New schools delivered in record time
The new school buildings are permanent, have airy full-sized classrooms, are networked for IT, and have proper facilities for children with special needs.
As the Department of Education delivers 10 new school buildings to Educate Together, the group made the following statement:
"No less than 10 state-of-the-art new school buildings are being handed over to Educate Together today... These schools, built by the Department of Education's Rapidly Developing Areas programme have been constructed in an intensive effort over the summer. Some projects have gone from green field to finished school in 14 weeks.
"The [new schools are] in Gorey, Belmayne, Lucan East, Carlow, Maynooth, Greystones, Balbriggan, Mullingar, Skerries and Swords.
"A key development is the delivery of the permanent building for Bracken Educate Together National School in Balbriggan. This is the school that was opened in record time last year in an emergency programme to address a serious shortage. The story hit the headlines at home and abroad. We are delighted to say that all the undertakings made by the government to Educate Together at that time have been honoured and that the school can now develop properly in a permanent building.
"These schools have been built in an entirely new fashion to previous school building programmes. They are 'system built' which means that they are built in optimum factory conditions in modular units which are then assembled on site. The schools are permanent, with light, airy, full-sized classrooms, networked for IT with adequate extra space for special needs education and proper facilities for children with disabilities. The buildings have lifts for the disabled, shower units and modern security and fire systems.
"A feature of this construction is that it delivers very high energy efficiency which will significantly reduce school running costs in the future and minimise their carbon foot-print. They deliver very high levels of air-tightness which is a critical factor for efficiency.
"The performance of this programme demonstrates that the State can deliver state-of-the-art buildings for schools in a highly efficient and speedy fashion. This means that there should be no reason for the continued reliance on expensive, temporary prefabs to address school space shortages.
"CSO and EU figures support the basic projections in the National Development Plan that there will be up to 100,000 new pupils in our education system by 2013. Despite the economic down-turn and a slowing of inward population flows, the CSO last night confirmed that there is a need for a minimum of 7,000 new school places per year in the next few years.
"This means that the pace of the current school building programme must be maintained and the necessary State funds ring-fenced for the purpose. The new system of delivery of school buildings is ideally suited for this purpose." (Source: Educate Together)
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