place

Warwick Senior High School

1981 establishments in AustraliaAustralian school stubsEducational institutions established in 1981Public high schools in Perth, Western AustraliaUse Australian English from April 2015
Western Australia stubs
Warwick SHS buildings 2
Warwick SHS buildings 2

Warwick Senior High School is a public co-educational high day school, located in Warwick, a northern suburb of Perth, Western Australia. Founded in 1981, the school provides education to approximately 900 students from Year 7 to Year 12. Specialist programs offered include netball, football, and academic excellence.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Warwick Senior High School (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Warwick Senior High School
Erindale Road, Joondalup Warwick

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Wikipedia: Warwick Senior High SchoolContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N -31.8379 ° E 115.8158 °
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Address

Warwick Senior High School

Erindale Road 355
6024 Joondalup, Warwick
Western Australia, Australia
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Phone number

call+61862404400

Website
warwickshs.wa.edu.au

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Warwick SHS buildings 2
Warwick SHS buildings 2
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Nearby Places

Hamersley, Western Australia
Hamersley, Western Australia

Hamersley is a residential suburb 14 kilometres (8.7 miles) north-northwest of the central business district of Perth, the capital of Western Australia, and six kilometres (4 mi) from the Indian Ocean. The suburb adjoins two major arterial roads—Mitchell Freeway to the west and Reid Highway to the south—and is within the City of Stirling local government area. It was built during the late 1960s and 1970s as part of the Government of Western Australia's response to rapidly increasing land prices across the metropolitan area.Before development, Hamersley was a remote district covered in jarrah, marri, banksia and other vegetation typical of the Swan Coastal Plain, with small areas cleared for small-scale agriculture such as market gardening and poultry farming. By 1974, six years after the first subdivision, Hamersley was home to the district's first community hall, an annual parade and fair which were broadcast on Perth TV and radio, an active progress association, and its own newspaper, the Hamersley Gazette, a forerunner to today's Stirling Times. Rapid growth further north removed the focus from Hamersley, which was completed in 1981 and has remained relatively stable since then. Significant reserves of remnant bushland remain in parts of the suburb. The largest of these is an exclusion zone around the 180-metre (590-foot) high ABC radio tower in the suburb's southeast, which broadcasts AM stations to the Perth metropolitan area. The guyed tower was built in 1939 and is a landmark in the region, although it has been a local political issue since the 1980s.