Let’s raise the next generation to be smarter than us.
November 1st, 2016
Photographer:
David Guo
Whether or not they actually grow up to be architects or not, the primary skills that drive design and architecture can have huge benefits on our children. The way kids grow up to think, behave, solve problems and create can be improved immeasurably by teaching them from a young age, to think like architects.
For some young people in Beijing, Golden Week Holiday 2016 was an opportunity to comprehend the mathematical subject in hands-on manner. For five days at the beginning of October, children and parents flocked to the west entrance area to the 798 At Zone building to experience the custom-built popup spaces.
This year, Rotterdam-based design studio, Collective Paper Aesthetics, were part of the 798 International Children Art Festival program, offering a variety of art disciplines for Beijing’s children to experience through doing – including of course, architecture.
Collective Paper Aesthetics designer Noa Haim crafted an interactive installation with 1,000 heart-board pyramid play-units. Every play-unit is 100% recyclable and possible to use and mould in a multitude of ways . When it becomes impossible to reuse adapt – the material itself can ultimately be recycled.
On the fifth and last day of the festival, the building’s courtyard featured a “Mega Heart” structure; a four-sided pyramid, three-sided pyramid, Igloo and many spheres, stars and fragments of heart worked together based on the children’s own design. Giving the kids two hours lead-time, the 10-child “project team” worked collaboratively to piece together the structure – and the results are fascinating.
Teaching kids to be architects doesn’t necessarily mean they become architects. But it does mean that we will have created a new generation of creative and mathematical thinkers who can build something (both figuratively and literally) that our generation could not have imagined.
INDESIGN is on instagram
Follow @indesignlive
A searchable and comprehensive guide for specifying leading products and their suppliers
Keep up to date with the latest and greatest from our industry BFF's!
Natural stone shapes the interiors of Billyard Avenue, a luxury apartment development in Sydney’s Elizabeth Bay designed by architecture and design practice SJB. Here, a curated selection of stone from Anterior XL sets the backdrop for the project’s material language.
In the second instalment of our performance seating three-parter, we turn to DKO’s Michael Drescher and Jacob Olsen to peek behind Sayl’s confident architectural form and explore the ideas of inclusivity, adaptability and freedom to move as hallmarks of what sitting your best actually means.
The Geelong College’s Sport and Wellbeing Centre ‘Belerren’ designed by Wardle is designed around bringing in natural light. But Shade Factor’s job was to help modulate and precisely control it for the most important competitive moments.
Stepping into Intuit’s Sydney workplace certainly doesn’t feel like walking into an office. Why? In this film, we discover that, when joy takes precedence as a design driver, even a high-performing commercial CBD headquarters can feel like an intuitive wonderland that invites employees to choose their own adventure.
Panorama Design Group brings an imaginative world to life for knowledge hunting in a kids’ bookstore in Chengdu – and Joan Miró was the source of inspiration.
Frightening or fascinating? Perth Children’s Hospital takes the nightmare out of hospital visits, inviting curiosity and play into its life-changing spaces.
The internet never sleeps! Here's the stuff you might have missed
The Australian Institute of Architects (AIA) has announced the shortlist for the 2026 New South Wales Architecture Awards, with more than 120 projects recognised across 13 categories.