How many of us have a HAVEN to go to? Is it a natural thing...to
have a place that is safe and secure? Do we MOVE ON as we get older and
do we no longer need a HAVEN...or because our needs change our HAVENS
change?
The other day I was in the patio and noticed that a bluejay was sitting
on our gate. Not that this alone was any spectacular thing, but I
noticed his (Pardon me, but I don't know if it is a he or a her,
bluejays all look the same) real curiosity as to what I was doing and
most interesting was his lack of response when I came closer, nearly
close enough to touch. It was almost as if he was conformable with my
presence and the activity that I was involved with. He has appeared
several times doing the same thing. I thought this bird was comfortable
for one reason, he was visiting his HAVEN, a place of comfort, that was
safe and secure.
Every spring for the past, at least six years, we have had a pair of
bluejays that rebuild their nest and raise little-ones to the point of
their first flight. The nest is just below our master bedroom window,
with in perfect eye sight of both my wife and I to check activity from
egg to hatch to maturity. If you know bluejays, or what we have
nicknamed them in the West, "camp robbers", they make a very large
ruckus every morning...something that we have learned to look forward to
every spring. Every year when the birds begin to test flight they are
all over the patio. Mostly they hide in the large rhododendrons and only
move if their parents push them. We don't know how many really make it
and how many are captured by other critters, but we do know that some
do. During their growing period we are very active in the patio
preparing potted plants and cleaning from winter storms. The birds don't
seem to be interrupted by our activity. In fact, sometimes, I find the
young ones on the ground in areas that are very exposed, so I help them
back into the bushes, all the time their parents are watching intently.
They seem to be very comfortable with what we do for them. Our patio has
become their HAVEN and they return year after year, and now their
offspring return, just to visit.
In my early days of architecture I was involved with residential custom
homes. There is nothing like designing homes for families, creating
comfortable, specialized HAVENS. One of the most memorable projects in
my career will be our own family home in Port Angeles, Washington.
Facing the Olympic Mountains, the two story, passive solar, 2/3
underground home was not only a HAVEN for my wife and me but our three
kids. Today, after 34 years, the home continues to be a HAVEN for the
new owners. Our family visits there every time they have a chance, and
the new owners welcome them so graciously.
This Post is really important to me, as I truly believe that as an
architect that I have a moral responsibility to design a comfortable
HAVEN for my clients. This is not only true in residential architecture,
but as well in places of business, where we dine and shop and
especially in our schools. As we approach another school year those new
first time students are coming from a variety of neighborhoods. Some
from family homes, where for the last 6-7 years, it has been theirHAVEN . Others from broken homes, single parents, foster parents, and
perhaps places that some of us may consider a non-haven. This is, in
many cases, their first venture out of the nest. This first experience, I think,
is absolutely a key to their survival in the education system.
Our National educational crisis in education will not be solved by
great architecture. But with great, sustainable, creative design, that
welcomes the student , the staff and the community, we can be part of
building a HAVEN for learning. Great architecture does not necessarily
mean award winning, but architecture that creates an environment that
promotes learning, enables and allows for flexibility and change, and
strengthens the desire to go to school on a daily basis. The national
average freshman graduation rate (AFGR) in 2008-09 was 75.5 %.
(According to the USA Department of Education, IES, National Center for
Education Statistics), the lowest state number at 56.3% and the highest
at 90.7%. Although this is up a percentage point from 2007-2008 it still
means that nearly 25% of the freshman do not graduate. There are many
reasons that students don't stay in school, and again I don't think the
facility will solve the issue, but I do think we can create spaces and
buildings that enhance the learning environment and create HAVENS that
help students move on with comfort. Sustainable educational
architecture can lesson life cycle costs of a campus, reducing the
operational burden so that more money can be spent on great teachers and
staff, and more comfortable environments.
As humans we do things because we are comfortable and we feel
secure and safe in doing them. I personally will shop and dine at a
place of business where the first impression is good and I return if the
experience was comfortable. The first time student to a school that has
a poor first impression may only be setting the stage for an overall
dislike of going to school and eventually dropping out. New students,
and for that matter all students, need to feel welcome, comfortable,
safe and secure. They are in their own way, Moving On with a new phase
of life, leaving the nest, testing their wings and they need to know
that there are no other critters that are going to harm them during this
new experience. From the moment they walk through the front door of
this new HAVEN they need to experience this comfort.
Yes we all have HAVEN's! They change as we MOVE ON, but they have
characteristics that remain constant and as the bluejays in our patio,
and my family, sometimes it is good to re-visit that initial place of
comfort...Do you have a HAVEN!
Seeking a new "haven". One more baby on the way due in January. Man cave just not cutting it anymore. Maybe in a few years I can get back to the mountain tops.
ReplyDeleteMy middle daughter Sarah commented on the post:
ReplyDelete"Liked yore blog dad. I think you and mom created the best haven for my sisters and me not just because we had the best house but because we had the best family. Hope I can do that for my girls and for my students. I think it is really important to understand that a lot of times a child's only safe haven is at school."
Sarah teaches special education to pre-schoolers. She masterfully creates exceptional and individual HAVENs for each of her "kids". When visiting her classroom it is obvious that they love their teacher Sarah. Both Emily and Abby, my grand daughters, have a terrific HAVEN all created by her parents. They are so lucky!