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St. David Catholic Secondary School

1965 establishments in OntarioCatholic secondary schools in OntarioEducational institutions established in 1965High schools in the Regional Municipality of WaterlooSchools in Waterloo, Ontario
Waterloo Catholic District School Board
StDavidCrest 2012
StDavidCrest 2012

St. David Catholic Secondary School, established in 1965, is a Roman Catholic high school instructing students from grades 9 to 12. St. David CSS is located in Waterloo, Ontario and is a member of the Waterloo Catholic District School Board. Its building is the oldest secondary school building in the board. Historically it was a junior high school, instructing students from grades 7 to 10. St. David received full funding from the Ontario Ministry of Education in 1985, when the school changed its educational focus to students in grades 9 to OAC. Since the OAC year of secondary school was phased out of Ontario schools in the 2002-2003 school year, St. David CSS now teaches grades 9 through to 12. At present (2011) St. David educates 1045 students. St. David is named after St David, a 6th-century saint.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article St. David Catholic Secondary School (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

St. David Catholic Secondary School
High Street, Waterloo

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 43.4843 ° E -80.5294 °
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Address

St. David Catholic Secondary School

High Street 4
N2L 3X5 Waterloo
Ontario, Canada
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Phone number
Waterloo Catholic District School Board

call+15198851340

Website
stdavid.wcdsb.ca

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Nearby Places

Research and Technology station
Research and Technology station

Research and Technology is a stop on the Region of Waterloo's Ion rapid transit system. It is located on the Waterloo Spur rail line in Waterloo, between Bearinger Road and Columbia Street, near a prominent bend in Wes Graham Way. It opened in 2019, and it serves its namesake, the David Johnston Research and Technology Park, to the west, and the industrial lands along Philip Street to the east (via a pedestrian pathway). Access to the platform from the south is only from the Wes Graham Way side; to the north, the only exit is the pathway to Philip Street. The southbound track is also used by freight trains on the Waterloo Spur line, which serves industrial locations in Elmira. These trains only run in the overnight hours after LRT service has halted. To protect the station structure (and the trains themselves), a gauntlet track is in place alongside this station that offsets the freight track a small distance. The station's feature wall consists of ceramic tiles in a solid red. In the summer of 2020, the land between the platform and Wes Graham Way was converted into a park-like community space with landscaping, paths and benches.The station was to feature two artworks: Network by Ken Hall, a sculpture about connections supporting technological development, and The Passenger by Brandon Vickerd, a bronze figure to invite thoughtful reflection on the human relationship to nature. Network was cancelled when the artist was unable to complete the work due to other commitments; The Passenger was installed in October 2020.