Mountain-Born Architecture: The Lung Vai School in Vietnam

Volume: 12 | Issue: 01 | Year 2026 | Subscription
International Journal of Town Planning and Management
Received Date: 12/06/2025
Acceptance Date: 03/02/2026
Published On: 2026-03-10
First Page: 27
Last Page: 35

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By: Ar. Kiranjeet Kaur Jassal and Ajay Kumar.

1. Sustainability Consultant, Rising Boxes Technology Solutions, Jalandhar, Punjab, India
2. Student, Department of Environment Architecture, Mahatma Gandhi Mission University, Aurangabad (Chhatrapati Sambhajinagar), Maharashtra, India

Abstract

Lung Vai School, located in the mountainous Minh Tân region of northern Vietnam, represents a context-sensitive architectural response shaped by geography, climate, and the cultural traditions of the Hmong community. Designed by 1+1>2 Architects and completed in 2020, the school demonstrates how educational infrastructure in remote regions can be realized through vernacular intelligence, material ecology, and participatory construction processes. Rather than relying on imported typologies or industrialized systems, the project draws directly from local terrain, building practices, and social patterns to create an environment that is both resilient and culturally meaningful. This study examines Lung Vai School through an integrated framework that includes site responsiveness, material selection, spatial organization, environmental performance, and social impact. Rammed earth walls constructed from on-site soil provide thermal stability and visual continuity with the surrounding mountains. Bamboo lattice trusses reinterpret traditional craft while enabling lightweight structural spans. Semi-transparent polycarbonate roofing introduces diffused daylight, reduces energy demand, and responds sensitively to the region’s mist-heavy climate. Decentralized water harvesting, biological wastewater treatment, and small-scale solar systems further reinforce the project’s self-sufficiency. Beyond technical performance, the school functions as a social catalyst. Community participation in construction strengthened local ownership and transferred building knowledge across generations. Spatial layouts inspired by terraced settlements support child-friendly movement, outdoor learning, and collective gathering. Through these strategies, Lung Vai School transcends its role as a functional facility and becomes a spatial extension of Hmong cultural life. The findings position the project as a replicable model for rural educational architecture in mountainous and resource-constrained regions. It demonstrates that sustainable design can emerge from local materials, cultural continuity, and environmental logic, offering an alternative to standardized rural infrastructure across Southeast Asia and similar contexts.

Keywords: Bamboo structure, community participation, environmental architecture, Hmong community, Lung Vai School, passive cooling, rammed earth construction, rural education architecture, sustainable design, vernacular architecture.

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Citation:

How to cite this article: Ar. Kiranjeet Kaur Jassal and Ajay Kumar Mountain-Born Architecture: The Lung Vai School in Vietnam. International Journal of Town Planning and Management. 2026; 12(01): 27-35p.

How to cite this URL: Ar. Kiranjeet Kaur Jassal and Ajay Kumar, Mountain-Born Architecture: The Lung Vai School in Vietnam. International Journal of Town Planning and Management. 2026; 12(01): 27-35p. Available from:https://journalspub.com/publication/uncategorized/article=25053

Refrences:

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