04/01/2026
Rainbow International School reimagines learning through a climate-responsive, three-storey structure oriented north–south and organised around a skylit central spine. Kota Green stone and locally sourced Tandur Yellow limestone define floors, edges, and transitions — transforming heat into thermal comfort while giving the campus a calm, tactile, and distinctly rooted architectural character. Classrooms open to shaded courtyards; bridges and niches foster informal learning.
The 83,500 ft² structure is embedded with the idea of practical learning, offering students the space and liberty to evolve — where movement becomes discovery, pause becomes reflection, and the architecture quietly recedes so curiosity, imagination, and growth can gently take its place.
[Rainbow International School, climate-responsive design, sustainable architecture, passive cooling, north-south orientation, skylit spine, courtyard learning, tactile architecture, local materials, Kota Green stone, Tandur Yellow limestone, contextual design, experiential learning, modern school design, architecture for education, rooted design, spatial learning, Indian architecture, biophilic design, thermal comfort, learning environment, architectural narrative, thoughtful spaces, community learning]
DesignWithPurpose TimelessArchitecture LocalMaterials StoneArchitecture LearningThroughSpace DesignInContext FutureOfEducation ArchitectsOfIndia CulturalSustainability GreenBuildingDesign ArchitecturalInnovation BuiltToInspire DesignForChange SpatialExperience