Alderwood Collegiate Institute | |
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Address | |
300 Valermo Drive Etobicoke, Ontario, M8W 2L1 Canada |
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Coordinates | 43°36′34″N 79°32′02″W / 43.60944°N 79.53389°WCoordinates: 43°36′34″N 79°32′02″W / 43.60944°N 79.53389°W |
Information | |
School type | Public, high school |
Motto | Scientia Cum Amicitia (With the knowledge of Friendship) |
Founded | 1955 |
Status | Demolished |
Closed | 1983 |
School board |
Toronto District School Board (Etobicoke Board of Education) |
Oversight | Toronto Lands Corporation |
Superintendent | Jane Phillips-Long |
Area trustee | Pamela Gough |
School number | 891118 |
Grades | 9-13 |
Enrollment | 786 |
Language | English |
Area | Alderwood |
Colour(s) | Gold, and Black |
Team name | Alderwood Auggies |
Website | www |
Alderwood Collegiate Institute (Alderwood CI, ACI, or Alderwood, named Alderwood Secondary School and Alderwood High School prior) is a former public high school that existed from 1955 to 1983 under the governance of the Etobicoke Board of Education (now part of the Toronto District School Board) and that served the Alderwood neighbourhood in the former city of Etobicoke in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The portion of the Alderwood site was transferred to the TDSB's realtor arm, Toronto Lands Corporation (TLC) in 2011 and sold to Urbancorp, a housing developer in August 2012.
In 1952, the Etobicoke Board of Education had originally intended a middle school in the present site. With overcrowding at Royal York Collegiate Institute, the board decided to purchase the 15.87 acre Shields Site for $148,000. The northern portion would be then used for Douglas Park Junior School which opened in 1956.
Gordon S. Adamson and Associates were commissioned as architects for the Alderwood project. Construction began in July 30, 1954, but the flooding from Hurricane Hazel caused an delay. The school was opened on September 6, 1955 to the first 340 students with the official opening ceremony November 1955. With increasing population, four classrooms, a science lab, a commercial room, a new auditorium and enlarged cafeteria were added in 1960.
Alderwood had its amazing athletic program such as football, cross country, wrestling, basketball, and more.
In September 1980, New Toronto Secondary School, Royal York Collegiate Institute (now Etobicoke School of the Arts), and Alderwood underwent a review due to low enrollment as many catholic immigrants who arrived in the area transferred their children to the separate school system when full separate school funding commenced. As a consequence, on June 24, 1981, the Etobicoke Board approved the closure of Alderwood and New Toronto whose students were combined into the newly renamed Lakeshore Collegiate Institute on June 25, 1983, with the afternoon closing ceremonies.