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Er, standardisation of school buildings is not a terribly new idea. Many of the board schools built during the late Victorian era in the wake of the 1870 Elementary Education Act by the likes of Edward Robson, chief architect of the London Schools Board, were built to a standard plan, adapted where necessary to the exigencies of the available sites.
This makes them as instantly identifiable in our urban landscapes as churches, town halls and breweries. The adoption of a limited number of standard plans enabled speedy deployment, highly necessary to the ambitious plans of a government wanting to provide places for hundreds of thousands of primary age children as expeditiously as possible.
As long as the designs are of high quality, distinctive, sustainable and fit for purpose, there's no good reason to think that this methodology should not succeed. But the revelation that they are being designed by 'construction companies' rather than a specialist architect with a track record in schools design gives pause for thought.

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