Sub-divisional magistrates have been assigned the job of supervising the construction of these buildings by the rural development department, District Development Commissioner Shahid Iqbal Choudhary said.
"The target is to construct 100 buildings by the end of this year under the 'TAMIER' project," he said.
Students in remote areas of the district face hardships due to lack of proper infrastructure at open-sky schools, which functioning without buildings and often face closure due to bad weather.
The education department has sponsored 45-50 per cent funds for the project while the remaining funds are being provided under convergence of various schemes, the officer said.
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He said that an assessment of the open-sky schools was done in June, and it was found that 163 schools in the district do not have a building.
"Accordingly a project was worked out with convergence of schemes and manpower of departments as well as community resources for providing buildings to open-sky schools," the officer said.
The remaining 63 schools, with enrolment below 20 and without school buildings, would be taken up during the second phase of the project next year, he said.
State land was provided for nearly 70 schools while the remaining schools are being built on community or private lands for which donations are being sought, the officer said.
The highest, 20 buildings are coming up in Koteranka followed by 14 in Darhal, 10 in Thanamandi, and nine each in Manjakote, Peeri, Baljarallan and Khwas zones, he said.
"These schools have a total enrolment of 3,181 students in the current year, which is expected to nearly double with the construction of these buildings," he said.
Choudhary said that an independent inter-departmental engineering team would inspect the construction of the buildings for quality.