The school opened in
Milton Keynes in 1987. Father (田川 茂
Tagawa Shigeru), the principal of the
Gyosei International School, was the founding principal of this school. He opened the school to serve Japanese children in the
European Community (EC) who were members of diplomatic families and families on business. Mitsui Construction was the main contracting company, while Higgs and Hill designed the school. The design and construct programme had a cost of £8 million. In 1991 the school was Europe's largest Japanese school, with 1,000 students. As of 1995 the school had 700 students from elementary through after junior high school. Around 1998 there was an incident where a group of students placed barricades in their dormitory area and loudly made statements against teachers; Lesley Downer
The Independent stated that reports cited the students not being permitted to participate in the local football culture nor visiting the McDonald's in town. The secondary school's peak number of students was 400. In January 2002 it had 30 students, and that month the school announced it would close in March of that year, stating that the economic crisis in Japan was responsible for its closing. By 2002 fewer Japanese executives were being sent abroad and fewer Japanese families sent their children abroad to study. Shiro Suematsu was the school's final chief administrator. The school closed on 8 May 2002. In 2004 a developer planned to demolish the school campus and replace it with a housing development. The site is now a retirement village. ==See also==