Tech-Conscious School Designs

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Rosan Bosch Studio Presents the Award-Winning Garzón School

Rosan Bosch Studio has designed The Garzón School — an award-winning educational campus set within a 94-acre rural landscape in Uruguay. This project presents a bold and timely vision for nature-based education in an era increasingly defined by digital acceleration and artificial intelligence.

The Garzón School project responds to a critical question facing contemporary education. Namely, what kinds of physical environments do children need when technology has transformed how knowledge is accessed and shared? The answer lies in a design that elevates sensory experience, human connection, and direct engagement with the natural world. The guiding principle of the school — that the school is the park and the park is the school — dissolves the conventional boundary between classroom and landscape.

Trend Themes

  1. Nature-based Learning — Immersive outdoor campuses signal potential for education models that balance digital fluency with sensory development, ecological literacy, and place-based discovery.
  2. Hybrid School Environments — Flexible designs that merge classrooms with landscapes reveal new possibilities for learning spaces that support collaboration, wellbeing, and adaptive pedagogy.
  3. Tech-conscious Architecture — Built environments that counterbalance AI-driven education with human-centered design create openings for schools that prioritize presence, connection, and experiential learning.

Industry Implications

  1. Education — Schools and curriculum providers can reference nature-integrated campuses as a pathway toward differentiated learning experiences in technology-saturated contexts.
  2. Architecture — Design firms are seeing demand for campuses that replace conventional classrooms with fluid, multisensory environments shaped around movement, ecology, and social interaction.
  3. Edtech — Digital learning platforms may increasingly intersect with physical space strategies that frame technology as a complement to, rather than a substitute for, embodied education.

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