JC Project Wellbeing
Scope
- Public Space Research & Analysis
- Drafting Design Guidelines & Principles
- Design Thinking Training & Workshops
- Stakeholder Engagement (Internal)
- Community Engagement (External)
- Urban Tech Feasibility Studies & Beta
- Physical & Digital Placemaking
- Facilitating Cross-Sector Relations
Client
Status
Location
The Jockey Club Project Wellbeing was one of the first projects where we integrated our user research and stakeholder engagement as an integral part of the placemaking and design strategy. Together with our client team, were committed from the beginning of the project to create a project that stem from the research process of interacting our student users, and the teachers and principal team.
We started with the research question, how might we create a school for wellbeing?
We conducted workshops with 400+ students and teachers at 8 primary and secondary schools and uncovered several major factors that contributed to well-being:
- Teacher-student connection
- peer-to-peer connection
- sense of belonging
- sense of ownership
- balance of active and private areas
- flexibility for multiple kinds of activities
These become the basis to develop our design as we further relate them to school’s context and the spatial limitation.
Our 8 schools for Phase I and Phase II of this project includes:
- S.K.H. Wei Lun Primary School
- P.L.K. Ma Kam Ming College
- P.L.K. Ho Yuk Ching (1984) College
- TWGHs Ko Ho Ning Memorial Primary School
- C.C.C. Kei Heep Secondary School
- C.H.C. Living Spirit College
- POCA Wong Siu Ching Secondary School
- Raimondi School
There were many factors that affect the students’ wellbeing, and sometimes these needs are in opposition. For example, active versus passive, group versus individual, fixed versus flexible. From outdoor garden to indoor meditation space, to multi-purpose room. The challenge is to create spaces that can accommodate these multiple options, and remind our team that a key factor of wellbeing also lies in creating flexible functions outside of the day-to-day classroom. For example, putting more emphasis on soft-seating and zones with dimmable lighting, and other elements that can create different sensory regulations for the students based on their initial opinions.
Key Partners
- HKACMGM
- Po Leung Kuk
- Tung Wah Group of Hospitals
- PolyU CPCE
- The Hong Kong Jockey Club Charities Trust