Educational Architecture Competitions: Schools, Campuses, Libraries, and Kindergartens (Updated April 2026)
This is the UNI editorial home for educational architecture — the discipline that asks a single question across every scale of the built environment: how does space shape what and how people learn? It is the tradition of Alvar Aalto's Viipuri Library, Louis Kahn's Phillips Exeter Library, Mies van der Rohe's IIT Crown Hall, Hans Scharoun's Geschwister-Scholl School, Herman Hertzberger's Apollo Schools, Takaharu Tezuka's Fuji Kindergarten, SANAA's Rolex Learning Center, Diébédo Francis Kéré's Gando Primary School, and Anna Heringer's METI School in Bangladesh. It is one of the oldest and most consistently funded architectural typologies in the world — and the one where the design decisions made today shape how the next generation thinks, works, and lives.
What Is Educational Architecture?
Educational architecture is the design of every built environment dedicated to learning — from nurseries, kindergartens, primary schools, and secondary schools through universities, research campuses, libraries, lifelong-learning centres, and informal learning spaces in the city. It is less a single building type than a family of typologies unified by a common concern: the physical environment is never neutral, and it shapes the learning that happens inside it.
The Italian Reggio Emilia approach to early childhood education famously calls the environment "the third teacher" — alongside adults and peers. That phrase captures the central insight of the entire discipline. A school is not just a container where teaching happens. It is an active participant in the teaching itself.
Why Educational Architecture Matters More Than Most Typologies
Educational buildings are one of the most consequential typologies in architecture for reasons that have nothing to do with their visual drama:
- Childhood is formed here. Children spend thousands of hours of their early years inside school buildings. The spatial experience of those years shapes how they understand the world, how they relate to other bodies in space, and how they imagine what a public building can feel like. The stakes are developmental, not just aesthetic.
- The evidence base is unusually strong. Heschong Mahone Group studies have shown that students in well-daylit classrooms advance 19-26% faster in reading and math than students in poorly daylit rooms. The HEAD Project found that six design parameters account for roughly 16% of variation in learning progress. Ventilation, acoustics, and natural light are not soft factors. They are measurable clinical variables for cognitive performance.
- Schools are the most democratic public buildings in most communities. Every child passes through. Every parent visits. Unlike museums or cultural centres, schools are genuinely universal civic infrastructure. How they look matters for what communities believe about themselves.
- The typology is permanent employment for architects. Schools, libraries, and universities are commissioned in every economic cycle. Many of the most celebrated architects of the 20th and 21st centuries — Aalto, Kahn, Hertzberger, Kéré, Heringer — made educational buildings the centre of their practice.
- Educational architecture is civic architecture. A school or library is often the first serious building a community gets. The Gando Primary School and the METI School both began as acts of community self-construction before becoming Pritzker-adjacent precedents.
- Post-COVID, the stakes have risen. The pandemic exposed ventilation failures, overcrowding, and poor outdoor access as real health problems. Educational architecture after 2020 is no longer optional — it is a public health question.
A Historical Lineage of Educational Architecture
- Alvar Aalto (1898-1976) — Viipuri Library (1935) and Helsinki University of Technology: Aalto's Viipuri Library (now in Vyborg, Russia) is the founding text of modern educational architecture. Its undulating wooden ceiling in the lecture hall was designed as an acoustic and light-modulation instrument. Light is organized to reach every reading desk without direct glare. Every detail serves the act of reading. Every serious library architect since has studied Viipuri.
- Louis Kahn (1901-1974) — Phillips Exeter Library (1972): "A man with a book goes to the light. A library begins that way," Kahn said. The Exeter Library is organized as concentric rings: brick on the outside where the books live, concrete on the inside where the reader sits, and a central atrium of light at the core. Each ring corresponds to a different kind of reading attention. It is probably the most philosophically rigorous library ever built.
- Mies van der Rohe — IIT Crown Hall (1956): the canonical modernist architecture building. A single undivided open space held up by four external plate girders. Crown Hall is simultaneously a classroom, a studio, and a manifesto — Mies teaching architecture through the act of architecture. It is still the home of IIT's architecture school and still the reference point for "architectural education as built form."
- Hans Scharoun — Geschwister-Scholl-Schule, Lünen (1962): the postwar German school that became a manifesto for democratic education. Scharoun rejected the military grid of Prussian-era schools and designed an organic plan where each class had its own identity and its own relationship to the outside. After the fascist era, he believed architecture could rebuild civil society through the experience of children.
- Herman Hertzberger (b. 1932) — Apollo Schools, Amsterdam (1983): the canonical architect of the structuralist school tradition. Hertzberger treats school buildings as small cities: stairs become tables, corridors become territories for informal learning, and alcoves become retreat rooms. Every inch of circulation is programmed. The Apollo Schools are the most studied built example of Montessori-influenced architecture.
- Peter Hübner: the German architect whose participatory school design method involved students and teachers directly in the design and construction of their own schools. A radical practice that inspired a generation of educational architects worldwide.
- Álvaro Siza: the Setúbal Teacher Training College in Portugal (1986-1993) demonstrated how restraint, light, and proportion could produce an educational environment of unusual dignity at modest budget.
- SANAA (Kazuyo Sejima and Ryue Nishizawa) — Rolex Learning Center, EPFL Lausanne (2004-2010): the 20,200-square-metre undulating concrete shell that holds 500,000 volumes and almost no interior partitions. A library without walls. A campus building that dissolves into landscape. Won in international competition in 2004 and finished in 2010, it redefined what a university learning centre could be.
- Takaharu Tezuka — Fuji Kindergarten, Tokyo (2007): the most celebrated contemporary kindergarten in the world. An oval roof plan that gives 600 children a continuous running track. Zelkova trees grow through the building. Sliding doors dissolve the boundary between inside and outside. It won the Moriyama RAIC International Prize in 2017. Fuji Kindergarten is an argument for joy as a design brief.
- Diébédo Francis Kéré (Pritzker 2022) — Gando Primary School, Burkina Faso (2001): the school Kéré designed for his home village while still a student in Berlin. Built from clay and cement using local labour, with a suspended corrugated roof for passive cooling. Kéré's school won the Aga Khan Award for Architecture in 2004 and became the founding text of contemporary humanitarian educational architecture. Twenty years later it led directly to his Pritzker Prize.
- Anna Heringer — METI Handmade School, Rudrapur Bangladesh (2006): a two-storey earthen classroom building built by the community using mud and bamboo. Won the Aga Khan Award for Architecture in 2007. METI proved that the highest-quality educational architecture can be made from the most modest materials — and built by the people who will use it.
- Renzo Piano, Rafael Moneo, Norman Foster, and David Chipperfield have all made educational buildings — university libraries, campus master plans, laboratory buildings — central to their mature practices. Educational architecture is where leading practices go to make their most careful work.
Canonical Projects Every Student of Educational Architecture Should Know
- Viipuri Library, Finland (Aalto, 1935) — light and public literacy
- Phillips Exeter Library, New Hampshire (Kahn, 1972) — the ideal of concentrated study
- IIT Crown Hall, Chicago (Mies, 1956) — modernist architectural education
- Geschwister-Scholl-Schule, Lünen (Scharoun, 1962) — democratic postwar school design
- Apollo Schools, Amsterdam (Hertzberger, 1983) — structuralism and Montessori in built form
- Rolex Learning Center, EPFL Lausanne (SANAA, 2010) — the library without walls
- Fuji Kindergarten, Tokyo (Tezuka Architects, 2007) — the school as playground
- Gando Primary School, Burkina Faso (Kéré Architecture, 2001) — the school as civic act
- METI Handmade School, Rudrapur Bangladesh (Heringer, 2006) — earth, community, and pedagogy
- Setúbal Teacher Training College, Portugal (Siza, 1986-1993) — restraint as pedagogy
- Jussieu Libraries proposal, Paris (OMA/Koolhaas, 1992) — the unbuilt manifesto for the post-modern library
Two Pedagogical Traditions That Shape Educational Architecture
The Montessori Spatial Tradition
The Italian physician and educator Maria Montessori (1870-1952) developed a pedagogical method that depends heavily on the physical environment. Montessori classrooms use child-scaled furniture, uninterrupted work cycles, freedom of movement, and carefully displayed materials that invite children to choose their own activity. The spatial requirements are specific: low thresholds, varied alcoves, material richness, natural light, access to outdoor space, and the absence of rigid lines of sight from teacher to student. Herman Hertzberger is the canonical architect of Montessori-influenced school design. His Apollo Schools are essentially Montessori principles translated into architecture.
The Reggio Emilia Approach: Environment as the Third Teacher
In postwar Italy, the town of Reggio Emilia developed what has become the most influential early childhood education philosophy of the late 20th century. Its defining idea for architects is the concept of the environment as the third teacher — the physical space is an active educator alongside adults and peers. Reggio schools are organized around a central piazza, with an atelier (art studio) space, documentation walls displaying children's work, natural light, transparency, and connections to outdoor gardens. The assumption is that children deserve beautiful, rigorous spaces because they are capable, curious, and worthy of them. Reggio-influenced schools worldwide look different but share this underlying commitment.
What Research Tells Us About Learning Environments
Educational architecture has an unusually strong evidence base — a set of peer-reviewed studies showing that specific design decisions produce measurable cognitive outcomes. Every competition entry in this typology should know this research:
- Daylight: the Heschong Mahone Group studies of over 21,000 students in California, Washington, and Colorado found that students in classrooms with the most daylight advanced 20-26% faster in reading and math than students in the least daylit classrooms. Operable windows added another 7-8% improvement.
- The HEAD Project (Holistic Evidence and Design): a multi-variable study led by Professor Peter Barrett at the University of Salford found that six design parameters — light, temperature, air quality, ownership, flexibility, and complexity — account for approximately 16% of the variation in learning progress over a school year.
- Ventilation and CO2: research consistently shows that elevated CO2 levels (above ~1,000 ppm) impair cognitive function measurably. A 100 ppm increase correlates with reduced working speed and increased absenteeism. Post-pandemic, ventilation has become a primary design criterion.
- Biophilic design in schools: MDPI studies of biophilic classroom interventions show improvements in standardized test scores, reduced stress, and improved attention span in students exposed to natural materials, plants, and daylight.
- Flexibility and physical activity: flexible school layouts that allow movement during the day reduce sedentary behaviour without harming academic outcomes.
- Trauma-informed and inclusive design: the Association for Learning Environments (A4LE) has published a growing body of work on trauma-informed school architecture, especially for schools serving students with histories of instability, displacement, or violence.
Educational Architecture After COVID-19
The pandemic was the greatest stress test in educational architecture history. What it exposed was uncomfortable: inadequate ventilation, overcrowded classrooms, poor outdoor access, digital inequity, and rigid plans that could not flex to changing needs. The eight shifts now driving educational architecture briefs globally:
- Biophilic integration — living walls, indoor planting, courtyards, daylight-first classrooms.
- Outdoor classrooms as programmed space — not emergency fallbacks but designed, year-round learning environments.
- Flexible and hybrid learning spaces — rooms that can reconfigure for in-person, hybrid, and digital learning as needed.
- Net-zero and passive design — sustainability as a baseline for new school buildings, not an aspiration.
- Community use beyond school hours — schools as civic infrastructure that serve their neighbourhoods evenings, weekends, and holidays.
- Trauma-informed spatial design — quiet rooms, de-escalation alcoves, sensory-appropriate environments.
- Embedded digital infrastructure — power, connectivity, and display integrated into architecture rather than retrofitted.
- Agile furniture and reconfigurable walls — rooms that adapt to the activity, not the other way around.
The Library as the Heart of the Learning Building
Within educational architecture, the library is a typology of its own with its own canon. Three libraries define contemporary thinking:
- Viipuri Library (Aalto, 1935): light as the organizing principle of public literacy. The undulating ceiling modulates acoustic and visual conditions simultaneously.
- Phillips Exeter Library (Kahn, 1972): the carrel at the edge, the atrium at the centre, and the philosophical act of choosing a book at the threshold between them.
- Rolex Learning Center (SANAA, 2010): the continuous undulating floor that dissolves the boundary between library and campus. A 21st-century argument that the library is no longer a room — it is a landscape.
Contemporary library briefs increasingly blur into learning centre briefs. The line between "library" and "informal learning space" has dissolved. Strong contemporary educational competitions treat the library as the spatial heart of the whole school — not a back-of-house storage room for books.
Open Briefs in This Section Right Now
The competitions currently curated in the UNI educational typology section:
- 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
Browse all ongoing competitions for more briefs across every discipline on the platform.
How to Prepare a Strong Educational Architecture Competition Entry
- Start with a pedagogical argument. The best educational buildings have a theory of learning embedded in them. Your concept statement should make your pedagogical premise explicit in the first paragraph. Are you designing for Montessori self-direction? Reggio Emilia atelier work? Traditional instruction? Hybrid digital learning? State it.
- Design for the child's body, not the adult's. In schools for young children, every dimension is measured from the child's perspective. Window sill heights, door handles, stair risers, light switches, sightlines. Hertzberger's Apollo Schools and Tezuka's Fuji Kindergarten both demonstrate this uncompromisingly.
- Cite the evidence. Reference Heschong Mahone's daylighting research, the HEAD Project's six parameters, or A4LE's trauma-informed design work where they apply. Juries in this typology reward research literacy.
- Make light primary. Aalto, Kahn, and every serious educational architect since has treated daylight as the first design decision, not the last. A school with bad daylighting is a bad school.
- Design the circulation as learning space. Hertzberger's lesson: corridors, stairs, and alcoves are not wasted space between classrooms. They are where informal learning actually happens. Program them.
- Connect inside to outside. Fuji Kindergarten, Gando, METI, Rolex all dissolve the boundary between the building and the landscape. Post-pandemic, this is no longer optional.
- Respect community and context. Kéré's Gando School and Heringer's METI are both civic acts — the community participated in their design and construction. Educational buildings should feel like they belong to the people who use them, not to a distant architect.
- Design sections, not just plans. Section drawings reveal the quality of educational spaces better than plan drawings. Cross-sections show daylight strategy, volume, hierarchy, and atmosphere in a single view.
- Include experiential renders from child-height. A render taken at 1.1 metres above the floor tells the jury something a 1.7-metre render cannot. It shows how the child experiences the space.
- Cite the canon honestly. Reference Aalto, Kahn, Hertzberger, Scharoun, Kéré, Heringer, SANAA, or Tezuka where their work informs yours. Juries reward intellectual honesty about where ideas come from.
April 2026 Platform Snapshot
- 3 open briefs currently curated in the educational typology 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 UNI community
- 68 disciplines covered across architecture and design
Frequently Asked Questions About Educational Architecture
What is educational architecture?
Educational architecture is the design of spaces dedicated to learning — from nurseries and kindergartens through primary and secondary schools, libraries, universities, research campuses, and lifelong-learning centres. It is unified by a shared question: how does a building shape what and how people learn? The discipline has a strong evidence base showing that daylight, acoustics, ventilation, and spatial organization produce measurable differences in learning outcomes.
Who can enter educational architecture competitions on UNI?
UNI competitions are open to students, graduates, emerging architects, and established practitioners worldwide. Most competitions in this typology welcome both individual and team entries. A UNI Membership gives you unlimited entries across every brief on the platform — see UNI Membership.
What makes an educational architecture competition entry stand out?
Entries that embed a clear pedagogical argument — explaining how the spatial choices support a specific theory of learning — consistently score higher than formally ambitious but conceptually vague projects. Strong entries also cite evidence-based design research (Heschong Mahone daylighting studies, HEAD Project findings) and reference canonical precedents (Aalto, Kahn, Hertzberger, Kéré) with intellectual honesty.
What is the Reggio Emilia approach?
Originating in postwar northern Italy, the Reggio Emilia approach treats the physical environment as "the third teacher" alongside adults and peers. Classrooms are organized around a central piazza, materials are displayed as an invitation to learning, natural light and outdoor connection are prioritized, and documentation of children's work shapes the walls. Architects influenced by Reggio create schools that treat children as capable, curious, and worthy of beautiful spaces.
What is the most influential kindergarten ever built?
Fuji Kindergarten in Tokyo (Tezuka Architects, 2007) is widely cited as the most significant contemporary kindergarten. Its circular roof plan gives 600 children a continuous running track, large zelkova trees grow through the building, and massive sliding doors dissolve the boundary between inside and outside. It won the Moriyama RAIC International Prize in 2017.
How does post-pandemic thinking affect school design?
Post-2020 educational architecture briefs routinely specify improved natural ventilation, dedicated outdoor learning zones, flexible room configurations adaptable to hybrid teaching, trauma-informed spatial sequences, and embedded digital infrastructure. The pandemic exposed long-standing weaknesses in school design — inadequate ventilation, overcrowding, poor outdoor access — and the post-pandemic brief has become the new baseline.
What are the most important precedent buildings in educational architecture?
A standard canon includes: Viipuri Library (Aalto, 1935), Phillips Exeter Library (Kahn, 1972), IIT Crown Hall (Mies, 1956), Apollo Schools Amsterdam (Hertzberger, 1983), Geschwister-Scholl-Schule Lünen (Scharoun, 1962), Rolex Learning Center EPFL (SANAA, 2010), Fuji Kindergarten (Tezuka, 2007), Gando Primary School (Kéré, 2001), and the METI Handmade School Bangladesh (Heringer, 2006).
What does the research say about school design and learning outcomes?
The evidence is unusually strong for this typology. Heschong Mahone Group studies show 20-26% faster reading and math progress in well-daylit classrooms. The HEAD Project at the University of Salford found six design parameters (light, temperature, air quality, ownership, flexibility, complexity) account for ~16% of learning variation. Ventilation studies show measurable cognitive decline above 1,000 ppm CO2. Biophilic design in schools correlates with improved attention and test performance.
Is educational architecture a good specialization for emerging architects?
Yes. Educational buildings are one of the most consistently funded public building sectors globally — schools, libraries, and universities are commissioned in every economic cycle. Many of the most celebrated architects of the 20th and 21st centuries — Aalto, Kahn, Hertzberger, Kéré — made educational buildings the centre of their practice. The typology rewards architects who care about program, community, and evidence as much as form.
How do community and context matter in educational architecture?
Enormously. The most celebrated contemporary school buildings — Kéré's Gando Primary School in Burkina Faso and Heringer's METI School in Bangladesh — were built by and for their communities using local materials and local labour. Educational buildings that feel imposed from outside rarely succeed. Ones that feel genuinely owned by the community they serve almost always do.
Recommended Reading for Educational Architects
Start your library with: Herman HertzbergerSpace and Learning: Lessons in Architecture 3; Peter Barrett et al.Clever Classrooms: Summary Report of the HEAD Project (freely available from the University of Salford); Francis Kéré monographs and interviews; Anna HeringerForm Follows Love; Takaharu TezukaThe Yellow Book and his TED talk "The best kindergarten you've ever seen"; Pamela Loeffelman and others at A4LE (Association for Learning Environments) for trauma-informed and evidence-based design research; Alvar Aalto monographs on Viipuri Library; and Louis Kahn on the Exeter Library. For post-pandemic thinking, the Heschong Mahone Group daylight studies and MDPI biophilic-schools research papers are freely available.
Explore More on UNI
Beyond educational typology, explore related sections including typological competitions (the broader typology discipline), healthcare and wellness architecture (which shares evidence-based design methods), sustainable and ecological design (for net-zero school briefs), cultural and museum architecture, and heritage conservation and adaptive reuse. Browse all ongoing competitions, see what's trending, preview upcoming launches, or study the past competitions archive. Ready to enter? Explore UNI Membership for unlimited access to every brief on the platform.