
image: Sharon Danks
A School Community in California Collaborates to Create a Vibrant Green Schoolyard at Rosa Parks Elementary School
Schools across the United States and around the world are using their grounds to enhance hands-on teaching and learning, enrich outdoor play, improve the ecology of their neighborhoods, and develop and celebrate their own sense of place. The green schoolyard movement is flourishing in many forms and can be seen in school gardens and wildlife habitats, rainwater systems, renewable energy projects, green building efforts, material reuse programs, nature playgrounds, outdoor classrooms, art installations, and many other creative endeavors on school property. While individual projects on each of these themes are now fairly common at both public and private schools in many parts of the country, it is still rare to see a comprehensive approach being taken on a single K-12 campus.
Rosa Parks Elementary School in Berkeley, California, is ahead of the curve with a multi-faceted green schoolyard that contains hands-on teaching tools, a vibrant play environment, and examples of green design and local ecology. The project to retrofit an existing schoolyard is engaging students, families, teachers, and school staff in its ongoing design, implementation, and stewardship.
The green schoolyard project began in 2006 with a participatory design process led by Bay Tree Design. The resulting concept plan expressed this public school community’s vision for the future of their school grounds. Designed to be implemented in manageable phases as funds are raised, the plan is being realized project by project, with work accomplished each semester by the talented school community. Since the green schoolyard has a very modest PTA-funded budget, all of the labor is done by volunteers from the school community who have a broad range of professional skills that they generously contribute. The school holds work parties each semester to build or plant new elements and to maintain the growing number of features already onsite. Parents and teachers also collaborate to write grant proposals to fund individual projects each year.
Over the last six years, the green schoolyard has become the broad, unifying “umbrella” for many school-wide efforts ranging from renewable energy education to hands-on art installations and sustainable means of transportation to school. These and other projects spring from the community’s deep and diverse talent pool, and are shepherded by the individuals and groups that dream them up. Some of the themes and projects implemented onsite include:
Edible gardens. The school grounds includea wonderful teaching garden used for academic instruction by the garden educator and classroom teachers, and smaller “nibbling gardens” intended to be used by children for their own, self-guided exploration and unstructured play time at recess. Fruit trees (fig, lemon, apple, plum) and berry bushes are also used as edible landscape features around the playground.

Water systems. A small amount of pavement (300 square feet) was removed to create a nature play zone and increase rainwater infiltration. The school also installed a stormwater cistern to supplement landscape irrigation and teach students about water conservation.
Energy systems. Rosa Parks School is currently home to two renewable energy systems, and a third is planned for later this year. The smallest is a solar-powered pond pump system that the students can operate.

Students rotate the small solar panel to watch the water pump turn on and off—creating a very effective and inexpensive renewable energy demonstration that children intuitively understand and can interact with during class time and at recess. Nearby, a 1 kW grid-tied solar array (group of panels) generates electricity that offsets the energy used by one classroom. The educational value of this larger, prominently displayed system is further enhanced by a parent-built digital interpretive display located in the science room that includes real-time energy read outs and additional data gathered by students. A substantial 20 kW grid-tied photovoltaic system will be installed on the school’s roof later this year. This larger system should generate approximately 25% of the school’s energy.
Waste as a resource. The green schoolyard at Rosa Parks was implemented using green building principles and practices that emphasize recycling, composting, and recycled and reclaimed materials. In addition to the citywide composting and recycling programs used by the school district, the school garden includes compost bins and composting curricula. Garden beds are maintained organically, using locally produced compost. The wood used to create decorative picket fences around the schoolyard came from urban timber that was harvested and milled locally. The the solar panel installed to power the pond pump system also had a prior life on another site. The beautiful garden gate that was created by a parent, is made of reclaimed lumber.

Curriculum ties. Teachers of several subjects bring their classes outside to enjoy the gardens and to use the setting as an outdoor teaching environment. To this end, the schoolyard now includes a variety of outdoor classroom spaces—large and small—that can accommodate an entire class or smaller clusters of students while they collaborate on their assignments. Curriculum elements, designed with input from the teachers, are also installed throughout the site. Boulders from around California and the western USA are arranged as a geology trail for science studies. A “human sundial” is painted on the asphalt so students may observe the passage of time. A wonderful annual science fair, and many other school-wide celebrations, take place outside.
Imaginative play. For play, the schoolyard provides the usual places to bounce balls, jump rope, play sports games, and climb play structures. But it also includes a “nature play” space with inviting nooks that encourage students to gather for conversation and creative, open-ended play; loose play parts (mulch, twigs, plant pods, flowers, edible plants) for children to use in the games they dream up themselves; a pond for aquatic exploration; and opportunities to create art at recess using chalk and other simple materials.

Beauty, comfort and support. It is essential to convey to children that they are valued members of the community, and that the quality of their environment is important. The school community has worked to nurture an inviting and supportive environment at Rosa Parks by fostering comfortable microclimates, providing a variety of seating options, installing artwork created by the children, and planting flowers and other attractive vegetation that they can explore. These elements of the landscape mesh well with the “village-like” atmosphere created by the unique design of the school’s welcoming architecture and overall philosophical approach to “building community” through school-wide events.

Sustainable transportation to school. Rosa Parks holds “walk and roll to school” days to encourage students to get to school under their own power by walking and by riding bikes, scooters, and skateboards. Racks are included onsite to secure the rolling means of transportation during the school day.
Community stewardship now and in the future. The Rosa Parks Green Schoolyard Committee is responsible for keeping the green schoolyard features looking their best and for adding new elements to the yard each semester. Teachers, school staff members, the principal, parents, students, and community members have all contributed to making this project what it is today, and will be the ones to carry it forward in the future. This collaborative, ongoing design and building process is dynamic, exciting, rewarding, and educational, for both the children who use this schoolyard every day, and the adults who help to shape their environment.

Every school changes over time as its students grow up and graduate, families move on, and school staff members’ interests and careers shift. This is a natural part of a healthy school community, and is something that we at Bay Tree Design incorporate into our school yard designs. Green schoolyards are living entities—not static environments—and should be allowed to change as time passes to respond to their community’s needs. Green schoolyard master plans should be revisited and updated from time to time by the school community and/or the designers. This way, a project’s ongoing development continues to reflect the school’s current population and goals and remains relevant to the life of the school.
Since the project at Rosa Parks is now in its sixth year, and all of the kindergarteners who began the project have now graduated, we will be helping the school community to revisit the original master plan this year, update it, and plan next steps. Our firm has been the catalyst for this project from its inception, and has shaped the overall design of many of the projects implemented to date. However, it “takes a village” to be stewards of a green schoolyard. The success of this project is the result of the collaboration, dedication, and hard work of the whole school community and is a tribute to the power of working together.
More information about the green schoolyard at Rosa Parks School can be found in the video, Turning Nature Into Classrooms, produced by Erika Brekke for OnEarth.org and in Asphalt to Ecosystems: Design Ideas for Schoolyard Transformation by Sharon Danks (New Village Press, November 2010).
by Sharon Danks, ASLA
Endnote:
1. Phrase in article title is derived from an African proverb.
Links to related resources:
Asphalt to Ecosystems: http://www.newvillagepress.net/book/?GCOI=97660100259630 and http://www.asphalt2ecosystems.org
Bay Tree Design, inc.: www.baytreedesign.com and www.ecoschools.com
International School Grounds Alliance’s resource page: http://www.greenschoolyards.org/home/resources
Video by OnEarth.org about Rosa Parks School: http://www.onearth.org/media/video-turning-nature-into-classrooms
Accompanying video about Rosa Parks School and the “Asphalt to Ecosystems” book:
Link: http://www.onearth.org/media/video-turning-nature-into-classrooms
Title: “Green Schoolyards: Turning Nature Into Classrooms.”
Sharon Danks, ASLA, is principal of Bay Tree Design, inc. in Berkeley, California. She can be reached at: sharon (at) baytreedesign.com, 510-644-1320, www.baytreedesign.com.
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