09/15/2025
Biophilic design meets pedagogy in several schools designed by COOKFOX, where architecture becomes a tool to enhance well-being and learning.
At the Marymount School of New York, abundant natural sunlight and planted terraces foster a strong connection between pupils and nature. The design maintains the character of a townhouse spatial distribution—intimate and human-scaled—while expanded to serve a larger community (pic 1 and 2).
At Mundo Verde Calle Ocho, a bilingual public charter school now under construction in Washington, D.C., the architecture emerges organically from its site, responding to the existing topography and maximizing solar orientation. The school is designed as a living framework for sustainability and cultural expression (pic 2 and 3).
In Cambodia, the Neeson Cripps Academy embraces an open-air approach, with flexible learning spaces accessed through outdoor walkways that capture passive cross-ventilation. The north wing contains science labs, an art studio, computer lab, film and media room, galleries and administration offices. Filtered outdoor air is supplied to all classrooms through energy recovery ventilators, optimizing indoor air quality and boosting learning capacity (pic 2 and 3).
Across these diverse contexts, the common thread is the intentional use of biophilic strategies to enhance student well-being, nurture curiosity, and create the best conditions for learning.