place

Lislehurst

1885 establishments in OntarioBuildings and structures in MississaugaHistoric buildings and structures in OntarioHistory of MississaugaUniversity of Toronto Mississauga
University of Toronto buildingsUse Canadian English from January 2026
Lislehurst IDM 14962
Lislehurst IDM 14962

Lislehurst (also known as The Principal's Residence) is a historic mansion in Mississauga, Ontario, Canada. Built in 1885, the property has been owned by the University of Toronto since 1963, located on its Mississauga campus and traditionally serving as the residence of the campus principal. Lislehurst was designated a Historic Place in 1985.

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

Lislehurst
Principals Road, Mississauga Erin Mills

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Wikipedia: LislehurstContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 43.554722222222 ° E -79.668888888889 °
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Address

Lislehurst (The Principal's Residence)

Principals Road 3369
L5L 3E2 Mississauga, Erin Mills
Ontario, Canada
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Lislehurst IDM 14962
Lislehurst IDM 14962
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Nearby Places

Terrence Donnelly Health Sciences Complex
Terrence Donnelly Health Sciences Complex

The Terrence Donnelly Health Sciences Complex (TDHSC) is an academic building of the University of Toronto on its Mississauga campus in Mississauga, Ontario, Canada. The building is home to the Mississauga Academy of Medicine (MAM), one of the four academies in the Temerty Faculty of Medicine's MD program. It was built in 2011 as part of an effort to expand Ontario health care education, and is the only medical school location in Mississauga. The Faculty of Medicine is affiliated with Trillium Health Partners' teaching hospitals in Mississauga for students in the Mississauga Academy of Medicine. Apart from MAM, the Health Sciences Complex houses the UTM Biomedical Communications program and the Department of Anthropology. It was designed by Kongats Architects Toronto, with funding provided by Carlo Fidani, Terrence Donnelly, and the Provincial Government. Carlo Fidani donated $10 million for building costs, scholarships, and a chair in family and community medicine. Terrence Donnelly donated $12 million to building costs and scholarships. Capital funding for the project of $30.3 million was provided by the Provincial Government. The construction for the 5,960 square meter (64,153 square feet), four-storey building began the summer of 2009. The building officially opened on November 1, 2011. The building was designed like a "stacked box," built on a slope between the Communication, Culture and Technology and William G. Davis buildings, with an elevated walkway built connecting to the latter. Inside the building are modern classrooms, seminar rooms, computer facilities, learning spaces and laboratories, a student lounge, and outdoor terrace.