townscape animated by the gasholders, the evolving King鈥檚 Cross development and the passing of Eurostar trains from nearby St Pancras, stimuli that pupils will be able to enjoy from their playground.

Although Marjoram reveals that one of the biggest challenges of the floorplan was 鈥渁rranging the school around the residential stairwell cores鈥, to the casual observer the interior of the school reveals a subtle shift in the nature of the challenge the project was faced with. Here, the constraint shifts from incorporating school and residential more to incorporating a primary and SEN school. Pedagogically this is addressed by both teachers and pupils at the academy learning sign language and making use of extensive shared facilities.

But architecturally, it is addressed by the adoption of a number of design consistencies across both schools. For instance, while both schools have separate entrance atriums, that at Frank Barnes is conspicuously configured as the smaller of the two and there is one demonstrable main entrance for both schools.

A CGI shows how a perforated, planted bronze screen separates the playground from public realm at the north-west corner. The gasholders are visible to the right

A CGI shows how a perforated, planted bronze screen separates the playground from public realm at the north-west corner. The gasholders are visible to the right

Colour coding is extensively used in internal areas to denote various sections of the building with the colour scheme intuitively matching that of the school鈥檚 logo. Each school has a principal staircase but both are configured as highly permeable single, straight flights without the returns of reverse-landings that might create unwarranted spatial complexity for children with heightened sensitivity.

Corridor and hallway corners are also expressed as wide curves rather than right angles in order to assist observation and visual connectivity. A marked feature of the interior is natural light. Along the edges this is facilitated by huge expanses of glazing that occupy the full width of the 7.5m structural grid. And the circular skylight shafts admit daylight into the centre of the deep plan.

For Marjoram the key to immersing the schools into the residential development is a consistency of architectural approach. 鈥淭he language has to work. Elevationally the bottom two storeys use the same brickwork as the residential floors above; we鈥檝e never tried to shy away from the fact that this is a school beneath 11 storeys of flats.鈥

But beyond this, he says the challenge of combining the SEN and primary schools are met by employing design strategies that should be prevalent on all good school design. 鈥淚t鈥檚 about creating distinct spaces that work together. And delivering any good school, regardless of context or type, is down to delivering the fundamental values of acoustics and daylight.鈥

This year鈥檚 inaugural 黑洞社区 Live event will feature a speech on school building in 2016 which will discuss some of the issues touched upon in this article. For more information see