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École secondaire Marguerite-De Lajemmerais

1962 establishments in QuebecEducational institutions established in 1962High schools in MontrealQuebec school stubs

École secondaire Marguerite-De Lajemmerais is a Francophone secondary public mixed school located in Rosemont-La Petite-Patrie borough in Montreal, Quebec. Part of the Centre de services scolaire de Montréal (CSSDM), it was originally in the catholic School board Commission des écoles catholiques de Montréal (CECM) before the 1998 reorganization of School boards from religious communities into linguistic communities in Quebec. In 2019, the school had 677 students.Originally a girls' school, the school started admitting boys in September 2019 due to declining enrollment.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article École secondaire Marguerite-De Lajemmerais (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

École secondaire Marguerite-De Lajemmerais
Rue Sherbrooke Est, Montreal Rosemont–La Petite-Patrie

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N 45.5715 ° E -73.5518 °
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École secondaire Marguerite-De Lajemmerais

Rue Sherbrooke Est 5555
H1N 1A2 Montreal, Rosemont–La Petite-Patrie
Quebec, Canada
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Phone number

call+15145965100

Website
marguerite-de-lajemmerais.csdm.ca

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Olympic Village (Montreal)
Olympic Village (Montreal)

The Olympic Village is a twin-tower structure in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, built as the athletes' residence for the 1976 Summer Olympics. Designed by architects Roger D'Astous and Luc Durand, it was built massively over budget by a consortium of architects, including Joseph Zappia, who was later convicted of fraud in connection with his involvement with the building. Construction was overseen by René Lépine, Chairman of Groupe Lépine, and his associates through the company Zarolega Inc. Construction overruns were so drastic that the Olympic Installations Board seized the complex after its original estimate of $30 million ballooned to $90 million. The Olympic Village is situated in Rosemont–La Petite-Patrie, with the entrance on the northeast corner of Sherbrooke Street East and Viau Street and the building extending along Sherbrooke Street as far as De L'Assomption Boulevard. Its design was chosen by Mayor Jean Drapeau to imitate a similar structure in the South of France and was criticized for its exposed walkways, as some noted that they were unsuitable for winter climate. All the athletes were housed there, except those participating in equestrian sports and sailing, who were housed in residences set up in Bromont, Quebec, and Kingston, Ontario.The Régie du logement has an office and court rooms on the ground floor. In 1998, Metcap Living Inc. bought the buildings from the Régie des Installations Olympiques for $64.5 million.In 2004, El-Ad Group bought the buildings from Metcap Living Inc. In 2012, El-Ad Group expressed their interest to sell the buildings.On August 6, 2012, it was reported that El-Ad had sold the buildings to CAPREIT for $177.5 million.