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Nutana Collegiate

1909 establishments in SaskatchewanEducational institutions established in 1909High schools in Saskatoon
Nutana Collegiate
Nutana Collegiate

Nutana Collegiate is a high school located in the Nutana neighbourhood of central Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, serving students from grades 9 through 12. Nutana was the first public high school in Saskatoon and is part of the Saskatoon Public School Division. The school possesses a significant collection of early Canadian art.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Nutana Collegiate (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Nutana Collegiate
11th Street East, Saskatoon Nutana

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 52.118993 ° E -106.66141 °
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Address

Nutana Collegiate

11th Street East 411
S7N 0E9 Saskatoon, Nutana
Saskatchewan, Canada
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Phone number
Saskatoon Public Schools

call+13066837580

linkWikiData (Q16959624)
linkOpenStreetMap (23187551)

Nutana Collegiate
Nutana Collegiate
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Nearby Places

Gustin House
Gustin House

Gustin House is a municipal and provincial designated historic building located in the Nutana neighborhood of Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada. Trounce House, also a historic building, is located in the backyard of the Gustin House property. Gustin House is a 1920s style residential home with a special piano studio that connects to the main living room by sliding glass doors, permitting the use of the combined space for performances. In 1928 a back extension was constructed permitting a second rear piano studio to be added, the first remaining in the living room at the front of the house inside the veranda, with a library between the rooms. Dr Gustin's summer-class students also used the piano in Grace-Westminster United Church across the street at the corner of Eastlake Avenue—Westminster Church on 12th Street having closed in the mid-1960s. Built for Dr. Lyell Gustin (1895–1988), pianist and music teacher, the space was used to teach amateur and professional musicians over a period of 70 years. Between some 357 of the students taught by Lyell Gustin over 465 diplomas from Canadian and English music examining boards were awarded.In 1988, after the death of Lyell Gustin, the house was left to the University of Saskatchewan. Initially the university only intended to preserve the two Steinway pianos and portraits as a memorial. However, the university was persuaded to sell the building and its other contents to one of his former students, Lloyd Rodwell, who donated the assets to the Gustin/Trounce Heritage Committee. The committee now operates the home as an office to organize recitals in the city, while permitting it to be used to display artifacts of Lyell Gustin, for meeting space used by the local music community and hosting chamber music recitals.