Capital City Academy
Capital City Academy (commonly abbreviated to CCA) is a specialist sports and arts Academy in Willesden, North West London, in the borough of Brent.
Capital City Academy | |
---|---|
Address | |
Doyle Gardens , , NW10 3ST England | |
Information | |
Type | Academy |
Local authority | Brent |
Department for Education URN | 134226 Tables |
Ofsted | Reports |
Principal | Marianne Jeanes |
Gender | Mixed |
Age | 11 to 18 |
Enrolment | 1112 |
Website | http://www.capitalcityacademy.org |
Design
The School was designed by architect Sir Norman Foster and engineers Buro Happold, and is sponsored by Sir Frank Lowe. Capital City Academy was built to replace its predecessor Willesden High School. Its buildings on the high school's playing fields were first used in 2003 and officially opened on 12 June 2003.
Location
It is situated near Willesden Sports Stadium and King Edward VII Sports Ground. Although near Willesden Green, the school is in the parish of All Souls, Willesden. The school is also located not far from Roundwood Park.
History
The school began as Willesden County Grammar School on Uffington Road (off Doyle Gardens) in 1924 and the buildings were extended in 1932. It was one of five grammar schools run by the Willesden Education Committee from 1947. In September 1940, a bomb destroyed four classrooms; a V-1 flying bomb landed nearby in 1944 at the junction of Doyle Gardens and All Souls Avenue. For one year in 1966 it became Willesden Grammar-Technical School when it amalgamated with Willesden School of Engineering in Goodson Road earlier known as Leopold Road Comprehensive. In September 1967, it joined with Pound Lane School on Pound Lane to become a comprehensive school known as Willesden High School. In 2003, it became one of the first three academies in England, with the aim of attempting to overcome educational underachievement in deprived areas. At the time, Willesden High School had some of the worst GCSE results in the UK.[1]
Uniform
It is expected that uniform expectations apply when students travel to and from the academy, which includes:
- School blazer with logo
- School jumper with logo
- School tie in their year colour
- Dark blue trousers / skirt
- Pale blue shirt/blouse (Years 7 & 8)
- White shirt/blouse (Years 9, 10, 11)
- PE polo shirt
- PE tracksuit bottom
- PE tracksuit jacket
- Capital school bag (Years 7-9)
- School bag that can fit an A4 folder (Years 10-11)
- Dark blue/black outdoor coat
Notable visits
Former UK Prime Minister Tony Blair opened the Academy.[2] Frank McCourt the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Angela's Ashes visited and signed copies of his books for the Gifted education group of students, reviewing the Carnegie Medal and Kate Greenaway Medal nominations of the year.[3]
CCA in Media
The Children
The Children was a TV Mini Series aired on ITV in September 2008. The main character was a headteacher played by Inspector Morse actor, Kevin Whately. The scenes set at his school were filmed in the academy, with actual students, as extras.
Teachers TV
The Academy has been filmed for Teachers TV a number of times most notably in its first two years.[4] where it goes into depth about the school on the original site of the Academy, Willesden High School.
Sports Hall
The Academy's main sports hall is home to the PAWS London Capital basketball team, one of the leading clubs based in the capital city. Having recently featured in the British Basketball League for three years, the Caps currently compete in Division 1 of the English Basketball League.
Alumni
Willesden High School
- Dave Beasant, goalkeeper
- Luther Blissett, striker with Watford
- Phillip DeFreitas, cricketer, fast bowler for England
- Shane Richie, Alfie Moon in EastEnders, former husband of Coleen Nolan
Willesden County Grammar School
- Gerry Anderson, renowned animator and creator of Thunderbirds (TV series)
- Roy Battersby, television director
- Les Buck, General Secretary from 1962-77 of the National Union of Sheet Metal Workers, Coppersmiths, Heating and Domestic Engineers
- Stuart Carne CBE, GP
- Carl Cushnie, first black entrepreneur to enter Britain's richest 500 people (number 312) in 1998, becoming Britain's richest black businessman, sentenced for six years for fraud.
- Liz Gebhardt, actress
- Ron Goodwin (briefly), renowned composer of soundtracks such as Those Magnificent Men in their Flying Machines and 633 Squadron
- Norman Hudis, screenwriter who wrote the first six Carry On films, and established the franchise
- Gary Locke (English footballer), full back for Chelsea
- John Neville CM OBE, actor who starred in Terry Gilliam's The Adventures of Baron Munchausen
- Molly Parkin, fashion writer and novelist
- Prof Graham Warren FRS, Professor of Cell Biology from 1999-2007 at Yale School of Medicine, and Principal Scientist from 1989-99 of the Imperial Cancer Research Fund
Former teachers
- Max Morris, headteacher from 1966-78 of Willesden High School and President of the NUT from 1973–74
References
- "BBC News - EDUCATION - 'City academies' to tackle school failure". news.bbc.co.uk.
- "PM Opens Capital City Academy". Foster + Partners. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
- Smithers, Rebecca (30 May 2005). "'I can't think of anything else I would rather have done'". the Guardian. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 6 January 2009. Retrieved 22 January 2009.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Capital City Academy. |