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Bramcote Hills Sports and Community College was a mixed state school in Nottinghamshire. It taught children from 11 to 18 (Years 7-13). It is located in
Bramcote Bramcote is a suburban village in the Broxtowe district of Nottinghamshire, England, between Stapleford and Beeston. It is in Broxtowe parliamentary constituency. The main Nottingham–Derby road today is the A52, Brian Clough Way. Nearby ...
,
Nottinghamshire Nottinghamshire (; abbreviated Notts.) is a landlocked county in the East Midlands region of England, bordering South Yorkshire to the north-west, Lincolnshire to the east, Leicestershire to the south, and Derbyshire to the west. The traditi ...
. It was part of the White Hills Park Federation with Executive Head Teacher, Kevin Dean, the School Leader, Mal Kerr. Bramcote Hills Sports and Community College was formally closed by Nottinghamshire County Council on 31 August 2009. At the same time the council agreed from 1 September 2009, to enlarge
Alderman White School and Language College Alderman White School is a mixed, 11-18 secondary school in Bramcote, Nottinghamshire. The school is a member of The White Hills Park Federation Trust and became an academy on 1 October 2012, rebranding from Alderman White School & Language Colle ...
, to incorporate the remaining site of Bramcote Hills School, following demolition of the unsafe upper school, this making Alderman White a split-site school.


History


Grammar schools

The school started life as two separate schools sharing the same campus. Bramcote Hills Technical Grammar which opened in 1955 and Bramcote Hills Grammar School in 1957. The founding head teacher of BHTS was Mr Frank J Cresswell. On Friday 27 March 1970 at 6.25pm on BBC1, Heat 5 of '' Television Top of the Form'' had Bramcote Hills Grammar School, with Josephine Allen, Heath Brooksbank, Peter Stone, Chris Fawson against Leominster Grammar School (now Earl Mortimer College). The team were beaten 34-33. Following the retirement of Mr Cresswell, who died only a few months after retiring, the two grammar schools which shared the same site merged in 1973 under the Head Mastership of Mr Lyons


Comprehensive

In 1978 the two merged grammar schools became a comprehensive school, to form Bramcote Hills Comprehensive School (BHCS) under the Leadership of Mr Pitts, succeeded in 1982 by Mr Maltby, until 1996 Ms Nada Trikic. Under the Head Teacher of Nada Trikic it gained
Sports College Sports Colleges are senior secondary schools which promote sports alongside secondary education. United Kingdom Sports Colleges were introduced in 1997 as part of the Specialist schools programme, Specialist Schools Programme in the United Kingdo ...
specialist status in 2004 and was renamed "Bramcote Hills Sports and Community College" "BHSCC" and awarded a grant to improve sporting facilities, this included a regeneration of the schools changing rooms gym extensions and out door surfaces. Nada Trikic left the school in 2006 to become a HMI Inspector of schools. In the summer of 2007 the school celebrated "50 Glorious Years" reuniting may old pupils, staff and teachers 2006 saw it join the first federation in Nottinghamshire, under the leadership of a "super head" who was to head 3 schools in the area. The Federation was founded as 2006 all three schools were without Head Teachers, Bramcote Hills Sports & Community College, Bramcote Park Business & Enterprise School and
Alderman White School and Language College Alderman White School is a mixed, 11-18 secondary school in Bramcote, Nottinghamshire. The school is a member of The White Hills Park Federation Trust and became an academy on 1 October 2012, rebranding from Alderman White School & Language Colle ...
College and all have falling numbers of students on roll The school also had a school leader which was Mal Kerr until he left when the school closed in 2009. Bramcote Hills has always organised form groups around the letters B R A M C O T E, coming from the spelling of Bramcote, though falling numbers lead to dropping the "A" form. The school years were originally split in two, grouping BRAM and COTE together for time-table purposes. As numbers on role were falling since 2003 the number of forms has decreased. In 2007 the new intake only had four form groups for year 7 (BRMC) compared to a 7 form entry in 2001. In the 1960s the four form groups were T E C and H, with T being the top stream. The school closed on 31 August 2009.


Campus

The School is situated in
Bramcote Hills Bramcote Hills forms the northern area of the village and Nottingham suburb of Bramcote, Nottinghamshire, built in the 1950s. It is separated from the main part of the village by the A52 Derby Road (the ''Brian Clough Way''). It takes the name fr ...
on vast campus site which houses other schools, Bramcote Park Business & Enterprise School, Bramcote Hills Primary and Foxwood Foundation School & Technology College within its boundary with Moor Lane, the A52 and Coventry Lane, Bramcote Hills Sports and Community college is accessed by Moor Lane, Bramcote. The School is built within the broxtowe green belt. A former sand pit known as Bramcote Quarry lies to the west, and is part of the original school campus and is rented to Biffa Waste Services, bringing in rent of £455, and royalties of over £10,000 pa and is being infilled to provide public open space and playing fields for the school in the future (With a view of selling existing playing fields, which are detached from the school site, to housing developers). The school originally comprised a Main School and an Upper School, separated by tennis courts. The Main School comprises a four-storey tower bock which houses English, Maths and Humanities, along with a gym and technology and drama block, Assembly Hall and recently extended Learning Resource Centre.(Library). The Upper School consists of Science Block, Music & Art Block, three-story tower block housing business studies, ICT and Modern Languages, and a 6th form Block 'Bramcote College' and a sport halls known as 'The Barn' as this is a converted Dutch barn in 2003 and forms one of the four indoor sports areas. In addition the upper school has another assembly hall used for examinations and is equipped for staging school productions with sound and lighting. The school unusually had two dining halls which were both extended and refurbished in 2006, one in Main School for years 7-9 and one in Upper School serving 10-13, this is a reminisce of the school originally being two separate schools. The site and school buildings are also host to several mobile communications and radio masts due to its hill location, a mast for
T-Mobile T-Mobile is the brand name used by some of the mobile communications subsidiaries of the German telecommunications company Deutsche Telekom AG in the Czech Republic (T-Mobile Czech Republic), Poland (T-Mobile Polska), the United States (T-Mobile ...
was originally sighted on the tower block of the Upper School, however this has been relocated to the corner of the school site where a temporary mast now resides, due to the demolition of the tower. The mobile mast nets the local council in the region of £8000 per annum on a lease till 11 May 2017. The school also has a large playing field to the north of the site which boarded Coventry Lane accessed by Moor Lane via foot, it also has to the south of the side a large running track and football pitches which are shared with the neighbouring Bramcote Park Business & Enterprise School.


Bramcote College

The school was host in the 1990s to "Park View 6th Form Centre" a shared sixth form facility for both Bramcote Hills Comprehensive and neighbouring Bramcote Park Comprehensive, enabling an intake and catchment from both of the schools. The 6th Form Centre was managed by Mr Andrew Kilgour. This partnership ended in 2002 and the 6th form was renamed "Bramcote College" and became the sole responsibility of Bramcote Hills Comprehensive School, and came under one budget. Bramcote College took on a new Head of 6th Form in 2004 Mr David Soulsby. The 6th Form is in a self-contained block of smaller class rooms that were built as part of the grammar school, now a block attached to the upper school. It has its own ICT room, Music Technology Suite and library. There is also a separate dining area for 6th form students in the upper school canteen, which is open throughout the morning till close after lunch, to enable student to purchase breakfast, snacks and pre-order lunch to avoid queuing with school children. In addition there is a large common room, with pool table and vending machine provided by the Students Union, with all profits benefiting the students. Bramcote College remained to have its own individual identity, with separate logos and rules from the main school, for example 6th formers did not have a uniform and with adult environment, students called staff by first names. The College has always had a strong and involved
NUS NUS or Nus may refer to: * National University of Singapore * Nus, a town in the Aosta Valley of Italy * Neglected and Underutilized Species, or Neglected and Underutilized Crops * National Union of Students (Australia) * National Union of Students ...
Student Union. With elected Male & Female Presidents, and Elected Treasurer. The Bramcote College SU had a good community involvement, running Annual Charity Days, and supporting the Nottingham Marathon by providing marshals for a section of the shorter course. The Student's Union also organises an Annual College Ball, for both years 12 & 13 to celebrate the end of term in May, before examinations commence in the summer. The performance of the 6th Form is always dependent on the intake, as the college does not have any entrance requirements. Results were seen to dip, after the nearby
Bilborough College Bilborough Sixth Form College is a sixth-form college in Nottingham, England. The college has students from across the conurbation. A third of its students come from Nottingham, another third from the surrounding county of Nottinghamshire, and ...
opened its new building, and attracted more students from the school. In 2006 Ofsted found the 6th form to be "Very Good" compared to the whole school which only received a satisfactory rating In 2008 the performance of the College had the highest
Contextual Value Added Contextual value added (CVA) is a statistic that was used by the government of the United Kingdom to assess the performance of schools. It was superseded by expected progress and then Progress 8 The statistic is intended to show the progress child ...
CVA score in the Broxtowe area. Bramcote College gained a new role following the Federation of Bramcote Hills, with Bramcote Park & Alderman White, becoming the Federation 6th Form. Bramcote Park again are now sharing the 6th Form of Bramcote Hills alongside Alderman White. The name was altered to "Bramcote Hills Sixth Form College". Following the Federation a £500,000 renovation project of the 6th Form accommodation was constructed in 2008. However, as explained below the building work found problems with the structure of the existing building. Following this the 6th Form was moved to the Main School Building, and temporary housed in the Learning Resource Centre, creating a common room and informal learning environment with ICT facilities, similar to that planned in the re-development. David Soulsby left the role of Head of 6th Form in 2008 to be replaced by Faye Parker.


Recent building developments

In 2004, plans were submitted for the building of a new technology and art block situated next to the main school site. This was subject to many objections due to the poor design aesthetics, impact on the local landscape, and the fact the school is in the
Green Belt A green belt is a policy and land-use zone designation used in land-use planning to retain areas of largely undeveloped, wild, or agricultural land surrounding or neighboring urban areas. Similar concepts are greenways or green wedges, which hav ...
. The plans subsequently never got off the drawing board. In a £500,000 re-development of the 6th form accommodation in 2008 to create a new open plan modern learning environment for post 16 education, including internet cafe and new common room alongside refurbished class rooms with interactive white boards. The new extension was nominated by Broxtowe Borough Council – both for Design and Standard of Construction, in February 2009, however, the nomination could not be founded due to the construction, leading to the findings of structural problems in the existing building. While completing these works, and re-roofing the building it was discovered to have brittle concrete, the problem was caused by high alumina cement or
Calcium aluminate cements Calcium aluminate cements are cements consisting predominantly of hydraulic calcium aluminates. Alternative names are "aluminous cement", "high-alumina cement" and "Ciment fondu" in French. They are used in a number of small-scale, specialized ap ...
, which was used in the construction of buildings in the Nottinghamshire county between the 1950s and 1970s. Subsequently, the refurbished building was never opened to students and the entire building was condemned for use due to its instability. Years 7&8 were moved to the two other schools in the federation as they had spare capacity, Years 9-13 remained in the safe buildings at Bramcote Hills. . Following a Nottinghamshire County Council Report on 14 May 2009 it was revealed there are further problems with the 'safe' buildings currently being used. The Design and Technology block was closed, as the building could not safely support the concrete roof. The work to rectify this problem was completed in the summer of 2009 by re-enforcing the windows with steel, and repairing foundations to reinstate the full block. In the Summer of 2009 demolition of the unsafe blocks in the upper school was completed, demolishing the science block, 3 storey tower block, and the 6th form block, leaving the gym, changing rooms, barn, and the art and music block, built by more recent construction. Prompt demolition was favoured to reduce the running costs of empty buildings.


Closure

The unsafe buildings put the future of the School and site into media speculation. The school and federation and Nottinghamshire County Council opened a consultation on the closure of Bramcote Hills Sports and Community College, and for Alderman While School and Language College to take over the remaining 'safe' buildings on the site, creating a split site school. This created a 14-19 College on the site in the existing buildings. Nottinghamshire County Council formally approved that the school close on 31 August 2009, with current students on role being transferred to Alderman White School and Language College.


Future of the site

The site is now part of
Alderman White School and Language College Alderman White School is a mixed, 11-18 secondary school in Bramcote, Nottinghamshire. The school is a member of The White Hills Park Federation Trust and became an academy on 1 October 2012, rebranding from Alderman White School & Language Colle ...
however the issues still remain current for the existing buildings. Alderman White under the White Hills Park Federation are continuing to run post 14 and post 16 provision from the site for the remaining federated schools, under the name of "Bramcote Hills College Sixth Form". Launching a glossy prospectus for the 2010 intake. However the sustainability of this 'new' venture cannot be seen as the remaining buildings on the site can only be used safely until 2014 / 2015, unless funding is found for new accommodation Further investigations into the structural issues with the building have been ongoing. Extensive structural testing, only recently concluded in February 2009, determined that the buildings that have remained in use can remain so for the next three years. It is likely that they can be retained beyond that and probably for six years, subject to regular monitoring and inspection. This should result in the buildings being in use until the time that Building Schools for the Future (BSF) funding delivers a solution for this area. Beyond that time the future use of the buildings is currently unclear within the context of BSF. A master plan, identifying the educational needs and requirements of the area will be developed to clarify this at a later date. The current proposals may provide the flexibility to retain parts of the existing buildings, subject to the monitoring and testing regime outlined earlier Under a
Freedom of Information Act Freedom of Information Act may refer to the following legislations in different jurisdictions which mandate the national government to disclose certain data to the general public upon request: * Freedom of Information Act 1982, the Australian act * ...
Request, copies of the structural surveys of all the buildings on the Bramcote Hills Site have been released and reveal faults have also been found in the floor and supporting structures of the Lower School along with the details on the failing roof beams on the Technology Block, and the possibility of failure due to the replacement of original metal framed windows with UPVC units. A number of options have been considered to address the need for sufficient teaching accommodation as follows: * Demolish all of the buildings and provide temporary accommodation * Demolish all of the buildings and build new accommodation * Repair and reinstate existing accommodation An appraisal has been carried out to determine the cost of building a new 14-19 vocational facility on the site. This has been estimated at approximately £13 million, which is far in excess of the estimated costs for repairing and reinstating existing accommodation. Repairing and reinstating the existing buildings is the option that will be least disruptive to students’ education and provide sufficient teaching accommodation. A Freedom of Information request from Nottinghamshire County Council request reveals the costs attributed to the building problems at the Bramcote Hills Site as at 10/2/2010 they are £1,752,642.71, which comprises survey costs, associated works from the survey of all buildings on the site £1,393,561.52 and demolition of the Upper School Block £317,368.65. The works from the surveys included works to the lower school, major works to the technology block - which are ongoing, temporary fencing and scaffolding, relocation of Drama, IT Science and forming access road to the Park School site. All equipment value retrieved from the upper school site was retained by the former Bramcote Hills School, ultimately returning to the Federations budget.


Notable alumni

*
Huw Swetnam Huw Swetnam is a British slalom canoeist who has competed since the mid-2000s. He won a silver medal in the K-1 team event at the 2009 ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships in La Seu d'Urgell. He also won three medals in the same event at the E ...
, slalom canoer, won gold at the
2009 European Canoe Slalom Championships The 2009 European Canoe Slalom Championships took place at the Holme Pierrepont National Watersports Centre in Nottingham, United Kingdom between May 28 and 31, 2009 under the auspices of the European Canoe Association (ECA). It was the 10th editi ...
in Nottingham


Bramcote Hills Technical Grammar School

* Brian Bates, footballer with
Notts County Notts County Football Club is a professional association football club based in Nottingham, England. The team participate in the National League (division), National League, the fifth tier of the English football league system. Founded on the 2 ...
* Geoffrey Kirk FREng FRAeS, Chief Design Engineer from 1994-2007 for Civil Aerospace, Rolls-Royce, and Chief Design Engineer from 1982-85 of the RB211-535E4 and from 1985-87 of the
IAE V2500 The IAE V2500 is a two-shaft high-bypass turbofan engine built by International Aero Engines (IAE) which powers the Airbus A320 family, the McDonnell Douglas MD-90, and the Embraer C-390 Millennium. The engine's name is a combination of the Roma ...
*
Pauline Latham Pauline Elizabeth Latham, (born 4 February 1948) is a British Conservative Party politician, who was elected at the 2010 general election as the Member of Parliament (MP) for Mid Derbyshire. Early life Latham was born on 4 February 1948 in ...
(''née'' Turner) OBE, Conservative MP since 2010 for
Mid Derbyshire Mid Derbyshire is a List of United Kingdom Parliament constituencies, constituency represented in the House of Commons of the United Kingdom, House of Commons of the Parliament of the United Kingdom, UK Parliament since its 2010 creation by Pau ...


Bramcote Hills Grammar School

* Andy Gill (journalist), music journalist and former Editor of ''
NME ''New Musical Express'' (''NME'') is a British music, film, gaming, and culture website and brand. Founded as a newspaper in 1952, with the publication being referred to as a 'rock inkie', the NME would become a magazine that ended up as a f ...
'' * Stephen Hammersley CBE, Chief Executive from 2004–15 of
UK Community Foundations UK Community Foundations (UKCF) is a Charitable organization#Charity registration, registered charity that leads a movement of community foundations committed to positive social change in the United Kingdom, UK through the development of “communi ...
* Jeff Owen, former presenter on
BBC Radio Nottingham BBC Radio Nottingham is the Local BBC Radio, BBC's local radio station serving the county of Nottinghamshire. It broadcasts on frequency modulation, FM, Digital Audio Broadcasting, DAB, digital TV and via BBC Sounds from studios on London Road ...
*
Amanda Solloway Amanda Jane Solloway (née Edghill, 6 June 1961) is a British politician serving as Lord Commissioner of the Treasury since September 2022. She served as Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Equalities and Parliamentary Under-Secretary of ...
(also Bramcote Hills Technical Grammar School), Conservative MP from 2015-17 and since 2019 for Derby North,
Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Science, Research and Innovation The Minister of State for Science, Research and Innovation (also known as Science Minister) is a mid-level position in the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy in the British government. It was re-created by the Second Johnson ...
since 2020. * Adam Tedder, actor * Julie Acred OBE, health service leader


References


External links


Bramcote Hills Sports and Community College

White Hills Park Federation
{{DEFAULTSORT:Bramcote Hills Sport and Community College Defunct schools in Nottinghamshire Educational institutions established in 1978 Educational institutions disestablished in 2009 1978 establishments in England 2009 disestablishments in England Sport schools in the United Kingdom