The European School, Luxembourg I (ESL1) was the first of the European Schools. It was founded in October 1953 on the initiative of officials of the European Coal and Steel Community, with the support of the Community's institutions and the government of Luxembourg. In April 1957, it formally became the first of the European Schools. It is located on the Kirchberg plateau in Luxembourg City since 1973.

History

Boulevard de la Foire

thumb|The school's former building, now home to the INLL, pictured in 2023

Parents working for the European Coal and Steel Community established the school in 1953. It became necessary to establish a new school when many European children from varying language backgrounds appeared.

When the school was founded it was located on the premises of a former furniture shop in the Limpertsberg district of Luxembourg City. It initially had 72 students. The school later moved to Villa Lentz in Hollerich. In 1956 construction began on a new building, located on Boulevard de la Foire, just outside the city centre. The building was opened on 11 December 1957. This building now houses Luxembourg's (INLL). The first students graduated in 1959; the graduating class was 23.

During the late 80s, the school re-used the building at Boulevard de la Foire, as an overflow school for three age groups of the primary school.

Kirchberg

thumb|[[President of the European Parliament|European Parliament President Roberta Metsola giving a speech at the school's reception hall in 2023.]]

The Boulevard de la Foire building was designed for a maximum capacity of 700 pupils, but by 1969, that number had ballooned to 1,557, with classes having to be held in every space possible, including in the attic, hallways and corridors. To remedy this, in November 1969, the Chamber of Deputies approved the construction of new premises for the school on the then largely undeveloped Kirchberg plateau, at a total cost of 363 million LUF. being formally inaugurated on 4 June 1975 in the presence of Grand Duke Jean and Grand Duchess Joséphine-Charlotte.

At the end of the 1990s, due to the consistent growth of the student population, the grounds on Kirchberg were completely redesigned. Old buildings were demolished and new ones (e.g. a new primary school building, an extension of the secondary school building and a new theatre building) were built, though three blocks of the secondary school (the current A, B and C blocks) were left standing. The new buildings went into use starting in September 1999. The prefabricated T and L blocks were added due to the high number of students. In 2012, the school relocated a large portion of students to a second European School of Luxembourg campus, situated in Bertrange. The L block was later demolished, its grounds replaced with a basketball court, though the T block remained standing.

In 2014 the Luxembourgish government signed an agreement for the European Schools to accept 100 more students in their English and French sections.

The school is due to be served by new branch of the Luxembourg City tramway by Autumn 2027.

Students

As of 1999 the secondary school cycles consisted of three main sections, English, French, and German, each having two classes of students (classes A and B), while the Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, Dutch, and Greek sections only had one class of students per year each. Some students from Scandinavian countries also made up the Danish, Swedish, and Finnish sections, the latter two having been the newest addition to the language sections, just opened in 1995, respectively 1999.

The world record for the largest human DNA helix was held in 2013 by the Hacettepe University in Turkey, with 3,034 participants, and as of 2016 it is held by the students from the Medical University of Varna in Bulgaria, with 4,000 participants.

Incident

On 23 January 2001, two false bomb alerts caused the closure of the school's premises in the early mornings before the start of the classes. An unprecedented police presence ensued in collaboration with a special forces unit of the Luxembourgish police arriving by helicopter with bomb-sniffing dogs to inspect students' lockers. RTL, Luxembourg's main TV channel was also quick to arrive on the school grounds. Teachers from the school collaborated with the police in the first hour of their arrival to identify the perpetrator via a recording of his phone call.

Notable alumni

  • Martin Ågerup - Danish economist
  • Eric Everard – founder and CEO of Artexis Group
  • Christos Floros – Greek-Luxembourgish politician
  • Marta Estévez García – Luxembourgish-Spanish international footballer
  • Lara Heller – British-German-Iranian actress and voice actress
  • Marc Hostert – radio personality
  • Princess Margaretha of Liechtenstein – second daughter of the Grand Duke of Luxembourg
  • Elizabeth May – Olympic triathlete
  • Brian Molko – lead singer, songwriter and guitarist of Placebo (transferred prior to graduation)
  • Fleur Maxwell – Luxembourgish former figure skater
  • Claire Maxwell – sociologist
  • Martine Reicherts - Luxembourgish politician, European Commissioner (2014)
  • Amy Thompson – Luxembourgish footballer
  • Henk van der Zwan – Dutch diplomat
  • Adrián Méndez Elola - Spanish-Luxembourgish international rugby player.

References