Mandurah Baptist College’s STEAM Centre is expected to provide students with enhanced science, technology and arts programs when completed later this year.

The new classrooms and facilities will be integrated and collaborative learning spaces created for science, technology, engineering, the arts and mathematics. The STEAM centre will also merge with the Lakes Theatre building, which will be refurbished with redesigned learning spaces for music and drama, as well as more presentation spaces.

Educational architect Brad Quartermaine, who designed the full college masterplan, has designed outdoor learning spaces and a seamless light and open entrance into the centre, which includes an indoor amphitheatre and landscaping. Senior school principal Matt Dusci said he could not wait to see the students in the new and “more collaborative” facilities.

“We’re really excited to see how it is going to be utilised,” he said. “So what we are looking at is a new STEAM Centre with a focus on technologies, engineering and science on the bottom floor and then arts classrooms with a media, visual arts and photography focus on the top floor. We’re really excited about the master plan, so I think it’s really going to extend what we do as a school over the years to come.”

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