{"id":10991,"date":"2025-12-09T13:51:01","date_gmt":"2025-12-09T13:51:01","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/rutha.org\/index.php\/2025\/12\/09\/aacm-designs-kindergarten-in-italy-to-feel-like-a-small-village\/"},"modified":"2025-12-09T13:51:01","modified_gmt":"2025-12-09T13:51:01","slug":"aacm-designs-kindergarten-in-italy-to-feel-like-a-small-village","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/rutha.org\/index.php\/2025\/12\/09\/aacm-designs-kindergarten-in-italy-to-feel-like-a-small-village\/","title":{"rendered":"AACM designs kindergarten in Italy to feel like “a small village”"},"content":{"rendered":"
\"Kinder<\/div>\n

An “abstract ensemble” of pyramidal roofs cloaked in terracotta<\/a> tiles was designed to evoke the feel of a small village at Kinder Rain, a kindergarten<\/a> in Italy<\/a> recently completed by local architecture studio AACM.<\/span><\/p>\n

The 672-square-metre kindergarten is located in Piove di Sacco, Padua, where it occupies a green site surrounded by trees.<\/p>\n

\"View
AACM has completed a kindergarten in Italy<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

Looking to create a form that would feel familiar for both pupils and the surrounding community, AACM<\/a> drew on traditional Veneto cabins known as Casone Veneto, which informed the kindergarten’s pyramidal roofs.<\/p>\n

“The idea of building a public piece of architecture made us think about how to link the project to the history of the place, to make it a building that is welcomed and understood by locals,” AACM co-founder Rodolfo Morandi told Dezeen.<\/p>\n

\"Exterior
Its structure is topped with pyramidal roofs<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

“The shape is an echo of the traditional fishermen’s houses called Casone Veneto that, with its sloped roof, is a sort of a monument in the culture of the Piove di Sacco area,” he continued.<\/p>\n

“The school appears then as a small village, an abstract ensemble of pyramidal ‘houses’ gathered around a central square, the ‘agora’, an inner playroom faced by each classroom.”<\/p>\n

\"Courtyard
Terracotta tiles cloak the exterior<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

Kinder Rain’s classrooms are organised around this central playroom, which acts as a connecting space alongside a hall and cloakroom to avoid the need for any circulation corridors.<\/p>\n

In each classroom, the pyramidal roof forms are expressed by steep, high ceilings culminating in skylights, which AACM hopes will “ignite the imaginations” of those inside.<\/p>\n

\"Children
The courtyards are flanked by concrete benches<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

A minimal palette focuses attention on the building’s geometry, with wooden floors, white walls and wood fibre panel ceilings, which both control acoustics in the taller spaces and nod to the traditionally thatched roofs of Casone Veneto.<\/p>\n

Around the building’s perimeter, three courtyards or ‘external classrooms’ open out onto the surrounding site through large openings, where a paved walkway and concrete bench seating wrap the edge of the building and expand into an entrance plaza to the south.<\/p>\n