Students have a hand in building campus entrance
The dozen 14 and 15-year-olds on the foundation course for building craft operations joined with sculptor Pete Codling to form the landscaped area outside the Arena Skills Centre.
They made mounds of their hands to help him to make a hand sculpture on the right of the building's entrance to welcome visitors. It is inspired by a hand holding a tool or being offered for a handshake and is being installed this week. It measures 5ft tall and will total around 6.5ft on its brick plinth
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Hide AdIt is made of copper jesmonite, a copper powder suspended in a bio-resin that will verdigris with a green coating.
The hand was chosen as a symbol of education, communication and skill. The main hand shape on the left is in the form of two raised flower beds shaped like a thumb and small finger and planted with sensory plants. The rest of the hand is depicted by a resin-bound aggegrate surface and aluminium edging.
The students also rendered some of the walls of the flower beds as the landscaping took shape to put their classroom knowledge to practical use.
Opened in January 2005, the skills centre has lacked any landscaping until now.
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