Established | 1932 |
---|---|
Type | Academy |
Executive Head | Miss C. Abbott |
Head Of School | Mr P. Sprakes |
Chair of Directors | Ms A Barker |
Founder | Joseph Malet Lambert |
Location |
James Reckitt Avenue Kingston upon Hull East Riding of Yorkshire HU8 0JD England Coordinates: 53°46′05″N 0°18′07″W / 53.76803°N 0.30192°W |
Local authority | Hull City Council |
DfE number | 810/4020 |
DfE URN | 142150 Tables |
Ofsted | Reports Pre-academy reports |
Staff | 160 |
Students | 1456 (as of 2012 Ofsted inspection) |
Gender | Co-educational |
Ages | 11–16 |
Colours | Green and Yellow |
Publication | The Voice |
Website | Malet Lambert |
Malet Lambert is a secondary school for 11- to 16-year-old pupils in Kingston upon Hull, East Riding of Yorkshire, England. The school is situated on James Reckitt Avenue in the east of the city, its front facade overlooks East Park. Malet Lambert opened in 1932 and became a grammar school in 1944 before becoming a community comprehensive in 1969. The school converted to academy status in September 2015.
Malet Lambert opened in September 1932, established by the local education authority, as a replacement for the overcrowded Craven Street Municipal Secondary established in 1893 by the school board as Hull's second higher-grade board school. The original site was on Holderness Road but it was turned down because it was too expensive at £500. A site was chosen along James Reckitt Avenue in the East Hull suburbs, overlooking East Park. The main school building was designed as a two storey Neo-Georgian building, with a central spine encompassing offices, library, assembly hall and gymnasium. All the classrooms were to face south, extending out in two wings with the science laboratories along the sides. Originally, girls were taught in the first floor classrooms and boys on the ground floor, a system which was kept in place for many years.
The school became a co-educational grammar school for 11- to 18-year-olds as a result of the Education Act 1944 and in 1968 it became a community comprehensive school.
The original building was designed to accommodate about 600 pupils. New ancillary rooms to the rear of the main hall, changing rooms and two Physics laboratories were constructed in 1955. Followed in 1961 by a building known as the 'Glass House' which was used for Home Economics (the building was demolished in 2000). A Sixth Form centre was constructed in 1972 and converted into a music block in 1986. A sports centre was built to the west of the main building in 1985 and the West Playshed was converted into an art block in 1995. A new Technology block opened in 2000 following the demolition of the existing accommodation and a building for the use of Science and Geography was opened in 2001 by Lord Dearing and named The Dearing Centre.