Lowestoft Sixth Form College
The college was established to educate students between the ages of 16 and 19. Students study for AS & A-Levels and other qualifications such as BTEC and GCSE.
History
The college replaced the Lowestoft Sixth Form Consortium, a shared sixth form provision which ran at the town's three high schools. A Suffolk County Council School Organisation Review decided that post 16 academic provisions in Lowestoft would be best served by a single institution, rather than through the three high-school based sixth forms at Benjamin Britten High School, Ormiston Denes Academy (formerly The Denes High School) and East Point Academy (formerly Kirkley Community High School).
Capital funding for the College was approved at Ministerial level in December 2009 and building work was soon underway at a cost of £25 million. The College was officially opened on 17 October 2012, by Lord Tollemache the Lord-Lieutenant of Suffolk.
The building
Lowestoft Sixth Form College is a modern purpose-built building. It was designed by Atkins and constructed by Morgan Sindall, it consists of 8060m of learning space for up to 1000 students. Accommodation is on four floors. In 2012 it was announced as a winner of a Royal Institute of British Architects’ Craftsmanship award. The college was designed to be energy efficient.
Facilities include science laboratories, a music recording studio, dance, drama and art studios as well as general teaching classrooms, pastoral support and a careers-advisory service.
References
- ^ L6FC A-Z Courses, 2013-09-17.
- ^ Lowestoft Sixth Form College opens with over 550 pupils, BBC news website, 2011-09-01. Retrieved 2015-11-17.
- ^ Lowestoft College gains first award, Norwich Evening News, 2012-05-24. Retrieved 2013-06-08.