School as a Meeting Place
The new comprehensive school in Essen serves as a learning hub that brings the neighborhood together.
After six years of planning and construction, the new Gustav Heinemann Comprehensive School in Essen-Schonnebeck now stands complete – welcoming and designed for connection. A playful nod to its namesake appears throughout: the distinctive horn-rimmed glasses of Essen's former mayor and later Federal President are reimagined as a concrete sculpture. Sehw Architektur has created something remarkable – an inclusive building for the district that earned multiple awards even before opening its doors.
The building unfolds across distinct, clearly articulated structures that guide visitors intuitively through the space. The strategic offset of the two southern wings creates a striking entrance forecourt, immediately establishing the building's welcoming character. This isn't a school for students and teachers alone – it's fundamentally open to the community. Local residents access the integrated district library, forum, cafeteria, auditorium, and specialized classrooms, making it a true civic hub. The robust masonry façade features light-coloured, whitewashed clinker brick, punctuated by precisely arranged windows in wood-aluminium frames. Inside, warm wood defines the material palette: durable industrial parquet flooring, wood-glass doors, birch plywood cabinetry, and wooden slat ceilings that enhance acoustics. Generous windows, glazed entry zones, and interior courtyards flood the spaces with natural light. A thoughtful colour scheme—drawn from Le Corbusier's 1959 palette—uses five harmonious hues to enhance orientation and visual coherence. The school's true heart is the double-height forum. Its subtle slope creates dynamic flow into the adjacent multipurpose room, which can open seamlessly into the forum. The cafeteria extends beyond, while the public library anchors the southern end as a deliberately prominent, freestanding volume.
The building adheres to passive house principles without compromising on design or flexibility. Its solid construction and hybrid ventilation system eliminate the need for costly, complex mechanical systems. Natural gas condensing boilers provide heating, while passive cooling and individually controlled external shading manage summer temperatures. Night-time ventilation further reduces heat buildup during warmer months.
Photography Credits:
Philipp Obkircher
www.philippobkircher.de
Helin Bereket
www.helinbereket.com
(Published in CUBE Ruhrgebiet 01|22)