Bishop Challenor School features an elevated section to meet this requirement and includes Dualframe 55 casement windows,Elegance 52 ST curtain walling and 202 entrance doors."
Shared specialist facilities are arranged at the street level frontage, reinstating the historic urban grain using a traditional London Stock brick.
The concept was that of a joint or federated school with boys and girls taught in separate buildings from 11 to 16 years, but sharing some specialist facilities and most teaching staff.
A project allocation of £30.1m was approved by the DfES for an extended campus based on the concept of a "learning village", to be developed on a phased basis whilst maintaining existing facilities in use.
In the long term, the learning village will provide a combined campus for the education of boys and girls from ages 3 to 18 by integrating the establishments already on the site, namely: The "learning village" was to be a partnership between the Collegiate School, the Church and the local community to provide educational, cultural and recreational resources for the local community.
On 22 January 2010, at the official opening of the Federation, Bishop Stack, Chairman of the Diocese of Westminster’s Education Commission spoke "these profound words to those gathered on the site of steel, zinc and walls of glass":[6] "In 1946 the remains of Bishop Richard Challoner were transferred from their burial place in Milton, Berkshire, to a new tomb in Westminster Cathedral.
[9] Myers made many changes to the systems and leadership, but "besides these structural revolutions, however, her greatest challenge [was] to oversee a complete reversal in the school's culture."
[citation needed] She earlier received an award from the Lithuanian government for her work with pupils coming from the Baltic republic.
[citation needed]The Catholic publication The Tablet wrote in 2010, "You could call Catherine Myers a mutation in evolutionary terms.