by DOUG COLLIE
Former pupils who received their education at Jedburgh's abandoned grammar school site will have to rely on memories of their alma mater from now on as the bulldozers work to flatten the collection of buildings where generations of youngsters were taught for almost 140 years.
Jethart ex-pats and locals alike may feel like shedding a sentimental tear when they see our pictures of the rubble which now dominates the landscape along the entire length of The Pleasance as the demolition squad clears the classrooms, dining hall and sports centre in preparation for redevelopment of the five-and-a-half acre site. Here's what it once looked like:
Scottish Borders Council's selling agents D M Hall have been marketing the property since October with the entire area set to be free of all vertical structures by next month. Offers of over £800,000 have been invited.
The only building to survive the carnage is the listed original single and two-storey block, built in 1882-84 to the designs of Henry Hardy and John Rutherford Wight in a Neo-Jacobean style with Gothic details. The building is recognisable from its square-plan bell-tower, positioned over the entrance door (see below).
The 'new' school building was opened on 21 July 1884. The final cost, which came in under budget, amounted to £5,200. The school was initially built to accommodate 300 pupils. However there were soon plans to add a further two classrooms, thereby increasing its capacity to 500.
On the Pleasance on the opposite side of the road stood an Art Deco E-plan block by Reid and Forbes, which was built in 1935 as a primary school. Built at a cost of £10,300 the block was constructed of harled brick walls with synthetic stone facings. The building was used by the Grammar School for Social Dining purposes but unfortunately it was excluded from the listing in 2017 and has been knocked down.
The proposed demolition of the school was halted in 1996 following a last minute intervention by Historic Scotland, as the agency was then known.
A plan for a £8 million replacement school had been scrapped 18 months earlier as a result of education spending cuts with alternative proposals for demolition and rebuild at The Pleasance to rid the site of dilapidated classrooms.
But it would be another quarter of a century before the new £32 million Jedburgh Grammar Campus opened its doors.
Among the luminaries who spent their formative years in the old school are Roy and Greig Laidlaw who both distinguished themselves as Scottish rugby internationalists, Steve Hislop, a champion motorbike racer who died in a helicopter crash in 2003, elite swimmer Lucy Hope, and TV presenter Jill Douglas.
Before the site was advertised for sale, the council conducted a public consultation in which a majority of respondents voted for a new supermarket to be built on part of the site. Other favoured suggestions included a care home and a sports park.
We asked SBC for an update on its efforts to unload the cleared site. These are the questions we asked and responses received from the local authority:
1 - The site has been on the market since October. How would SBC describe the level of interest so far?
There has been some interest in the site and discussions are progressing. A closing date has not been set.
2. The top priority among those who responded to the council’s 2022 consultation was for a supermarket on the northern part of the site. Has there been any interest shown from supermarket/major retailers?
We cannot comment on discussions with potential purchasers at this time due to commercial sensitivity.
3. A document in the collection which accompanies the planning application shows the demolition contract is being carried out by Central Demolition Ltd., of Bonnybridge. What is the value of the contract awarded to that company/total cost of demolishing and clearing the site?
The Contract Value is £449,166.00
4. Was Central Demolition Ltd handed the demolition contract without competition or was there a contract notice published, inviting bids for the work? If so, how many bids were received? When is the clearance of the site expected to be complete?
We used the Scotland Excel framework for Demolition and Deconstruction and called off from lot 2 due to the estimated value. All suppliers within lot 2 who had the ability to service the Scottish Borders were invited (15 suppliers in total) to provide the most economically advantageous tender based on price and quality; we received 7 bids. A Contract Award notice was published on the 17th of September.
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