FOS precursor classes come to Holzkirchen – district of Munich

In Oberhaching, not only a new secondary school is being built on a school campus at the Deisenhofen S-Bahn station, but also a technical college (FOS), which is scheduled to start operating in the 2025/26 school year. Since the FOS in Holzkirchen, to whose relief the new school in Oberhaching is intended to make a significant contribution, is already reaching the limit of its capacity, the district administrators of the districts of Miesbach and Munich, Olaf von Löwis and Christoph Göbel (both CSU), have agreed on a interim solution agreed. This has now been unanimously approved by the Committee for Building and Schools in the district of Munich. According to this, the district will build modular containers at its own expense on a vacant lot on the Holzkirchen school campus and accommodate four classes there, which can be seen as precursor classes for the Oberhachinger FOS.

Assuming construction costs in another district is “a one-off process,” says the Green Hackl-Stoll

These temporary classrooms are scheduled to open at the start of the coming school year. For this purpose, the district councilors in the committee made a one-time budget of 640,000 euros. If, contrary to expectations, the new school building in Oberhaching is not completed on time, the matter would be presented to the district committees again in three years. The special-purpose association for state secondary schools in the south of the district of Munich could provide the equipment with computers and furniture as a pre-order, which can later be taken to the new technical college in Oberhaching. The administration announced that this had already been registered with the association.

The background is that Holzkirchen could no longer accept additional students, such as those who come from Munich and are actually planned for the commissioning of the FOS Oberhaching. “These would then be missing in the new school,” said Deputy District Administrator Otto Bußjäger (free voters) during the committee meeting. This also explains why one gets involved in this deal: “We pay, the district of Miesbach works,” says Bußjäger. District Councilor Gudrun Hackl-Stoll (Greens) added that it was “a one-off process that we take on construction costs in another district” and called for renegotiations. District master builder Christian Dauer agreed that there would be an additional round of negotiations, but also pointed out that the previous classes would have to be accommodated in Oberhaching should the agreement with Holzkirchen collapse. “And we would also have to bear property costs.”

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