Educational Architecture Competitions: Space Is the Third Teacher (Updated April 2026)
This is the UNI editorial home for educational architecture and learning environment design — the competitions that shape the physical spaces where children learn to think, young adults learn to practice, and communities learn to grow. It is the tradition of Herman Hertzberger's Apollo Schools, Louis Kahn's Phillips Exeter Library, Loris Malaguzzi's Reggio Emilia classrooms, and Diébédo Francis Kéré's Gando Primary School — the 2001 school in Burkina Faso that Dezeen named the most significant building of 2001 and that earned Kéré the Pritzker Prize in 2022. Educational architecture is where the built environment stops being a backdrop and becomes, in Malaguzzi's phrase, the third teacher.
What Is Educational Architecture?
Educational architecture is the design of every built environment where learning happens — from early childhood centres to doctoral research institutes, from rural humanitarian schools to urban research universities. It is one of the most consequential typologies in architecture because children spend approximately 15,000 hours in school buildings before graduation, and those hours shape how they think for the rest of their lives. The discipline spans:
- Early childhood centres: preschools, kindergartens, daycares, Montessori and Reggio Emilia spaces for children aged 0-6.
- K-12 schools: primary, elementary, middle, and secondary schools across every educational system.
- Universities and higher-ed campuses: from quad-based traditional campuses to contemporary research cities.
- Public and academic libraries: the civic learning infrastructure outside the formal classroom.
- Vocational and trade schools: fabrication labs, welding shops, culinary schools, technical institutes.
- Research institutions and laboratories: where formal knowledge is produced.
- Makerspaces and fab labs: the new typology of hands-on informal learning environments.
- Community learning centres: adult education, lifelong learning, civic education spaces.
- Outdoor and forest schools: the growing movement to move learning outside the box.
- Humanitarian and post-conflict schools: education in refugee camps, rural underserved regions, and post-disaster contexts.
Why the Physical Space of Learning Matters — The "Third Teacher" Principle
The most influential idea in contemporary educational architecture comes from an educator, not an architect. Loris Malaguzzi, founder of the Reggio Emilia approach in post-war Italy, articulated the principle that a child has three teachers:
- The adult teachers in the room.
- The other children in the room.
- The physical environment itself.
This is not a metaphor. Malaguzzi and the Reggio Emilia educators observed that the arrangement of a classroom — the light, the materials, the scale of furniture, the connection to outdoors, the quality of acoustic separation — actively teaches. A classroom with natural light teaches attention. A classroom with child-scale furniture teaches autonomy. A classroom with an atelier (studio space) teaches creative practice. A classroom with transparent walls teaches openness. A classroom designed around a central piazza teaches community.
The architect's job in educational design, therefore, is not merely to accommodate learning. It is to design a teacher. This is the highest-stakes idea in the discipline — and the one that separates great educational architecture from merely competent school buildings.
The Canon: Architects Who Defined Educational Design
Every serious entry in an educational architecture competition should know these figures and the arguments they introduced. They form the intellectual lineage of the field:
- Herman Hertzberger — the Dutch architect whose Apollo Schools in Amsterdam (1980-1983) replaced the traditional corridor-and-classroom layout with a network of "streets" and threshold spaces. Every transition zone became a learning zone. His book Lessons for Students in Architecture remains the most influential 20th-century text on school design.
- Louis Kahn — the Phillips Exeter Academy Library (1971) is not a school but is the foundational reference for how learning spaces can be simultaneously monumental and intimate. The central light-filled void, the study carrels at the perimeter, the hierarchy of light and silence — every subsequent academic library owes it a debt.
- Aldo van Eyck — the Dutch architect whose Amsterdam Orphanage (1960) treated children as legitimate users of serious architecture. His 700+ Amsterdam playgrounds (1947-1978) are the precedent for contemporary thinking about children's spatial rights.
- Loris Malaguzzi and Reggio Children — not architects, but the educators whose "third teacher" principle is the intellectual foundation of contemporary early childhood architecture.
- Maria Montessori — the Italian educator whose concept of the "prepared environment" (child-scale, ordered, freedom of movement) demands that architecture be designed around the learner, not the institution. Montessori schools worldwide still follow her spatial principles.
- Alvar Aalto — the Finnish modernist whose Viipuri Library (1935) and Helsinki University of Technology (1964) set the Nordic standard for humane, light-filled learning environments.
- Diébédo Francis Kéré — the Burkina Faso-born architect whose Gando Primary School (2001) proved that great educational architecture can be built with local clay, community labour, and an elevated ventilated roof. Awarded the Aga Khan Award in 2004, the Pritzker Prize in 2022 (the first Pritzker ever awarded to a native African architect), and named the architect of the most significant building of 2001 by Dezeen's 25th anniversary retrospective. His work redefined what humanitarian educational architecture can be.
- Rosan Bosch — the Danish-Dutch designer whose Vittra schools in Sweden codified the "six learning positions" (the Cave, the Campfire, the Watering Hole, the Studio, the Mountain Top, the Laboratory). Her work is the contemporary template for activity-based learning spaces.
- Henning Larsen Architects — the Danish firm whose Nordic school designs set the global standard for biophilic, daylight-driven, community-integrated learning environments.
- Sou Fujimoto — the Japanese architect whose Musashino Art University Library (2010) is a maze of radiating bookshelves where the architecture of the library literally becomes the experience of learning.
- Alejandro Aravena and ELEMENTAL — the Chilean Pritzker-winning firm whose UC Innovation Center Anacleto Angelini (2014) reimagined the university research building as a climate-adaptive, socially integrated civic space.
A Brief History of School Architecture
The school building has been reinvented multiple times in the last 200 years. The most thoughtful contemporary entries draw from this lineage:
- Monastic schools (pre-1500): cloister-based learning environments where scholarly work and contemplative life were inseparable.
- Victorian disciplinary schools (1800s): long rows of desks facing a single teacher, high windows to prevent distraction, narrow corridors. The architectural expression of the Lancastrian monitorial system.
- The Open Air School movement (early 1900s): tuberculosis-era outdoor classrooms that became the first break with the enclosed disciplinary model. Surprisingly influential on contemporary biophilic school design.
- Bauhaus and early modernism (1920s-30s): experiments with flexible spaces, daylight, and humane proportions. Le Corbusier's early classroom studies belong here.
- Postwar democratic modernism (1945-1970): schools as symbols of democratic optimism and mass education. The first generation of truly generous classroom design.
- Hertzberger and the humanist school (1970s-80s): Apollo Schools, Delft Montessori School, and the European humanist tradition that replaced corridors with learning streets.
- The open-plan experiments (1970s): a brief, chaotic attempt to remove walls entirely. Mostly failed, but planted the seeds for contemporary flexible design.
- The corridor-classroom standardization (1980s-2000s): the return of institutional efficiency, mostly forgettable. The "corridor school" that architects like Hertzberger had already replaced became the global default anyway.
- The activity-based learning turn (2005-present): Rosan Bosch's Vittra schools, the Danish learning landscape, Reggio-inspired early childhood design, and the global rediscovery of the third teacher principle.
- The post-pandemic school (2020-present): ventilation, outdoor learning, hybrid space, neurodiversity awareness, and climate resilience as baseline expectations.
Contemporary Movements Reshaping Educational Architecture
Agile and Activity-Based Learning Spaces
The dominant new floorplate logic in K-12 school design replaces the single-classroom model with a palette of varied settings. Students choose where to work based on what they are doing. Rosan Bosch's six learning positions — Cave (quiet focus), Campfire (group discussion), Watering Hole (informal social), Studio (making), Mountain Top (presentation), Laboratory (experimentation) — have become the canonical framework.
Biophilic Classroom Design
Daylight, views of greenery, natural materials, plants, and outdoor access are no longer premium upgrades but baseline expectations. The landmark Heschong Mahone Group study (1999) linked daylit classrooms to approximately 20% faster learning rates, and subsequent research has only reinforced the finding. Contemporary schools integrate living walls, school gardens as curriculum, and circadian lighting systems as a matter of course.
Post-Pandemic School Design
COVID-19 accelerated three trends that were already emerging but had been ignored: displacement ventilation over recirculated HVAC, operable facades for cross-ventilation, and direct indoor-outdoor classroom connections. The Green Schoolyards America movement and the EPA's indoor air quality guidance are now baseline references for K-12 school briefs.
The School as Community Hub
Contemporary school design increasingly treats the school as a civic anchor — a library open to residents, a community health clinic, adult education in the evenings, farmers markets on weekends, voting in elections. Architecture either enables or forecloses this. Single-entry security design vs. multi-zone community access design is one of the defining questions of contemporary K-12 briefs.
Neuro-Inclusive School Design
Recognition that classrooms have historically been designed for a narrow range of neurotypes. Neuro-inclusive schools offer sensory rooms, acoustic zoning, varied lighting levels, retreat spaces for overstimulated children, and choice of environments. Schools for students with autism, ADHD, and sensory processing differences are rapidly becoming mainstream briefs, and their design principles are improving schools for everyone.
Climate-Resilient and Net-Zero Schools
Passive House certification, photovoltaic canopies over playgrounds, rainwater harvesting, cross-ventilation without mechanical systems, and carbon accounting are becoming explicit brief requirements. The Architecture at Zero competition and the ACSA COTE Competition have made net-zero school design one of the most active student competition categories in the world.
Kéré's Gando Primary School: The Canonical Humanitarian Education Brief
No single project better demonstrates the possibilities of educational architecture than Diébédo Francis Kéré's Gando Primary School (Burkina Faso, 2001). Kéré, born in Gando, was sent to Germany as a child for his education and returned to build a school for his home village. The design was extraordinary:
- Built from local clay and cement bricks — materials the community could produce themselves without imported industrial supplies.
- An elevated roof floating above the classroom volumes — creating natural ventilation that cooled the interior without mechanical air conditioning in a region where temperatures regularly exceed 40°C.
- Built by community labour — villagers themselves constructed the school, funded by Kéré through his architecture thesis at TU Berlin. The result was simultaneously an educational building and a training project in construction skills.
- Designed for growth — the original brief was for a small primary school; Kéré designed for future expansion, and the campus has grown to include secondary school, library, and teachers' housing.
The project won the Aga Khan Award for Architecture in 2004. It was named the most significant building of 2001 in Dezeen's 25th anniversary retrospective (January 2025). In 2022, Kéré received the Pritzker Prize — the first ever awarded to a native African architect. The Pritzker jury specifically cited Gando Primary School as the work that "served as an example to so many even beyond the borders of Burkina Faso." For anyone entering a humanitarian educational architecture competition, Gando is the reference point.
Open Briefs in This Section Right Now
The competitions currently curated in the educational and learning environments section on UNI:
- Learn-aid — Challenge to design an open learning module for the elderly
- FurniTeacher — Challenge to merge furniture with learning
- Cordial Science — Challenge to design public laboratory
- One Change — Challenge to illustrate the change you wish in architecture
- Uphold — Challenge to design locus for the upliftment of human rights
- Domain — Essay writing competition - Architecture in video games
For more briefs on the platform, browse all ongoing competitions.
Categories of Educational Architecture Competitions
Early Childhood Centres
Preschools, kindergartens, daycares, and spaces for children aged 0-6. Proportionality (child-scale), sensory richness, nature integration, and the "third teacher" principle are most literally applied here. Hertzberger's Delft Montessori School and Reggio Emilia-inspired briefs dominate the category.
K-12 Primary and Secondary Schools
The largest category by project volume. From rural single-classroom schools to metropolitan comprehensive high schools. Contemporary briefs emphasize activity-based floorplates, biophilic integration, post-pandemic ventilation, and community anchor functions.
Universities and Higher-Education Campuses
From the Oxbridge quad to the contemporary research campus. University buildings increasingly face the same post-pandemic questions as workplaces — how do you design learning spaces for variable attendance in an era of hybrid education?
Libraries as Civic Learning Space
The library is not dying — it is transforming. Kahn's Phillips Exeter, Fujimoto's Musashino, Alvar Aalto's Viipuri, and the contemporary generation of libraries as community hubs, makerspaces, and refuge points. Library architecture competitions are some of the most artistically ambitious briefs on UNI.
Vocational and Trade Schools
Fabrication shops, welding labs, culinary schools, automotive schools, CNC workshops. The architectural challenge is making these working environments legible, dignified, and pedagogically coherent. Often overlooked as design problems, they are among the most rewarding.
Research Institutions and Laboratories
The intersection of educational and scientific architecture. Louis Kahn's Salk Institute remains the reference. Contemporary briefs ask how research buildings can balance the intense technical requirements of wet labs with the generous public space of a university campus.
Makerspaces and Fab Labs
The new workshop — from hackerspaces to institutional fab labs. Design principles: flexibility, tool visibility, mess tolerance, project display space. The fastest-growing subfield in educational architecture briefs.
Humanitarian and Post-Conflict Schools
Schools in refugee camps, rural low-resource regions, and post-disaster contexts. Kéré's Gando is the anchor reference. Briefs like Kaira Looro (Senegal, annual) are the most consequential humanitarian education briefs running today.
How to Prepare a Strong Educational Architecture Competition Entry
- Start with pedagogy, not aesthetics. Before you draw anything, answer: what do you want this space to teach? How does the environment become a third teacher? Every design decision should have a pedagogical justification.
- Design at child scale. Educational architecture is one of the few typologies where the body of the primary user is genuinely different from yours. Sit on the floor. Measure furniture heights. Check window sight lines from 1.1 metres.
- Show the third teacher. Reference Malaguzzi and the Reggio Emilia principle explicitly. Juries reward entries that engage the pedagogical theory head-on rather than designing a generic classroom and calling it Reggio-inspired.
- Cite the canon. If your brief draws from Hertzberger's Apollo Schools, Kahn's Exeter Library, Kéré's Gando, or Bosch's Vittra schools, name them. Intellectual grounding is rewarded.
- Take ventilation and daylight seriously. These are the two most important technical inputs to a learning environment. Cite the Heschong Mahone daylight study. Draw your ventilation strategy in section.
- Design for community. Show how your school can open to the neighbourhood after hours. Single-entry security-first design is increasingly out of favour with juries.
- Include a neuro-inclusive argument. Show how your design serves children with different cognitive and sensory needs. This is no longer optional.
- Engage climate resilience. Passive cooling, daylighting, stormwater management, and embodied carbon are now standard expectations on any serious school brief.
- Draw in section. Educational architecture reads best in section — showing how light, air, and movement flow vertically through the building. Sections often reveal design quality that plans cannot.
April 2026 Platform Snapshot
- 6 open briefs currently curated in the educational and learning environments section
- 57 competitions currently open across all themes on the platform
- 767 total competitions hosted on UNI since 2017
- 7189 total entries submitted across all competitions
- 895 jurors have evaluated work on the platform
- 260K+ architects and designers in the global UNI community
- 68 disciplines including architecture, landscape, urban planning, and educational design
Frequently Asked Questions About Educational Architecture
What is educational architecture?
Educational architecture is the design of every built environment where learning happens — schools, universities, libraries, early childhood centres, vocational schools, research institutions, makerspaces, and humanitarian schools in post-conflict or low-resource contexts. It is one of the highest-stakes typologies in architecture because children spend roughly 15,000 hours in school buildings before graduation.
What is the "third teacher" in school design?
The "third teacher" is a concept from Loris Malaguzzi, founder of the Reggio Emilia approach to early childhood education. It describes the physical environment as a teacher alongside adult educators and other children. Space actively shapes how children learn, think, explore, and relate to one another. The third teacher principle is the most influential idea in contemporary educational architecture.
Who are the most influential architects in educational architecture?
Herman Hertzberger (Apollo Schools, Amsterdam), Louis Kahn (Phillips Exeter Library), Aldo van Eyck (Amsterdam Orphanage, children's playgrounds), Alvar Aalto (Viipuri Library, Helsinki University of Technology), Diébédo Francis Kéré (Gando Primary School, Pritzker 2022), Rosan Bosch (Vittra schools), Henning Larsen (Nordic schools), Sou Fujimoto (Musashino Art University Library), and Alejandro Aravena (UC Innovation Center). Maria Montessori and Loris Malaguzzi are essential pedagogical references even though they were educators, not architects.
What is Kéré's Gando Primary School and why does it matter?
Gando Primary School (2001) is a school in Burkina Faso designed by Diébédo Francis Kéré. Built from local clay bricks with an elevated roof for passive ventilation, constructed by community labour, and funded through Kéré's thesis at TU Berlin, it is the most important humanitarian education project of the 21st century. It won the Aga Khan Award for Architecture in 2004 and was cited in Kéré's 2022 Pritzker Prize — the first Pritzker ever awarded to a native African architect. Dezeen named it the most significant building of 2001 in their 25th anniversary retrospective.
What is the Reggio Emilia approach to classroom design?
The Reggio Emilia approach is an early childhood education philosophy from Reggio Emilia, Italy, founded by Loris Malaguzzi after World War II. In Reggio classrooms, the environment is treated as the "third teacher" — physical space actively shapes learning. Classrooms are arranged around a central piazza (communal space), include ateliers (studio spaces for art and making), feature natural light and materials, use child-scale furniture, and maintain documentation walls showing children's work. It has become one of the most influential models in contemporary early childhood architecture.
What is biophilic classroom design?
Biophilic classroom design integrates natural systems into learning environments — daylighting, views of greenery, natural materials, living plants, water features, outdoor access, and natural ventilation. Research, including the landmark Heschong Mahone Group study from 1999, has linked daylit classrooms to approximately 20% faster learning rates compared to windowless or poorly lit classrooms. In 2026, biophilic design is considered a baseline expectation for any serious educational architecture brief.
How has school design changed since the pandemic?
The pandemic accelerated three trends that were already emerging: ventilation (displacement ventilation replacing recirculated HVAC, operable facades for cross-ventilation), outdoor learning (direct indoor-outdoor classroom connections and full outdoor classrooms), and flexibility (hybrid scheduling driving multi-mode space design). The Green Schoolyards America movement and the EPA indoor air quality guidance are now standard references on K-12 briefs.
What is activity-based or agile learning space design?
Activity-based learning design replaces the single-classroom model with a variety of purpose-designed zones students can move between based on what they are doing. Rosan Bosch's six learning positions — Cave (quiet focus), Campfire (group discussion), Watering Hole (informal social), Studio (making), Mountain Top (presentation), and Laboratory (experimentation) — are the canonical framework. Done well, it is the most significant rethinking of K-12 school floorplates since Hertzberger's Apollo Schools.
Can architecture students enter educational architecture competitions?
Yes. Educational architecture competitions on UNI are open to students, early-career designers, and established firms alike. Many briefs explicitly welcome student entries. A UNI Membership unlocks unlimited entries across every educational brief currently open on the platform.
What is a makerspace and why is it an architectural problem?
A makerspace is a shared workshop equipped with tools for hands-on fabrication — 3D printers, CNC machines, laser cutters, woodworking tools, textile equipment, and electronics benches. As an architectural problem, makerspaces demand flexibility (rearrangeable furniture), tool visibility (the tools are part of the pedagogy), mess tolerance (finishes that can handle glue, paint, and sawdust), and project display (the work in progress is also the teaching). Makerspace design is one of the fastest-growing subfields in contemporary educational architecture.
Recommended Reading for Educational Architects
Start your library with: Herman Hertzberger Lessons for Students in Architecture; Carla Rinaldi In Dialogue with Reggio Emilia; Loris Malaguzzi and Reggio Children The Hundred Languages of Children; Maria Montessori The Montessori Method; Rosan Bosch Designing for a Better World Starts at School; Diébédo Francis Kéré Radically Simple; and the Heschong Mahone Group's 1999 Daylighting in Schools study for the empirical evidence on daylight and learning. For the contemporary case, read ArchDaily's archive of Kéré and Bosch projects and OECD's Designing for Education (2011, still the reference document).
Explore More on UNI
Beyond educational architecture, browse all ongoing competitions, see what's trending, preview upcoming launches, or study the past competitions archive. Related sections include public space and urban design (for schoolyard and campus public space), cultural and museum architecture, temporary and modular architecture (for humanitarian and modular schools), and free architecture competitions. Want unlimited access to every brief on the platform? Explore UNI Membership.