Council to spend extra £1.6m to help special school move

By Ellie Brown - Local Democracy Reporter

17th May 2024 | Local News

Coventry City Council wants to knock down both Woodfield School sites and replace them with houses (Image via Google Maps)
Coventry City Council wants to knock down both Woodfield School sites and replace them with houses (Image via Google Maps)

Coventry City Council will spend an extra £1.6 million on a project to do up an empty school so a new one can move in.

It means Woodfield School on Stoneleigh Road will be able to move into the old Woodlands School site in Eastern Green which shut in 2017.

The school will take on more pupils, meaning fewer children will be forced to travel outside the city due to a lack of specialist places.

But costs for the project have soared and councillors agreed extra funding today, 15 May.

As well as inflation, one reason for the higher costs is "complexities" with the design and refurbishment of the listed building. The building's protected status sparked questions at today's cabinet decision to agree the extra funds.

Planning permission to demolish Woodfield Primary School and turn the Stoneleigh Road site into 25 houses has already been granted.

Meanwhile the secondary school on Hawthorn Lane could also be demolished and replaced by a further 129 houses.

Cllr Gary Ridley, leader of the Conservative opposition at the authority, asked if the council can "push back" on the listed status and said these often cause problems around the city. Council director of property Richard Moon agreed that listing "makes life much more difficult than it otherwise would be."

Without this the council would likely have opted for a cheaper new build project for the school, he said. "I challenge anybody to walk around there on a cold February morning and liken it to the hanging gardens of Babylon," he added.

But Mr Moon said Historic England has allowed the council to demolish some of the school buildings and the groups have reached a compromise. He also said the organisation is "there to do a job" and they would argue that they are doing the right thing in preserving buildings for future generations.

"Is it ideal? Not in all circumstances no but it's an issue we just have to deal with," he added. Ten blocks built for the 1950s school are Grade II listed according to the Historic England website.

 The listing made in the early 1990s describes the school as an "early purpose-built comprehensive" built with a steel frame and precast concrete panels. Changes to the council scheme for the site's refurbishment include replacing roofs, strengthening work and more fire protection measures.

The decision also means Woodfield School will avoid delays to converting to an academy which depends on progress with the project. The school is currently split across different locations and is the only specialist provider for children with social, emotional and mental health (SEMH) needs in Coventry.

It is set to move to the site in Woodlands in late 2025.  Other councillors at the meeting voiced their support for the plan.

Cabinet member for children, Cllr Patricia Seaman, said: "This is Coventry at its best, doing its best, listening to our families and making it happen."

     

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