Vittra Telefonplan sits about five miles south of Stockholm, in the town of Hägersten. The school doesn't look like much from the outside.
The focal point of the school is its mighty "tree," which serves as a meeting place for all students and unites the other elements in the school.
Since there are no designated classrooms, many of the students do their work on laptops supplied by the school. Bosch wanted flexibility to be central to Vittra Telefonplan's design.
But cutting-edge technology isn't the be-all and end-all at the school. Kids are given ample opportunity to do hands-on work that incorporates music, dance, and art.
Likewise, there are times when learning still takes place in groups. Bosch believes that any successful education system blends the individual with the collective.
But owing to Bosch's preference for flexibility, even the "cafeteria" exists in a kind of free-floating space, constrained only by metal frames.
When kids have free time, they can gather near the work stations or climb the bright-blue "mountain" in the center of the school.
Or, if they want to be extra secluded, they can duck inside the mountain itself. Contained in the stairs is a tranquil "cave" that lets kids think and work in peace.
If you have a flexible environment, then you are able to inject alertness through lack of habituation," Bosch recently told The Long+Short. "You put people in a different state.
Source: The Long+Short