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100 Classrooms for Refugee Children / Emergency Architecture & Human Rights

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100 Classrooms for Refugee Children / Emergency Architecture & Human Rights - Image 2 of 16100 Classrooms for Refugee Children / Emergency Architecture & Human Rights - Image 3 of 16100 Classrooms for Refugee Children / Emergency Architecture & Human Rights - Image 4 of 16100 Classrooms for Refugee Children / Emergency Architecture & Human Rights - Image 5 of 16100 Classrooms for Refugee Children / Emergency Architecture & Human Rights - More Images+ 11

Zaatari Village, Jordan
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100 Classrooms for Refugee Children / Emergency Architecture & Human Rights - Image 6 of 16
© Martina Rubino

The Syrian civil war has displaced millions of people, most of them are children, most of them do not receive an education because of a lack of schools.

100 Classrooms for Refugee Children / Emergency Architecture & Human Rights - Image 14 of 16
© Martina Rubino

Emergency Architecture & Human Rights is building sand-bag schools to host Syrian and Jordanian children in Za’atari village, located just outside the Za´atari refugee camp, 10 km from the Syrian border. A vast majority of people who have been displaced from Syria are now living informally within the host community, hence they are often found without access to social security, sanitation, and educational facilities.

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© Martina Rubino
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100 Classrooms for Refugee Children / Emergency Architecture & Human Rights - Beam
© Martina Rubino

Za’atari village is currently home to15,000 Syrians and 13.000 Jordanians. EAHR, in collaboration with the local community and a local NGO, Acting for Change Jordan, implemented an extension to the existing school in order to increase the number of students access to education: the school will be used by children in the morning and by adults during the afternoon, who will use the space to learn reading and writing skills.

100 Classrooms for Refugee Children / Emergency Architecture & Human Rights - Stairs
© Martina Rubino

The classroom was built with the superadobe technique. The construction is inspired by the Great Mosque of Djenné, traditional earth architecture from Mali and vernacular beehive house structures of Syria originating form Aleppo and Homs, where many of the refugees come from. 

100 Classrooms for Refugee Children / Emergency Architecture & Human Rights - Image 13 of 16
© Martina Rubino

Due to the limited choice of building methods and materials, and the harsh environment characterized by hot summers and cold winters, the beehive style is a viable solution for a school construction. This kind of building technique does not require high-tensile-strength reinforcements and can be built quickly with unskilled labor, performing better than tents, cement blocks and corrugated metal sheets in terms of thermal insulation. In comparison with a cement block structure of similar dimensions, the costs for construction were halved.

100 Classrooms for Refugee Children / Emergency Architecture & Human Rights - Image 2 of 16
© Martina Rubino

During the construction, EAHR trained local workers on super-adobe construction methods which can also increase livelihoods and strengthen the resilience of the local community. This method hopefully allows these skills to be re-adopted to build more sustainable, low-cost and energy efficient buildings within the surrounding informal settlements and during Syria’s future reconstruction.

100 Classrooms for Refugee Children / Emergency Architecture & Human Rights - Image 3 of 16
© Martina Rubino

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Address:Zaatari Village, Jordan

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Cite: "100 Classrooms for Refugee Children / Emergency Architecture & Human Rights" 29 Sep 2017. ArchDaily. Accessed 31 Mar 2025. <https://www.archdaily.com/880676/100-classrooms-for-refugee-children-emergency-architecture-and-human-rights> ISSN 0719-8884
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© Martina Rubino

无一砖一瓦也可以建造儿童学校,专为难民区而建造的沙袋建筑 / Emergency Architecture & Human Rights

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