Hamilton ECE Wins Gold in the Best Design Awards
HAMILTON ECE WINS GOLD IN THE BEST DESIGN AWARDS
A Hamilton early childhood centre has won a gold medal in a prestigious national design awards at the weekend.
Creators Early Learning Centre Chartwell won a gold pin at the Designers Institute of New Zealand Best Design Awards in Auckland on Saturday night in front of a glamorous, star-studded crowd of the New Zealand design industries best talent.
The Best Design Awards is an annual showcase of excellence in graphic, spatial, product, interactive and motion design, organised by the Designers Institute of New Zealand. The centre won the award in the ‘spatial’ section, under the ‘healthcare’ category, of the Best Design Awards.
The modern, nature-inspired centre on Rutherford Street in Chartwell, Hamilton, was designed by award-winning architect Phil Smith, of Collingridge and Smith Architects (UK), who is well-known for his environmentally-focused childcare centre design.
The centre has an art and sensory studio, internal
garden, veggie patch and water play studio.
It is also is
fully solar-powered, and has energy-saving features
including underfloor heating, natural ventilation, good
insulation levels and low-energy lighting.
The judges
said the entry was “beautifully scaled, the spaces support
natural and authentic play showing the power of a simple
idea, consistently applied” and “had the judges saying
‘I wish I was a kid!’.”
Creators Educational Trust
Lead Design and Project Manager Kym Gibson said that the
Chartwell centre, which opened in January 2017, was designed
to encourage children to collaborate, communicate and
explore.
“It is important to us at Creators that we
create a beautiful, loving environment for our children,”
said Gibson. “We felt it should be an inspiring space for
them to learn, play and grow. We know the early years are a
vital time for brain development, and we’ve created
something really special for children at
Chartwell.”
Gisbson said that the building’s
architecture, interior decoration and educational approach
are all characteristic of the organisation’s Reggio Emilia
philosophy.
“Everything we teach is grounded in
empathy and compassion and harmony with nature, and that is
very much reflected in the design aspects,” said Gibson.
“It’s reaffirming to win this award, as it confirms that
we are on track with all that we do.”
Gibson, who has a
design background herself, was very involved in the design
of Creators Chartwell and worked closely with architect Phil
Smith. “I had a vision for the centre and how I wanted it
to look and feel, and I think we achieved that,” said
Gibson. “I love what Phil has done, designing something
that is both beautiful, sustainable and captures our values
completely. He really got us, and shared our vision.”
Gibson said she was also proud of the team at Creators,
and the staff, who ensure children at the centre have a
wonderful experience. “We are lucky to have a wonderful,
creative, collaborative team at Creators,” she said.
Creators Educational Trust is a not-for-profit
organisation, has approximately 900 children and 110 staff
on its books, at its four early childhood centres and
through its nationwide home-based ECE programme,
Creators@Home.
Creators Chartwell is licensed for 80
children from birth to five years old, and has about 16
teaching staff. There are other Creators ECE centres at
Forest Lake, Grandview and Waipa.
The Creators philosophy
is founded on four pillars: love and connection, nature
play, values-based learning and the Reggio Emilia approach.
This approach was started in the city of Reggio Emilia in
Italy after World War Two, where a group of parents offered
to care for children to enable other parents to help with
the rebuild.