Sanskriti School

The foundation stone for Sanskriti School was laid by Mrs Hemi Surendra Singh, chairperson of, the Civil Services Society on 30 May 1996.

[1] However, the Delhi High Court started suo motu case against the school receiving state funding and free land, which in turn converted into a Public Interest Litigation (PIL) in 2006.

[4][5] In November 2014, the Delhi High Court bench of Justice Pradeep Nandrajog and Justice Mukta Gupta ruled against the quota system stating, "Reserving seats for a particular branch of the Indian Services disadvantages children of persons engaged in other branches."

As it is built in a semi-circular style, it can seat around 600 people and its circular stage can accommodate 50 to 60 children during a performance.

A centrally air-conditioned circular building over three floors houses the junior, middle and senior school libraries [1].

The school has a spacious gymnasium, featuring high ceilings and a wide expanse, which contains a basketball court and table tennis equipment.

The gym is also used as a venue for yoga practices, Diwali Mela, college fairs and the JAM session during the Winter Carnival.

Aquatic events like inter-school and inter-house swimming competitions are held in the pool, which is built to international standards.

The pool is open to the staff, students and parents of the Sanskriti school during various predesignated time slots.

[7] The club is structured into departments, each specialising in a unique domain: Audio-Video Editing, AI/ML, Cryptic Hunt, Gaming, Graphic Designing, Logistics, Pitching, Programming, Quizzing, Robotics and IoT, Surprise, and Web Development.

ProjectBeta is widely recognised for its achievements, with members regularly securing awards at inter-school tech competitions and symposiums.

Their aim is to encourage students to think, innovate and collaborate to express themselves, and help build a safe and supportive community which inspires them to reach new horizons.