Western Heights College
History
The Vines Road Community Centre was established in 1984. For some time, Western Heights College had three campuses: the Junior Years Campus (formerly Minerva campus and Barton Campus) for years 7, 8 and 9, and 10. the Senior Years Campus (formerly Quamby Campus) for years, 11 and 12, located in the suburbs of Herne Hill and Hamlyn Heights respectively. By 1985, the college had been created from the merger of two existing secondary schools: Geelong West Technical School, in Minerva Road, and Bell Park High School, in Quamby Avenue.
In 2010, the City of Greater Geelong (COGG) appointed landscape architects Capacity Consulting to "develop a Master Plan for Hamlyn Park Recreation Reserve which incorporated new facilities at the Vines Road Education Redevelopment Project – incorporating Western Heights College". The new facilities included sports grounds and netball courts with Stage 2 including a basketball stadium.
In 2011, the school began relocating to a single location on Vines Road, formerly the site of the Department of Human Services Barwon South Western Regional Office and, before that, the Geelong Teachers' College. The Barton campus closed at the end of the 2008, and the completion of stage one allowed Years 7 to 9 to start school at the new site at the beginning of July 2011.
Community College
The college has pioneered "learning communities" of 100 to 120 students and there are no traditional arrangements of classrooms with 25 students and one teacher. These communities can operate independently. Shared community facilities feature in the school and are open to the public. These facilities include: Community Library, Vines Road Community Centre itself, Seniors Club, Sporting facilities and a central Civic Plaza. These facilities are owned and co-managed by the City of Greater Geelong in conjunction with the college's management. Various courses and programs are offered to students and the community on a fee-paying basis.
Western Heights College/Vines Road Community Centre experienced severe flooding in 2016.