L'Amoreaux Collegiate Institute

L'Amoreaux Collegiate Institute

The Jewel of the North East

Freedom with Responsibility
Address
2501 Bridletowne Circle
L'Amoreaux, Toronto, Ontario, M1W 2K1
Canada
Coordinates 43°48′6.93″N 79°19′4.31″W / 43.8019250°N 79.3178639°W / 43.8019250; -79.3178639Coordinates: 43°48′6.93″N 79°19′4.31″W / 43.8019250°N 79.3178639°W / 43.8019250; -79.3178639
Information
School type Public High school
Founded 1973
School board Toronto District School Board
(Scarborough Board of Education)
Superintendent Beth Veale
Area trustee Manna Wong
School number 4226 / 920576
Administrator Janet Thorsley
Principal Huw Chinnery
Grades 9-12
Enrollment ~650 (2015-2016)
Language English
Colour(s) Royal Blue and Gold         
Team name L'Amoreaux Saints
Website schools.tdsb.on.ca/lamoreaux/

L'Amoreaux Collegiate Institute (Or L'Am for short) is a public high school in Toronto, located in north-west Scarborough part of the Scarborough Board of Education that is now consolidated into the Toronto District School Board. Founded in 1973, L'Amoreaux has an extended French program, and over three quarters of the students do not use English as their primary language. L'Amoreaux is attended by about 650 students. The motto of the school is Freedom with Responsibility. The principal is Huw Chinnery and the Vice Principals are Roberta Bergman and John Stepheson[1]

History

The origins of L'Amoreaux Collegiate could date back to 1868 when S.S. No. 1 opened that later became L'Amoreaux Public School. Located in the northwestern L'Amoreaux neighbourhood, S.S. No. 1 was located on the northeastern corner of Finch and Birchmount until it was demolished in 1970 to eliminate intersection jog. The datestone now resides at the foyer of Silver Springs Public School foyer.

The collegiate itself, designed by noted Canadian architect Raymond Moriyama, was constructed in 1971 and opened on September 4, 1973 on Bridletowne Circle, just northeast of Warden and Finch as Scarborough's sixteenth collegiate. Distinctive in interior design, it featured a large tiered Central Market Square named after Rollit J Goldring, the first principal of the school in lieu of the standard auditoriums of similar sized facilities that had tended to be largely unused. The school hallway was featured in rock band Rush's 1982 video for the single Subdivisions.

Overview

Campus

L'Amoreaux Collegiate is built with 161,512 sq. ft. of space located in 15 acres. As a 2 story school with classrooms on the lower floor and the main office in the second. There are around 24 classrooms, six science labs, three art rooms, three music rooms, five computer labs (including Communications Technology lab), four vocational shops for tech design and construction, the Rollit J. Rolding Market Square, a cafetorium with a stage, four gymnasiums with the larger one having the ability to be portioned into two gymnasiums with the smaller gyms built in between, a 25m swimming pool shared with the city, main and guidance offices located in the second floor, and the 400m standard race track and football/soccer field. there are 2 small portables and 1 large portapak (Adult ESL Center). With its design, the school hallways have accent colors of red, yellow, green and blue as you move from the front of the school to the back, and the locker colours are red, yellow, green, teal and blue.

Sports

Clubs

See also

References

  1. Institute, L'Amoreaux Collegiate. "L'Amoreaux Collegiate Institute". schoolweb.tdsb.on.ca. Retrieved 2016-09-05.
  2. 1 2 l'Amoreaux C.I. Agenda 2016-2017. Toronto District School Board. 2016. p. 22.
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