A £28 million project that will unify a Wood Green secondary school with two of Haringey's special schools by 2011 is nearing completion.

Woodside High School, in White Hart Lane, and Moselle and William C Harvey will be brought together within the next two years on the Wood Green site to form an "inclusive learning campus", as part of Haringey Council's £200 million Building Schools for the Future programme.

The new complex, constructed by building contractors Apollo Education, will have improved English, maths and science faculties, better computer technology, a fitness gym, dance studio, multi-use games areas, drama studio and sports hall.

It will also be built to provide access for students with disabilities.

The council hopes the huge investment will help the once-failing school to continue to improve following promising GCSE results in 2009 with a 20 per cent increase in the number of Year 11 pupils achieving more than five A-C grades across all subjects.

Pupils gaining more than five GCSEs, including maths and English, increased by 10 per cent.

Woodside headteacher Joan McVittie said: "Woodside High students will move into the new block in September 2010 and we are all very excited by the prospect of the new resources. Our students have been involved in the design process and have influenced the way our new school will look.

"We are also looking forward to working in partnership with Moselle and William C Harvey."

William C Harvey, in Adams Road, Tottenham, a school for young people aged between 3 and 16 with profound and multiple learning difficulties, was rated "oustanding" by Ofsted inspectors in March this year.

Moselle, in the same road, caters for pupils with learning difficulties ranging from moderate to severe, as well as pupils with emotional, language and communication needs and young people with autism.

Younger pupils from both schools will become part of a second learning campus in Broadwater Farm while elder pupils will move to Woodside High.