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What are the six principles to consider when constructing a campus cultural landscape?

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Six Core Principles for Campus Cultural Landscape Construction: Creating Educational Spaces with Soul. Having visited over 500 schools, Shanghai Culture has found that 95% of excellent campus landscapes adhere to these basic principles. In the process of improving the campus environment, many schools invest heavily in landscape construction, yet the results are often unsatisfactory: some become mere decorations, some have extremely low usage rates, and some are completely disconnected from the school's educational philosophy. Based on years of experience in campus cultural construction, Shanghai Culture has summarized six core principles for campus cultural landscape construction to help schools create landscape environments that truly possess educational significance and cultural connotations.
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Case Introduction

Principle One: The Educational Principle – Let the Landscape Be a Silent Teaching Material

Core concept: The primary function of campus landscape is to educate people, and every design should carry educational significance.

Key points for implementation:

Curriculum Integration: Integrating subject knowledge into landscape design, such as a mathematical geometry garden, a Chinese poetry corridor, and a biological ecological pond.

Behavioral guidance: Guiding student behavior through spatial design, such as quiet contemplation areas to encourage independent thinking and open plazas to promote communication and collaboration.

Value Transmission: Transforming school motto and educational philosophy into tangible landscape language.

Principle Two: Cultural Principle – Highlighting the School's Unique Spirit and Character

Core concept: The landscape is the material carrier of school culture and should reflect unique historical traditions and spiritual connotations.

Key points for implementation:

Cultural Heritage Preservation: Unearthing touching stories and important events from the school's history and recreating them through landscape design.

Highlighting Distinctive Features: Personalized Design Incorporating School Characteristics and Local Cultural Features

Symbolic transformation: Transforming abstract cultural concepts into concrete landscape symbols and elements.

Principle Three: The Principle of Participation – Creating Growth Memories Together by Teachers and Students

Core concept: Excellent landscapes are the result of joint creation by teachers and students, not unilaterally provided by the school.

Key points for implementation:

Design participation: Widely soliciting opinions from teachers and students during the planning and design phase, and organizing design workshops.

Construction participation: Include activities for teachers and students to participate in during the construction phase, such as planting and painting.

User participation: Designing adaptable and creative landscape spaces that allow teachers and students to continuously participate in optimization.

Principle Four: Ecological Principle – Creating a Sustainable Green Campus

Core concept: The campus landscape should serve as a living textbook for ecological education, embodying the concept of sustainable development.

Key points for implementation:

Native plants: Prioritize the selection of native plants adapted to the local climate to reduce maintenance costs.

Ecological technologies: Utilizing ecological technologies such as rainwater harvesting, greywater reuse, and solar lighting.

Biodiversity: Creating diverse ecological environments to attract birds, insects, and other organisms to inhabit the area.

Principle Five: Functionality Principle – Meeting Diverse Usage Needs

Core concept: Aesthetic appeal must be combined with functionality to avoid being flashy but impractical.

Key points for implementation:

Reasonable zoning: Active and quiet areas are divided according to usage needs, ensuring no interference between them.

Appropriate Size: Designed to fit the age characteristics of the user.

All-weather use: Taking into account the usage needs under different seasons and weather conditions.

Principle Six: The Principle of Artistry – Enhancing Aesthetic Taste on Campus

Core concept: Campus landscape should possess artistic beauty, subtly enhancing the aesthetic literacy of teachers and students.

Key points for implementation:

Aesthetic Appeal: Emphasizing the harmony and unity of form, color, and material.

Spatial rhythm: Creating a rich spatial experience through variations in height, solidity, and density.

Exquisite details: Emphasis is placed on the craftsmanship and attention to detail in landscape features.

The construction of campus cultural landscapes is a professional and systematic project that requires adherence to scientific principles, consideration of both aesthetics and practicality, and a balance between tradition and innovation. Shanghai Culture, relying on its professional team and extensive experience, provides schools with comprehensive landscape construction solutions that are conceptual, distinctive, and feasible.

Contact the Shanghai Cultural Landscape Design Team now to get a customized campus cultural landscape construction plan!

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