Sod cutting marks start of work on Passivhaus primary school in Perth

Cabinet secretary for education and skills, Shirley-Anne Somerville MSP, performed the turf cutting ceremony this week to mark the official start of works on a state-of-the-art eco-friendly primary school for North Perth.

Sod cutting marks start of work on Passivhaus primary school in Perth

The new £19.9 million school, which will replace the current Balhousie and North Muirton Primary Schools, will be the first primary school in Perth and Kinross, and one of the first in Scotland, to be built to Passivhaus standards, where energy-saving measures are an integral part of the building’s design.

Expected to open in Spring 2023, it will have capacity for 500 pupils, a large nursery and also provision for children with additional support needs. The name of the new school will be agreed by the Lifelong Learning Committee in the New Year following a wide-ranging consultation with pupils, staff, parents, councillors and the local community.



Preparatory works began on site during the summer of 2021 with the demolition of the nursery at North Muirton Primary School. Nursery children at North Muirton have joined their peers at Balhousie Primary School for the duration of the building works, as the first step in merging the two school communities.

Shirley-Anne Somerville MSP said: “The new North Perth Primary School demonstrates Perth and Kinross Council’s continued commitment to their school estate. I am particularly pleased that this school will be one of the first primary schools in Scotland to be built to Passivhaus standards where energy-saving measures are an integral part of the building’s design.

“The school is supported by the Scottish Government through our £2 billion Learning Estate Investment Programme. This facility will provide a state-of-the-art learning environment that the pupils and staff of the current Balhousie and North Muirton Primary Schools and the whole community can be proud of.”

Councillor Caroline Shiers, convener of the Lifelong Learning Committee, added: “This is an exciting project that will create a new school from very solid foundations in the community in North Perth and provide a modern learning and teaching environment to help children achieve to their fullest. Alongside this, delivering one of the first primary schools in Scotland to meet the Passivhaus standards for energy efficiency is going to contribute to our work to tackle climate change locally.



“We look forward to welcoming pupils into the new school in 2023 - following extensive engagement with both the school communities at Balhousie and North Muirton its name will be agreed at Lifelong Learning Committee on 31 January 2022. We’ve already had positive discussions about possible names and there is real excitement about what this new school will mean for pupils and the wider community.

“We will continue to work together with pupils, staff and parents and carers at Balhousie and North Muirton throughout the months to come as the school is built. ”

Sod cutting marks start of work on Passivhaus primary school in Perth

The project forms part of Perth & Kinross Council’s ongoing capital programme of school upgrades and improvements through hub East Central Scotland to enhance the environment for learning and teaching across the area.



Gary Bushnell, chief executive, hub East Central Scotland, said: “We have worked closely with Perth & Kinross Council throughout the development of this project and it’s great to see work now starting on site. We look forward to delivering a high quality new school that is at the forefront of sustainable building for education and designed to meet the long-term needs of the community it serves.”

Kevin Dickson, regional managing director, Robertson Construction (Tayside), commented: “Perth & Kinross Council have committed to building forward better by adopting Passivhaus standards for this new school. As the delivery partner of choice, we will be working closely with the local community whilst creating a facility that they can be proud of, and that will herald a change in the sustainable delivery and lifecycle of educational projects in Scotland.”

Stephen Long, who is a member of the Learning Estate Infrastructure team at the Scottish Futures Trust, said: “In managing the new Learning Estate Investment Programme, our focus is on working with our partners to deliver high quality, well maintained, digitally-enabled buildings that achieve ambitious energy targets.

“Perth & Kinross Council has embraced that focus with this new school being designed and built to use around 50% less energy than that of a typical similar sized building, while also providing excellent ventilation and comfortable temperatures all year round. It is the first school of its kind to be constructed to such an ambitious energy reduction target in the council area and demonstrates its commitment to reducing building-related carbon emissions.”


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