IN Brief:
- The Department for Education is seeking an innovation lead for the Regenerative Schools Pilot.
- The programme will develop six standardised single- and dual-classroom designs using low-carbon and regenerative methods.
- A contractor appointment is expected to follow in 2027, with lessons intended to support wider education-estate delivery.
The Department for Education has opened procurement for an innovation lead to support its Regenerative Schools Pilot, a programme designed to test ultra-low-carbon approaches for future school buildings in England.
The appointment is valued at about £3.9m and will form a central part of the wider £33m research and development programme for the education estate. The successful consultant will act as the department’s principal technical partner, leading feasibility work, researching materials and construction techniques, and developing standardised designs for single- and dual-classroom teaching blocks.
The pilot will explore regenerative construction methods, bio-based materials, biodiversity measures, sustainable drainage, landscape-led design, and climate-resilient school buildings. An academic adviser is expected to be procured alongside the innovation lead, with a construction contractor appointment planned for 2027.
Once a contractor is appointed, the innovation lead is expected to move into a client-side assurance role, overseeing design development, off-site manufacturing, site delivery, and the capture of lessons that can be applied across later school programmes.
The education estate is facing a difficult combination of building condition, capacity, decarbonisation, RAAC remediation, and capital funding pressure. Framework routes are already being strengthened, with contractors named for a £9.5bn education framework that will support schools, colleges, universities, and related public-sector clients across multiple regions and work types.
The regenerative schools pilot adds a more experimental layer to that delivery landscape. Standardisation has long been used to improve cost and programme certainty in education construction, but the current challenge reaches beyond repeatable classroom layouts. Future school buildings are being asked to perform better on embodied carbon, operational energy, overheating, drainage, biodiversity, maintenance, and adaptability.
Regulatory direction is also pushing public-sector clients towards stronger performance evidence. The Future Homes and Buildings Standards have already raised expectations around low-carbon heat, ventilation, fabric performance, on-site renewables, and compliance evidence. Schools are subject to different design and operational demands, but the construction direction is similar: performance needs to be designed, modelled, built, commissioned, and evidenced with greater discipline.
Bio-based and regenerative materials bring specific delivery questions. Timber, fibre-based boards, alternative insulation, low-carbon concrete, and nature-led drainage can reduce carbon and improve environmental outcomes, but they must be specified with clarity around durability, moisture, fire performance, warranty, maintenance, and insurance. School sites also bring safeguarding, term-time logistics, acoustics, ventilation, maintenance access, and robustness requirements that expose weak assumptions quickly.
The off-site manufacturing element will be watched closely. Standardised classroom blocks can benefit from factory production, repeat detailing, shorter site programmes, and reduced disruption where schools need additional space. The commercial case depends on repeatability, predictable demand, early design freeze, and procurement routes that do not turn every deployment into a bespoke redesign.
The pilot’s value will be measured by whether it produces a credible delivery template. A regenerative classroom block that proves too expensive, too specialised, or too difficult to procure will have limited influence beyond the demonstration stage. One that balances carbon, cost, buildability, maintenance, and repeatable public-sector procurement could help shape the next wave of school estate investment.



