Timber rooves held together with 鈥榞lue and panel pins鈥 and materials that turn to 鈥榝ragile Weetabix鈥 when wet are ticking timebombs in our school buildings, finds Jessica Hill A swollen national debt, depleted construction force and baby boom after the Second World War made Britain desperate for new ways to build schools cheaply and quickly. Many of the quick fixes 鈥 from lightweight cement to hollow concrete blocks embedded in asbestos 鈥 were then forgotten about for decades. Now the Department for Education is finally commissioning a 拢4.8 million research project into the structural dangers of post-war buildings, two years after it was proposed. Matt Byatt, the immediate past president of the Institution of Structural Engineers, believes there is 鈥渁 whole legacy鈥 of buildings that have been forgotten about. 鈥淪everal new technologies were tried and adopted in the 1950s and 1960s. Those buildings have not been maintained as well as they should have been.鈥 Matt Byatt immediate past president of IstructE 鈥楽ystem-build鈥 stresses Of the 64,000 school buildings across England, 13,800 (22 per cent) come under the loose banner of 鈥渟ystem-build blocks鈥. There are 12 known types made from concrete, steel and timber. Of these, 3,600 (26 per cent) 鈥渕ay be more susceptible to deterioration鈥, a National Audit Office (NAO) report last year found. Like those made with RAAC (reinforced autoclaved aerated concrete), most system-build blocks are fragile structures, now at double their recommended shelf life of 30 to 40 years. But repairing or replacing them often involves disturbing the asbestos buried within them. As of last year, the DfE knew of six system-built blocks fully or partially closed since 2017 because of structural instability. But officials don’t know exactly how and with what materials these post-war schools were built. The DfE’s own condition data collection surveys (CDCs) are only simple visual assessments. Schools Week analysis of CDC surveys carried out between 2017 and 2019 found 987 system-built school structures referred to as 鈥渦nknown鈥 type. Laingspan and Intergrid Laingspan and Intergrid are two light-frame concrete systems that sit with RAAC at the top of the DfE’s priority list. They were used in the 1950s and 1960s to speed up construction and economise on steel, and were found in two buildings that closed urgently, one following the collapse of a wall, the NAO said. The union Unison warned 鈥渢here is the potential for a catastrophic collapse鈥 of these structures. In March, schools minister Damian Hinds said 24 schools had such buildings. All but one are now part of the school rebuilding programme. Unison last year accused the DfE of knowing about the risks for 鈥渁t least a number of years鈥 but not communicating the risks with 鈥渟taff, pupils or parents using those buildings on a daily basis鈥. CLASP Short for the “Consortium of Local Authorities Special Programme”, these buildings were prefabricated with a steel framework. There are 1,644 such school buildings in England. Their structures make them vulnerable to fire, so asbestos boards lined the steel. They are also prone to crumbling and easily damaged. While some local authorities replaced them over the decades, others didn鈥檛. Former Labour schools minister Lord Knight chairs the E-Act trust. He claims one of its schools built using the CLASP system 鈥 Willenhall Academy in the West Midlands 鈥 is now 鈥渢eetering鈥 with weak foundations. Fixing the issue is a 鈥溌10 million-plus [job]鈥. Scola A similar system, called Second Consortium of Local Authorities, was used in the construction of 767 school buildings from the 1960s on. It was often poorly insulated, contained asbestos and had a 25-year lifespan. A quarter of Scola schools were built in Hampshire, where the council admits they鈥檙e now 鈥渨ell beyond their estimated initial design life鈥. Rather than embarking on expensive rebuilds, the council is 鈥渞ecladding鈥 as its annual school capital funding grant of 拢23 million is 鈥渋nsufficient鈥. At current funding levels and pace of improvement, some of its Scola buildings will have to 鈥渨ait a further 20 years to be improved鈥. A primary school roof built in the 1950s with an unusual hybrid concrete and steel strand truss whichcollapsed with no warning Folded plate timber roofs 鈥榟eld with glue and panel pins鈥 Some dangerous construction techniques only reveal themselves when it鈥檚 too late. Two school hall roof collapses in 2011 and 2019 were linked to the failure of folded timber roofs over school halls. In both cases, the structural engineer who reported concerns to the safety body (CROSS-UK) concluded the end blocks were only held together with glue and panel pins. They warned 鈥渁 significant number of these roofs鈥ould exist, and users of such buildings may be at significant risk鈥. Another engineer reported in May 2023 how a 1950s primary school roof with an 鈥渦nusual hybrid concrete and steel strand truss鈥 in the north west collapsed with no warning. Its design was 鈥渋nherently defective鈥. Fordley Primary Schools cracked ceiling Concrete crisis It鈥檚 not just the RAAC that鈥檚 crumbling. In the past six months, four schools in North Tyneside have been found to have used an inappropriate pour of concrete 鈥 the 鈥渉ollow block and beam plank鈥 method. This led to their partial closure. Concrete fell from a computer suite ceiling and multiple roof cracks were discovered in Fordley Primary School. The council found three other schools 鈥 Churchill Community College, Hazlewood Primary School and Grasmere Academy 鈥 had the same problem. They were built by different companies. Jon Ritchie, the council鈥檚 resources director, describes it as an 鈥渆xtremely complex situation that鈥檚 occurred on a large scale鈥 in the four schools. Fordley鈥檚 headteacher Claire Withers says she鈥檇 be 鈥渧ery surprised鈥 if the issue was 鈥渏ust limited to this area鈥. She claims the DfE, which says the construction issue is 鈥渉istoric and isolated鈥, was 鈥渘ot very keen鈥 for the council to share the problem more widely. But the local authority insisted other councils and academy trusts knew about it. Some of Fordley and Churchill鈥檚 children are bussed to other schools, while Grasmere鈥檚 are crammed into other buildings and Hazlewood鈥檚 make do with outdoor toilets and a marquee. Cardinal Newman Catholic School in Luton was also built using 鈥渉ollow鈥 concrete blocks. Cracks in the ceiling forced buildings to close with some pupils taught remotely. What can happen when a roof is subjected to excessive loads from ponding of rainwater HACC Other schools were built using high alumina cement concrete (HACC). In 1973, the collapse of Camden Girls鈥 High School鈥檚 hall roof in north London, blamed on HACC, prompted the hasty closure of some other schools. It was banned in 1976 because it degrades rapidly when exposed to chemicals or water. IStructE warned in 1997 that 鈥渢he matter of seriously defective HACC roofs does not seem to be widely understood鈥. Woodwool and stramit Woodwool 鈥 shredded timber bound in a cement paste 鈥 was used extensively in the 1960s and 1970s, often in the roof decks of system-builds. It鈥檚 similar to stramit, a strawboard insulation made from fused wheat or rice straw used in the same decades. Both are flammable and often laden with asbestos. These materials cause no problems as long as they鈥檙e kept dry. But that鈥檚 getting harder to do with the DfE estimating that nearly half of schools (10,710) are at risk of flooding. That鈥檚 expected to increase to as many as 16,394 by the 2050s, with scientists predicting severe storms to become more common. Tim Warneford Academy funding consultant Tim Warneford says water-damaged woodwool and stramit are the two biggest building safety issues that keep him awake at night. He recently declared the sports hall at All Saints Academy in Bedfordshire a 鈥渘o-go area鈥 because of 鈥渧ertical and horizontal cracks in the woodwool and the weight of rainwater pounding on their roof鈥. A recent governors鈥 report for the school said 鈥渁cademy reserves will not cover the cost of repairs/replacements鈥. Sean McGinty, a technical manager for Sike Roofing, describes stramit as being like 鈥渇ragile Weetabix鈥 when wet. About one in five of the surveys he has undertaken in schools finds stramit or woodwool in their structures. 鈥淟ike RAAC, [these structures] could collapse at any time,鈥 he says. Solar strain In a cruel twist of fate, installing solar panels on rooftops is also creating safety concerns. A 2021 CROSS-UK report highlighted 鈥渄angerous assumptions鈥 in assessments for the instillation of solar panels in schools that did not take into account the existing structure and load of roofs and did not calculate additional weight correctly. The increasing use of air source heat pumps and air conditioning condensers are also adding weight and strain to rooftops. Solar panels Modern methods of construction National problems that led post-war school buildings鈥 problems 鈥 a swollen national debt and labour force constraints 鈥 have returned. The solution has been modular structures built using modern methods of construction (MMC), promoted through government initiatives. But at least seven such schools built or partially built since 2020 are now earmarked for demolition because they are structurally unsafe. In February, CROSS-UK reported a 鈥渟ystemic issue鈥 with modular timber frame systems, detailing six common flaws with their design and construction. These include issues with fire stopping, structural element protection, protection of connections and, in particular, “cavity barriers to the voids created when modules are fitted together to form multi-storey buildings鈥. Of the ten companies contracted to build schools in 2021 under the DfE鈥檚 拢3 billion offsite schools鈥 framework, two have gone into administration. An online brochure for the new Harrier Primary Academy in Essex, which gives an opening date of 2020, shows children playing at being construction workers laying bricks . But the DfE shunned the bricks and mortar approach to build the school, contracting Eco Modular Buildings Ltd.. The company collapsed in March 2023 and the school still has no opening date. Eco Modular had also been contracted to build The Flagship School, a special school in Sussex which remains unfinished after an opening date of last September. The school鈥檚 last Ofsted report from 2022 found 鈥減roblems caused by temporary accommodation鈥 meant leaders鈥 鈥渃apacity to do anything other than react to day-to-day events鈥 had been 鈥渟everely restricted鈥. Sir Frederick Gibberd College in Harlow Preventing 鈥榝loor rot鈥 James Emery, a sales manager for modular builders Wernick Buildings, says his company always ensures buildings have underfloor ventilation to prevent 鈥渇loor rot鈥. But he has visited schools built by other companies that 鈥渟unk the buildings into the ground without any ventilation鈥. By the time problems emerge, the original contractors have 鈥渨alked away鈥 as their warranties have expired. Caledonian Modular, which went into administration in 2022, built Haygrove School in Somerset, Buckton Fields Primary School in Northampton and Sir Frederick Gibberd College in Harlow, which were all ordered to close. Surveys found Sir Frederick Gibberd could not withstand 鈥渧ery high winds or significant snowfall鈥. Byatt says it鈥檚 鈥渁lmost as though we鈥檝e come full circle鈥 with the 鈥渜uick-fix鈥 construction problems of the past. He sees MMC as 鈥渁 quicker, cheaper way to get you out of a pickle in the short term. But if they’re not maintained 鈥 and we know that these schools are not maintained because they simply haven’t got the budgets 鈥 then it deteriorates.鈥