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University of Toronto at Mississauga

University of Toronto Mississauga
Utoronto coa.svg
Motto Tantum nobis creditum
Motto in English
So much has been entrusted to us
Type Satellite campus
Established 1967
Principal Ulrich J. Krull (Interim Vice-President & Principal)
Dean Amrita Daniere
Academic staff
210 full-time (2013)
Undergraduates 13,500 (2016)
Postgraduates 600 (2016)
Location Mississauga, Ontario, Canada
Campus Suburban, 89.4 hectares (225 acres)
Website utm.utoronto.ca
UofT-Mi-logo.svg

Coordinates: 43°32′54″N 79°39′48″W / 43.54833°N 79.66333°W / 43.54833; -79.66333

The University of Toronto Mississauga (also known as U of T Mississauga or UTM) is a satellite campus of the University of Toronto, located in Mississauga, Ontario, Canada. It is set on the valley of the Credit River, approximately 33 km west of Downtown Toronto. Among the University of Toronto's two satellite campuses, Mississauga receives the highest amount of undergraduate applicants.

University of Toronto Mississauga was built on the former estate of Reginald Watkins, which was acquired by the University of Toronto in 1965. Founded as Erindale College in 1965, construction of the University's main building began in 1966. Although this building was originally meant to be temporary, the building remained until 2016 as part of the North Building. In 1998, Erindale assumed the dual name of University of Toronto Mississauga, although Erindale College still remains an official alternate name.

In 2007, UTM celebrated its 40th anniversary, a milestone which was capped off with the grand opening of the Hazel McCallion Academic Learning Center on June 2, 2007.

The campus consists of a number of buildings arranged across a large, treed lot. The surrounding suburban neighbourhood (the Mississauga Road area and the Credit Woodlands) is a fairly affluent section of the city of Mississauga. The largest building was built as a megalithic structure, predominantly out of concrete, as was typical of the brutalist architecture style of the late 1960s. It was one of architect Raymond Moriyama's first major commissions. Other buildings were added over the decades, and with the enlarged enrollment at the beginning of the new millennium, the pace of construction increased.


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