Coláiste Íosagáin | |
Motto: | Irish: Mol an óige agus tiocfaidh sí |
Established: | 1971 |
Location: | Booterstown, County Dublin |
Country: | Ireland |
Coordinates: | 53.3028°N -6.2043°W |
Principal: | Sean Delap |
Free Label: | Religious order |
Free Text: | Siúracha na Trócaire |
Gender: | Female |
Colours: | Black and Yellow |
Homepage: | iosagain.eoiniosagain.ie |
Irish: Coláiste Íosagáin is a Catholic girls Irish: [[gaelcholáiste]] (Irish language secondary school) in Dublin, Ireland.
In 2008 and 2014, 100% of students went on to third level education.[1] It was ranked first from 2017 to 2019 by The Irish Times Good Schools Guide.[2]
In 1968 the Christian Brothers allocated land from its land part of the St. Helen's period house for the building of two schools: a girls' school, Coláiste Íosagáin, was established in 1971 under the control of the Sisters of Mercy, and a boys' school, Coláiste Eoin, under the control of the Christian Brothers. The school occupied temporary premises at Carysfort College, Blackrock from 1971–1975 when it moved to the Stillorgan Road new building. In 1983, President Hillery opened the new Coláiste Íosagáin school.[3]
The school has Gaelic football, camogie, basketball, and athletics teams. Camogie teams traditionally compete at Under 16 and Under 18 at B-League levels within the province of Leinster. In 2011, the Ladies B Under 18 Gaelic football team won the Inter-Schools All-Ireland Cup.
Early in the 1990s it was deemed that the school's existing single storey buildings, built in the 1970s, were too small to accommodate the expansion of both Coláiste Eoin and Íosagáin. It was decided that the school would require both a new classroom block and a sports hall/auditorium. The project, however, experienced difficulties from the outset due to a lack of funds. It took many years of collecting voluntary donations from parents and other members of the public for the project to even reach the planning stage. A second barrier was posed by the fact that additional accommodation could only be placed in a constricted rear area of the site, because the existing grass, Gaelic pitch to the south of this site was "sacrosanct". This restricted site condition caused the new building to be formed into two shared elements: a four storey academic block, and a sports hall with performance space. Despite these difficulties, building finally commenced in 2001, of a Grafton Architects-designed structure that met with all the schools requirements. The project was completed in 2003 and has since won an award at the Royal Institute of the Architects of Ireland Awards 2004. Work later commenced for a new building to be built on the far-side of Coláiste Íosagáin's main building, on a small side section of the school grass pitch in summer of 2013. The building consists of new classrooms, new changing rooms and chiefly, a school oratory. The building was completed in early December 2013 and is named 'Aireagal', because the main principle of the building is to provide an oratory for the students. This building completed the refurbishment of the school, and means that no more classes are held in prefabricated buildings.
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