The Rise School of Excellence has paid £750,000 for two buildings on the site of the former girls’ fee-paying school, as Croydon’s biggest landowners, the Whitgift Foundation, continue to dispose of their properties.
By GENE BRODIE, education correspondent

Making a splash: the swimming pool in Old Palace School – not one of its heritage buildings – has been part of a £750,000 property deal with Rise School of Excellence
The piecemeal break-up of the former sites of Old Palace girls’ private school has continued with the Jubilee Buildings on Church Road and school swimming pool being sold for £750,000 to the Rise School of Excellence, the Whitgift Foundation has confirmed today.
This follows the £4.7million sale last summer of The Great Hall, Old Palace, Science Block and Cathedral Building, to be used by a special educational needs school which opened last September. The Foundation had previously sold the Melville Road site of Old Palace’s prep school for £7million to a Hindu education organisation.
The latest sale brings total receipts for property disposals by the Foundation to around £12.5million in the past 12 months. Those sales will only cover a small part of the £55million lost from the Foundation’s unrestricted funds since 2017.









Discussing how the highs of Wembley in May last year could have turned so sour so quickly for Crystal Palace and their manager Oliver Glasner is 






CROYDON CHRONICLES: A dynasty began in the late 1800s with a family living at Lennard Road whose relatives would build a global business empire from marble, played roles in running the British team at the 1936 Winter Olympics, helped to build Broadcasting House and to dismantle London Bridge, as well as taking part in Dunkirk and D-Day.





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