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Philadelphia Private SchoolCampus & Facilities in Al Qusais 1، Dubai

Curriculum
American
KHDA
Good
Location
Dubai, Al Qusais 1
Fees
AED 19K - 35K
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Campus & Facilities

Good
KHDA Facilities Rating
Rated Good for management, staffing, facilities & resources — 2023–24 inspection
992
Students on Roll
Single campus, Pre-KG to Grade 12; campus size not publicly disclosed
3 Labs
Science Laboratories
Dedicated Physics, Biology & Chemistry labs; no pool or gymnasium listed
AED 42,987
Maximum Annual Fee
Above the American curriculum Dubai median of AED 33,610; mid-range overall
Very Good
Health & Safety Rating
Highest sub-rating awarded; covers child protection across all phases
On-Site ClinicSmartboard ClassroomsFootball Field2 Basketball CourtsCampus-Wide WiFiBYOD Grades 6–12

Philadelphia Private School occupies a single campus at the intersection of Beirut Street and Halab Street in Al Muhaisnah — one of Dubai's most school-dense residential corridors, with Al Qusais 1 alone hosting 15 private schools. The school has operated from this site since its founding in 2006, serving 992 students from Pre-KG through Grade 12. Campus size data has not been disclosed publicly, making an independent assessment of space per student impossible to confirm. [MISSING: total campus area in square metres or acres]

Academic facilities include three dedicated science laboratories — Physics, Biology, and Chemistry — alongside a computer lab and a library. Technology infrastructure is a relative strength: a high-speed wireless network spans the entire campus, classrooms are equipped with smartboards, and a BYOD policy operates for Grades 6–12, with devices provided for younger students. An online supplementary mathematics programme supports personalised learning. These provisions are functional and appropriate, though the school does not appear to offer a dedicated maker space, design technology suite, or innovation lab — facilities that are increasingly common at comparable American curriculum schools in Dubai.

Sports and recreation provision is modest. Outdoor facilities comprise two basketball courts and a football field, supplemented by indoor and outdoor playgrounds and green areas. There is no swimming pool, and no dedicated gymnasium or fitness suite is listed. A multipurpose hall serves assemblies, physical education, and activities. For a school with a fee ceiling of AED 42,987 — sitting broadly around the median for American curriculum schools in Dubai, where the sector median fee is AED 33,610 — the sports offering is functional but not expansive. Parents considering the school for sport-focused students should weigh this carefully.

Arts and performance infrastructure is limited to the multipurpose hall; no dedicated auditorium, drama studio, or visual arts suite is referenced in available data. [MISSING: dedicated arts, music, or performance facilities]. The school canteen serves students during break times, and an on-site clinic is staffed by medical personnel who also lead health and fitness workshops for students — a notable wellbeing feature that inspectors acknowledged positively. The KHDA inspection rated health and safety, including child protection, as Very Good across all phases, the highest sub-rating the school received and a meaningful reassurance for families.

The 2023–24 KHDA inspection rated management, staffing, facilities and resources as Good — a rating consistent with the school's overall Good judgement and an improvement on prior cycles. Inspectors noted that governors provide the necessary resources to support student learning. However, the inspection also flagged limited opportunities for environmental sustainability activities, suggesting outdoor or green learning environments are not yet fully developed. At fees ranging from AED 19,069 to AED 42,987, PPS Dubai sits in the mid-range of American curriculum schools in Dubai. At this fee level, the current facilities are broadly proportionate — functional and safe, but without the premium sports complexes, performance theatres, or innovation hubs that distinguish higher-fee competitors. Families prioritising academic outcomes over facility prestige will find the environment adequate; those seeking a campus that matches the ambition of the IB and AP programmes on offer may find the physical infrastructure a limiting factor.