Community hub work earns design practice top marks

DESIGN practice BDP is celebrating after earning award recognition for its work on a new £18 million community hub in North Lanarkshire.

The Newmains & St Brigid’s Community Hub won the Education Building or Project category and the Grand Prix in Architecture prize at the Scottish Design Awards 2023.

Designed to be environmentally and energy efficient and home to more than 600 children and staff, the campus comprises two schools and a family learning centre.

Hub South West Scotland delivered the project on behalf of North Lanarkshire Council with BAM Construction as its construction partner. BDP led the wider design team, consisting of Wallace Whittle (mechanical and electrical design engineer) and Blyth and Blyth (consulting civil and structural design engineer).

Scottish Design Award judges were impressed by the design features which promote both passive and active learning. BDP revealed its design creates a ‘dynamic’ radial array of teaching wings set around an open, central shared space. At the heart of the building is a multi-use area featuring Spanish steps and a helical slide that wraps around a statement figurative tree.

Image credit: David Barbour

There is also a reflection zone, to allow small groups or peer-to-peer learning or to provide quieter space.

All classrooms have direct access to the grounds, while external play spaces offer a range of sensory stimulating apparatus that include a treehouse, dens and play trails. Further plans include the creation of a wildlife habitat to enable outdoor learning about animals and nature.

The outdoor areas include an 11-a-side sports pitch, and new paths to connect the hub with the community. A forest school has been planted with willow structures, an outdoor classroom, a fire pit and den building zone.

Each teaching wing and lower level space is constructed from structural timber framing to reduce the building’s embodied carbon.

Image credit: David Barbour

The campus also includes a dedicated Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) themed classroom, a breastfeeding area as part of the council’s initiative to encourage more mums to breastfeed, EV charging for electric vehicles, and bike storage to encourage active travel.

Lindsey Mitchell, architect director at BDP, said, “Schools are at the heart of any healthy community. So, providing a successful, sustainable learning environment that promotes wellbeing is a contributing factor in supporting learning within a well-knitted social environment.

“This recognition for the creative, sustainable design of Newmains and St Bridgid’s Hub is fantastic. The project has always been about collaboration, and about creating a place for learning. That ethos really comes through. It is an exceptional space for community activity – delivering inclusion and engagement to build social cohesion and every unique aspect of this project has been received exactly as intended.”

Image credit: David Barbour

Michael Ross, chief executive of hub South West Scotland, added, “This new community hub is far more than just a school, it’s a community facility in every sense, providing state-of-the-art, flexible learning spaces which bring huge benefits to pupils and the wider community. Everyone involved in delivering this campus is delighted it has achieved much deserved recognition on a national stage.”

Jim Ward, regional director, BAM, commented, “We are delighted to have led the team to deliver a new, vibrant, and exceptional educational learning place for the community. We did this by taking North Lanarkshire Councils vision, set at the outset to create a ‘design led brief’ by engaging with the local communities, making them an integral part of the development process, which in turn makes them feel proud of their new facilities. The outcome is outstanding, and the awards recognition is fully merited.”