| 2026-05-07 | |
The Educational Complex Sirius redefines the school as a decentralized urban campus composed of autonomous yet interconnected clusters to serve the needs of the entire district.
The project comprises four main functional clusters: a primary school, a secondary school, a sports cluster, and a congress centre. These volumes are unified by a network of public spaces – open boulevards, plazas, atriums, and landscaped terraces – that transform the site into a “miniature city”. This urban morphology introduces a diversity of spatial typologies typically absent from conventional school buildings: streets, squares, parks, and communal courtyards become integral parts of daily learning and social life.
All functional blocks are connected at the second-floor level by enclosed pedestrian bridges, ensuring safe and weather-protected circulation for students. Each block is internally organized around a central atrium that serves as a flexible hub for gatherings, informal learning, exhibitions, and community events. The interior programming responds to age-specific needs and interests, with dedicated zones including group study pods, open-access laboratories and workshops, technology and art clusters, natural science hubs, libraries, dining areas, and administrative units.
Classroom spaces are designed for maximum adaptability. Movable partitions allow multiple rooms to be reconfigured for various formats: traditional lessons, double-period sessions, academic competitions, lectures, or public presentations. This flexibility supports evolving pedagogical models and community programming beyond school hours.
Sustainability is embedded throughout the project. Strategies include photovoltaic panels for renewable energy generation, CO₂ sensors for indoor air quality monitoring, abundant natural daylighting, cross-ventilation optimized through building orientation, rainwater management systems, and a continuous green framework that integrates the complex into the regional landscape.
Designed to withstand seismic activity up to magnitude 9, and elevated to mitigate flood risk, the complex combines resilience with openness. Its public-facing layout allows individual blocks to operate independently as cultural or leisure venues outside school hours, reinforcing the institution’s role as a district-wide attraction and resource.
The project was a finalist in the «WAF Future Projects: Education» in 2025.
ATRIUM is an international architectural practice, founded in 1994 by Anton Nadtochiy and Vera Butko. The studio is known for its conceptual rigor and contextual sensitivity across diverse typologies, including public institutions, educational complexes, transport infrastructure, and private commissions.
The studio’s work balances innovation with cultural resonance, often exploring the intersection of technology, ecology, and social function. ATRIUM’s projects have been recognized globally, including multiple nominations at World Architecture Festival (WAF), AR Future Projects Awards, Architizer A+Awards, and others.
Among the studio’s notable projects are the Symbol Residential Complex, Green River Park, the Ruarts Gallery and Museum, the Park of Future Generations (Yakutsk), and Quantum School (Astana).
Photo credit: ATRIUM