Environmental action - 2024 Finalist
Sint-Paulus
Belgium
Transforming playgrounds, cultivating futures
Sint-Paulus, a state-funded faith-based kindergarten through primary school in Kortrijk,
Belgium, has transformed its schoolyard into a climate-adaptive space, boosting biodiversity, air quality, and CO2
storage through its innovative and ecocentric educational model. Established in 1899, the school now serves 485
students, fostering resilience, social responsibility, and environmental stewardship.
Faced with the effects of climate change, urban heat islands, and biodiversity loss,
Sint-Paulus launched the “Climate Playground” project in 2016. This initiative not only addresses the urban heat
island effect but also enhances biodiversity, improves air quality, and increases CO2 storage through intelligent
design and community involvement.
The playground features over 40 trees and 150 bushes, a rainwater collection system that
significantly reduces water bills, and bird boxes that have increased local bird diversity. These efforts have
transformed a former concrete space into a thriving green environment.
The leadership at Sint-Paulus, guided by dedicated directors and a team of policy
officers, promotes a culture of innovation and collaboration. They have garnered multiple recognitions, including
the European Innovative Teaching Award and the New European Bauhaus Award.
Student engagement is a key aspect of the Climate Playground. The project has enhanced
education by integrating STEAM projects, promoting social-emotional learning, and fostering curiosity through
hands-on experiences. Collaborations with universities and international schools have enriched the curriculum and
provided students with real-world environmental challenges and solutions. The school is also the roots of the new
organisation BLES, which in two years has already helped more than 45 schools in Flanders to transform their
concrete playgrounds into climate-adaptive school grounds. BLES is creating sustainable change for more than 20,000
children and youngsters.
Should VBS Sint-Paulus win the World's Best School Prize for Environmental Action, it
plans to expand its vegetable garden and bee project, further integrating nature into everyday learning, and
continuing to develop sustainable practices that benefit both students, teachers and the wider community.

