European School Munich

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
European School Munich
European School Munich (main entrance) .jpg
European School Munich (main entrance)
type of school European school
founding 1977
address

Elise-Aulinger-Strasse 21
81739 Munich

place Munich
country Bavaria
Country Germany
Coordinates 48 ° 5 '47 "  N , 11 ° 38' 23"  E Coordinates: 48 ° 5 '47 "  N , 11 ° 38' 23"  E
student 2313 (2016/2017)
management Anton Hrovath
Website www.esmunich.de

The European School Munich (ESM) is one of thirteen European schools and one of three in Germany and was built in 1980 according to the plans of the architect Michael Eberl . It was founded in 1977 and moved to its current location in Neuperlach in southeast Munich in 1981 . It was set up mainly to care for the children of the staff of the European Patent Office (EPO), the executive body of the European Patent Organization , but is also open to the children of members of other European organizations and some contractual partners. Private applicants are only admitted to a very limited extent. The school offers the European Abitur as a final qualification.

To the school history

While the first year of the Abitur comprised only 14 students, the number of students soon increased to such an extent that, after moving in 1981, temporary expansions became unavoidable and a considerable expansion was planned. In 2004 the Europabau was built for events with a larger audience. The previous kindergarten had to be demolished in 2007 due to the expansion of the main building. A new kindergarten was therefore built on Putzbrunner Strasse. A third star was added to the primary school. As a result of the EU's eastward expansion , many teachers from the new member states joined the group from 2004 and the number of classes grew. In 2017, this resulted in 157 candidates for the European Abitur. In Fasanengarten extensive construction work for a new primary school and a second kindergarten currently underway. The opening is planned for autumn 2019. At the same time, the school will - belatedly - celebrate its 40th anniversary.

Publications

Known students

Web links

Footnotes

  1. Facts and figures on the beginning of the 2016–2017 school year in the European Schools . Office of the Secretary-General of the European Schools. Retrieved August 27, 2017.
  2. Eberl architects. Retrieved August 25, 2020 .
  3. Homepage of the school: About us. see. History section