PEI

P.E.I. government unveils design plans for new Évangéline Education Centre

Plans for the new $54-million school in Abram-Village also include an Acadian and francophone arts and culture centre, a public library and a daycare.

Prince County school was heavily damaged during post-tropical storm Fiona in 2022

What the new Évangéline Education Centre will offer students and community members

1 day ago
Duration 2:22
The new centre in the P.E.I. community of Abram-Village will replace the school that was heavily damaged in post-tropical storm Fiona. Officials say the new facilities will benefit not just students, but the entire community.

The provincial government announced the design for the new Évangéline Education Centre in Abram-Village, a replacement for the community's storm-damaged school.

P.E.I. Education Minister Rob Lantz said the original idea was to repair and renovate the community's existing school, École Évangéline, which was heavily damaged during post-tropical storm Fiona in 2022.

As the planning process went on, he said staff realized it would be better to build a brand new school.

The new Évangéline Education Centre will be built on the same site as the existing school. It will hold 225 school-aged students, 56 preschool children in its early years centre, and 15 students enrolled in before and after-school care programs.

The plans also include an Acadian and francophone arts and culture centre, a public library and a daycare.

Community members look over plans for the new school at an open house on Monday.
Community members look over plans for the new school at an open house in Abram-Village on Monday. (Julien Lecacheur/Radio-Canada)

"This is not just a school. This will be a place where the whole francophone Acadian community can gather," Lantz said.

"There's a lot of different interests and we want to make sure that the building included all of the amenities that all those different groups need."

The project is estimated to cost $54.3 million, with both the provincial and federal governments contributing funding. Construction is expected to start in the summer, with plans to open for the 2028 school year.

"I think that it was worth the time and effort to get here and we're ready to start digging," Lantz said.

A photo of a roof blown off of a school classroom in a wind storm.
École Évangéline sustained extensive damage to its roof in post-tropical storm Fiona in 2022. (Submitted by École Évangéline)

Students' ideas being used in project designs

Gilles Arsenault, the minister responsible for Acadian and francophone affairs in P.E.I., said there have been many meetings and consultations to finalize the design of the new education centre. 

"It's going to be used quite a bit and it will be the anchor of the community. As it is now, but with a new and modern look and feel to it," Arsenault said. 

Rendering of outside of a school.
Construction on the Évangéline Education Centre, shown here in a rendering, is expected to begin by summer 2025 with the goal of opening for the 2028 school year. (SableARC)

Some students at École Évangéline got the chance to share their own ideas about what the new school should look like and how it could be a better place to learn.

Grade 10 student Charlee Casey will have graduated by the time the school opens, but she said it's really nice to know the students had a say in the project.

"It's just nice to see the plan has actually started and going and they're doing a really good job on it," she said.

Arsenault said school is based on students being happy and comfortable in the building and environment they're in.

"We often forget to have the voice of the young people coming in, because they have great ideas and great ways of developing their own environment," he said.

"It is something that was very important to us to make sure their voice [was] heard. And not only heard, but also implement the changes that they were recommending."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Taylor O'Brien is a reporter based in Charlottetown. She is a recipient of the 2024 CBC Joan Donaldson Scholarship and has previously reported for CBC in Thunder Bay, Ont. She holds a master of journalism degree from Carleton University. You can contact Taylor by emailing [email protected].

With files from Julien Lecacheur