
Sorry for the bad photos, I had these lying on my hard drive since spring of ’06, but never had a real reason to post them until now. Today, Edith Cavell School (on Ontario St., in Riverside) was in the news, on AM800. It’s actually not a school anymore; about six years ago it was converted to condos. Apparently, Scaledown.ca’s own Mark Boscariol had a hand in creating this awesome adaptive-reuse project! I actually attended this school, between 1993 and 1994 while the new King Edward Public School was being built. It was a beautiful mess. Strage fungi growing in the basement gym, dark and dingy hallways, and very, very high ceilings.
From AM800 CKLW today:
| HERITAGE DESIGNATION | 2008-10-09 06:44:25 |
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The old Edith Cavell school in Riverside is being recommended for heritage designation. It’s had several incarnations since being built in 1919, including Riverside High School and Brennan High School. It was converted to condominiums in 2002. |
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I’m not sure what prompted the idea to designate it, but it’s a great idea to honour and preserve this structure.

Edith Cavell from the front. I remember having class portraits on this lawn.

Around back, I’m standing approximately where the gym used to be. The gym was below ground level, and the upper reaches of it were visible from the playground. Also, to the left in this photo, there was an extension of classrooms which apparently were removed during the condo conversion.

The brick structure is wonderful. A cat sits in the window of what was the music room.

The ceilings in the classrooms are wonderfully high in this 3 story structure.
Edith Cavell is obviously named after the famed British nurse whom in WWI, helped allied soldiers flee from German occupied Belgium. She was captured by the Germans and executed. This was a story we learned quite well while at the school. It’s good to see that adaptive re-use exists (or existed) in Windsor. If only it was a more popular alternative to outright demolition.
Owen Wolter Owen Wolter is the creator of windsoriteDOTca, former author of Windsor blog Windsor Visuals and is a self-described storyteller photojournalist. Owen believes print will never be replaceable, but that the internet is a fascinating market for 21st century news and communication.