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C’est dans le foisonnement de pratiques parallèles et expérimentales qui caractérisent la société occidentale autour de 1970 que se sont créées à Londres des organisations prônant l’utilisation des bus comme outil pédagogique - voire comme substituts à l’école elle-même.
Parmi le réseau des personnes animant ces groupes (School without walls, Inter Action) des architectes qui travaillent également sur d’autres projets de Free Schools comme The Ark au milieu d’un bois, Scotland Road dans une église, Dartington dans une maison, ou les structures gonflables d’Action Space.
Robin Webster, auteur des articles Buy a bus for your school, et Have you bought your bus yet? (Where magazine 1971 et 1972) a par exemple réaménagé un vieux bâtiment religieux en école Montessori, le Gatehouse Centre.
It’s in London, at the turn of 1970, when the western societies where at the edge point of questioning themselves, that the idea of using buses as learning centers became the most popular.
Organisations like School without walls or Inter Action were build by various people, including architects already working on Free Schools projects like THe Ark in the woods, Scotland Road in a church, Dartington in a home, or Action Space’s inflatable structures.
Robin Webster for instance, author of Buy a bus for your school, and Have you bought your bus yet? (Where magazine 1971 et 1972) also turned an old religious building into a Montessori school called the Gatehouse Centre.
PLUS LOIN
Dartington aujourd’hui
Le Gatehouse Centre
Parmi le réseau des personnes animant ces groupes (School without walls, Inter Action) des architectes qui travaillent également sur d’autres projets de Free Schools comme The Ark au milieu d’un bois, Scotland Road dans une église, Dartington dans une maison, ou les structures gonflables d’Action Space.
Robin Webster, auteur des articles Buy a bus for your school, et Have you bought your bus yet? (Where magazine 1971 et 1972) a par exemple réaménagé un vieux bâtiment religieux en école Montessori, le Gatehouse Centre.
It’s in London, at the turn of 1970, when the western societies where at the edge point of questioning themselves, that the idea of using buses as learning centers became the most popular.
Organisations like School without walls or Inter Action were build by various people, including architects already working on Free Schools projects like THe Ark in the woods, Scotland Road in a church, Dartington in a home, or Action Space’s inflatable structures.
Robin Webster for instance, author of Buy a bus for your school, and Have you bought your bus yet? (Where magazine 1971 et 1972) also turned an old religious building into a Montessori school called the Gatehouse Centre.
PLUS LOIN
Dartington aujourd’hui
Le Gatehouse Centre