The Scotsman

Months after opening school already too small to cope without extension

- By DAVID BOL Local Democracy Reporter david.bol@jpress.co.uk

0 Boroughmui­r High School in Edinburgh will need a £4.1m upgrade to take in an additional 300 pupils. Councillor­s said the rise in numbers could not have been predicted A new high school that opened its doors in February is already too small, forcing a local authority to spend an extra £4.1 million to extend the premises.

The £31m Boroughmui­r High School in Edinburgh will need to be upgraded to take in an additional 300 pupils by 2027.

A host of the city’s high schools also need to be expanded to accommodat­e more pupils over the next nine years, including Balerno, Currie, Trinity and James Gillespie’s.

Opposition councillor­s have hit out at the lack of planning by the council administra­tion, but the authority said the rise in number of Boroughmui­r pupils could not have been predicted. The council must pay for school buildings from its own budget or from the Scottish Government.

There are questions over there being adequate space at Boroughmui­r to extend the building.

Alison Dickie, vice-convener of children and families, said: “The school was originally built to accommodat­e projected future school rolls. Since then there has been a substantia­l increase in the number of pupils attending Boroughmui­r from the feeder primary schools. This could not have been predicted when the size of the school was originally determined.

“We have therefore allocated £4.1m in our capital programme to build a new extension to address this issue.”

The council will need to invest more than £91.5m by 2027 to upgrade high schools across the city to provide enough space for pupils.

Green Fountainbr­idge councillor Gavin Corbett said: “It’s been obvious for quite a while now that the new Boroughmui­r High School is going to be significan­tly over capacity. Indeed, it is already so.

“At present a feasibilit­y study is being carried out to assess where best to provide the extra space that will be needed very soon. My own preference is that additional building is carried out west along Dundee Street.”

He added: “Could this have been foreseen? Almost certainly. The amount of student housing being built in the area has freed up former shared flats for families and hence school roll rises – that could have been factored in as part of the planning process.”

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