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By RICHARD OSLEY
 

Ex-pupils David Miliband, left, Oona King, 2nd from left, and David’s brother MP Ed Miliband, far right, with former teachers Vivien Jacobs, centre, Richard Page-Jones and Kate Myers


Former pupil Marlon Harewood (centre-left) with Haverstock pupils


Pupils Anjeza Ahmagjoka, left, and Iftekher Boksh with Frank Dobson
Ex-pupils agog at school's 'dazzling transformation'

Former students including government minister praise new-look Haverstock

A SCHOOL which once felt like a grim Victorian prison has been transformed into a magical world such as Dorothy might have explored in The Wizard Of Oz.
That’s the view of high-profile ex-pupils of Haverstock School in Crogsland Road, Chalk Farm, who went back to class on Thursday night to see the showcase opening of the school’s refurbished buildings.
Twenty years after leaving the school, former Labour MP Oona King – notoriously defeated at last year’s general election by George Galloway – looked misty-eyed as she described the school’s dazzling transformation.
She said: “It is unrecognisable from when I was here.”
The school has been completely rebuilt in a £21-million project funded by a Private Finance Initiative scheme headed by Kajima Europe.
Under the terms of the deal, the construction firm will continue to manage the site.
The new-look school has been fitted out with interactive whiteboards, more than 500 computers, a floodlit sports pitch and ten science labs.
Ms King said: “I genuinely can’t believe it. It is like being part of the Wizard of Oz. I look across at some of the buildings and can’t believe that it is the same place.”
She recalled a cramped, rougher school where parents were unsure that it was the right place for their children, adding: “It was a tougher school back then. I had some friends at the school that were taken out. They couldn’t be here.”
The school’s link to the Labour Party does not end there – brothers David and Ed Miliband, both MPs, were also pupils at Haverstock in the 1980s.
While David Mili-band, now a senior government minister, made a flying visit to the gala, Ed Miliband stayed to watch special performances by drama and music students.
He said afterwards: “When I was here it was rather like a Victorian prison, the buildings were quite imposing. It was completely different.”
Asked whether the crumbling environment had affected his own education – given his rise through the Labour ranks – Ed Miliband said: “We (me and brother David) did do okay but that’s because the teaching at Haverstock has always been good. It has always been inspirational. It is just the buildings.”
Other guests included Holborn and St Pancras MP Frank Dobson, Camden Mayor Barbara Hughes and former Camden Council leader Jane Roberts, who said she could remember the days when bits of plaster fell from the ceilings.
On Thursday a suspended sculpture by artists Kisa Kawaskami was unveiled in memory of Richard Feilden, the architect for the project who died last year when he was crushed by a tree he was chopping down near his home in Bath.
West Ham United footballer Marlon Harewood, another former, pupil, also returned to the school for the party, while Sir Jonathan Miller, the polymath who lives in nearby Camden Town, also attended.
The refurbishment hit the headlines for the wrong reasons in September 2004 when Kajima failed to get the school ready for the new term. The firm blamed bad summer weather. The project was also hit by criticism that private deals should not be used to refurbish schools.
Former chairman of governors Dave Moulson said: “Like Wembley Stadium it’s a bit late, but, boy, is it worth the wait.”
Headteacher John Dowd said that he hoped in 100 years time that Haverstock School would be regarded as “Camden’s best school,” reminding party-goers that the school was becoming a preferred choice for parents and already full up for next year.
He said: “We were a school that had lost our confidence. These buildings will help inspire pupils.”
Current chairman of governors Jim Mulligan added: “John (Dowd) walks around each morning to check that this isn’t all a dream.”
 
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