VISION Issue 34 | Page 30

30 The ground floor, Dolly’s Café has a brilliant vibe within an urban context of adjacent apartments, townhouses and individual residences on a busy road. The ground plane opens most visibly through its glazing to provide the easiest of transitions between inside and out. An aesthetic based upon a distilled material palette of steel, glass and timber in their relatively natural states, proves highly effective in the making of a calm, tranquil study environment. No brightly coloured fandangles are required to suggest upbeat learning. Finely scaled mullions are evidence of pared structure that allows Viridian double-glazed units to perform with understated, crystalline elegance. Here, the form-making and architecture of extroverted character does the heavy lifting rather than a reliance on artificial or cosmetic flourishes to invest optimism usually framed by lifeless spaces. Daylight, the architect seems to be saying, is the great uplifter and daily tonic. Gipson’s enthusiasm for education and its role as a platform for continuing enquiry throughout life, drives his passion for more enlightened learning with the physical environment as pivotal. Corridors are rendered irrelevant with glass and timber screens providing transitional cues between learning spaces. PETER HYATT, VISION