Paying for the alterations was the biggest challenge. Since the public school system does not react to the design wishes of individual school classes – especially when these wishes do not conform to official standards – the group was left up to its own devices and the support of private sponsors.
The main problem for the eleventh graders was the size of the classroom. Every day, 18 seventeen-year-old pupils sat together in a cramped 21-m2 room. It was possible to make optimal use of the space using an arrangement of two concentric desks. The blackboard was also too large, and it was replaced by a smaller one measuring a single square meter. The class was quick to agree to all of the improvements (new lighting, better lockers, a new coat rack etc.). Deciding on a wall decoration was the only difficulty. While some dreamed of Scottish plaids, others wanted plain white with lace curtains. WochenKlausur built models of the classroom, and in a full-day workshop it was possible to reach agreement. All of the pupils’ proposals were presented for discussion, and then the ideas were eliminated one after the other until a single variant remained that everyone could agree upon.
WochenKlausur: Carmen Brucic, Simone Höller, Dominik Hruza, Pascale Jeannée, Felix Muhrhofer, Susanna Niedermayr, Stefania Pitscheider, Erich Steurer, Wolfgang Zinggl
|