Fire-hit school bounces back in new premises

Richard Greenand
Jonathan Morris,Devon
News imageGlennon Walters A drone image of a school building which is on fire, with a big cloud of smoke coming out of the roof of the building.There is a fire truck and firefighters in the right of the photo.Glennon Walters
The Promise School in Okehampton was heavily damaged during the fire on 22 February

One month after a fire tore through a school which teaches children with special educational needs, pupils have settled back into learning across three temporary sites.

The blaze on 22 February left the Promise School in Okehampton, Devon, destroyed and meant staff and families had to readjust while investigations continue into its cause.

Staff have transformed empty and unused rooms at Okehampton College, Wardhayes Sixth Form Centre and Okehampton Primary School into classrooms for all 85 pupils.

Promise School principal Quentin Gunderson said the school had "some fantastic learning spaces and we couldn't be happier".

News imageThe image shows an aerial view of a school site bordered by tall wooden fencing that forms a zig‑zag shape around a section of playground and green space. The building sits to the right of the frame with a brown tiled roof and several skylights. The fenced‑off area creates a private outdoor space where a handful of pupils and a few adults can be seen standing or walking across the playground.
A fenced off area gives Promise School pupils privacy and security

Gunderson said the makeshift spaces needed an enormous amount of work, there had been donations including books, toys and supplies.

Unused classrooms which were "dirty and dusty" had been cleaned up and the pupils had been given "private and secure" spaces to play, he said.

"As you can imagine for children with our profile of needs, creating just one site has been a challenge, but we've done three," he said.

"Whilst it's not the original school they had, they've got some fantastic learning spaces and we couldn't be happier to be back together as a team with the children, as a little family."

The original school will be demolished, but staff say the focus for now is keeping the children learning, supported and together.

Follow BBC Devon on X, Facebook and Instagram. Send your story ideas to spotlight@bbc.co.uk.