The first Nepalhilfe Beilngries school was opened 30 years ago
On 30 April 1995, the first Nepalhilfe Beilngries school was officially opened in the small village of Kadambas. Nobody could have guessed at the time how many more would follow.
On 30 April 1995, the first Nepalhilfe Beilngries school was officially opened in the small village of Kadambas. Nobody could have guessed at the time how many more would follow.
On 15 March, the extension to the school was officially handed over by board member Manfred Lindner and a delegation from the NHB.
After almost two years of construction, the school in Tanjakot in Humla, in the far west of Nepal, was officially opened on 1 April 2024. 360 schoolchildren now have a new school in one of the most remote areas of Nepal.
Since the completion of the passive solar house in September 2023, the five-month school closures in the winter from November to March due to low temperatures of up to -25 degrees will be a thing of the past. Pupils will now be able to attend school for 10 months.
A new building was quickly erected to prevent the collapse of the small primary school in Mahabir. The school is still waiting for the typical yellow and blue paint job.
The school, which was only built in 2014, was severely damaged in the earthquake in 2015 but could be completely renovated.
The large school in Gothatar, near the airport in Kathmandu, is co-financed by donations from the secondary school in Oberhaunstadt, near Ingolstadt, Germany. The school sponsorship also gave the school the nickname: School for School Oberhaunstadt.
Since the end of 2023, Bahunepati’s secondary school has been rebuilt by NHB, after the 2015 earthquake had severely damaged the school and actually rendered it unusable. Nevertheless, classes continued to be held there. In September 2024, the work was completed and the students were able to return to their school.
The Michl-Dacher School was the first school built by NHB in 1995, providing an education for more than 500 children. Completely destroyed in the earthquake, it was rebuilt in 2018.
The extension to the Hans Kammerlander School is used primarily to supplement conventional schools. There, school leavers learn subjects such as electrical engineering and the like in theory and practice.