It鈥檚 good that Cabe is assessing designs for 好色先生TV Schools for the Future, but the way it鈥檚 going about it leaves much to be desired
I am client adviser to the east London borough of Tower Hamlets, which is applying for funding from the third wave of 好色先生TV Schools for the Future projects. One of these schools was put forward to undergo Cabe鈥檚 new assessment procedure for schools, which gave me the chance to see how it worked from close range. And I鈥檓 sorry to say that it seems to me and the council that the system is flawed in several areas.
Cabe is an important part of the BSF design process. Its comments are useful and provide direction to design teams and, in the case of Tower Hamlets, the issues raised in the school panel assessments gave us focus. However, Cabe gives views only on the material submitted, which makes the process limited and static, and we fail to see how this takes into account the design and educational brief. It is, therefore, out of context of the bigger picture.
The brief naturally informs the design process and is central to the evolution of the scheme. The process also involves continuous and meaningful consultation with pupils, staff, governors and the community. This records the clients and building users鈥 aspirations for their project, and often results in important decisions being taken. All of the ideals and aspirations that stem from the design process are enhanced by the brief and hindered only by existing constraints. It is here where the Cabe assessment process is flawed.
Tower Hamlets is dealing with schools where most of the buildings are to be retained and remodelled alongside smaller elements of new build. Therefore, construction and refurbishment works take place around an operating school and involve complicated decanting and phasing operations. These impose constraints, often affecting the form and massing.
In the latest assessment reports on the Bethnal Green Technology College project, the buildings were given mediocre scores that did not acknowledge the obvious issues and constraints, let alone take them into account. All other individual elements were 鈥済ood鈥 or 鈥渆xcellent鈥. The overall design quality rating of 鈥渘ot yet good enough鈥, based on Cabe鈥檚 assertion that 鈥渙nly proposals achieving an overall rating of 鈥榚xcellent鈥 or 鈥榞ood鈥 are regarded as acceptable鈥 is a bit like getting 10 A*s and one B at GCSE and having your whole grade marked down to a B. Is that fair?
Cabe鈥檚 method is a bit like getting 10 A*s and one B at GCSE and having your whole grade marked down to B. Is that fair?
The current process adopted by Cabe is not sending out the right messages, it is not enabling the education and building industries to learn from elements of best practice 鈥 those solutions that scored an excellent rating 鈥 and it is not, therefore, appropriate.
Surely a more constructive method of evaluating the assessment criteria would be to allocate points, similar to the system utilised in BREEAM assessments or the design quality indicator (DQI) briefing and assessment tools. And while I鈥檓 on this subject, wouldn鈥檛 it make sense to give Cabe鈥檚 10-point assessments some parity with the DQI criteria? This would recognise the achievement of high design quality in all areas where this is realistic and achievable, provide consensus views from a wider audience, balance areas that are obviously beyond the school and team鈥檚 control, and provide a fair assessment overall.
We welcome constructive criticism that can improve schools for the future, but bringing design ratings down to the lowest common denominator only buries pockets of excellence from which we can all learn. Councils and the industry as a whole need to help encourage a fairer system by freely providing their feedback and demanding a system that does not penalise entire projects for elements designed with valid reason. It is demoralising for the whole team and unproductive for BSF.
We have sent our comments to Cabe and have called for a friendlier and more inclusive system. Let鈥檚 hope it listens.
Postscript
Caroline Buckingham is a director of HLM Architects
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