Læssøesgades School

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Coordinates56°08′47″N 10°11′14″E / 56.1464°N 10.1871°E / 56.1464; 10.1871
School typeElementary Public
EstablishedApril 16, 1921; 104 years ago (1921-04-16)
School number(+45) 86 12 33 87
Læssøesgade School
Læssøesgade Skole
Location
Læssøesgade 24, 8000 Aarhus C
Coordinates56°08′47″N 10°11′14″E / 56.1464°N 10.1871°E / 56.1464; 10.1871
Information
School typeElementary Public
EstablishedApril 16, 1921; 104 years ago (1921-04-16)
School number(+45) 86 12 33 87
PrincipalJens Sønderbæk (2016)
GradesReception - Year 10
GenderCo-ed
Age4 to 16
Enrolment350
LanguageDanish
WebsiteWebsite

Læssøesgade School (Danish: Læssøesgade Skole) is a public primary school in the Frederiksbjerg district of Aarhus, Denmark. The school offers reception classes, 1 through 10 grades and after-school activities in the Skolefritidsordning (Sfo).

In 1916 it was decided to build a new co-ed school in southern Aarhus in response to rapid population growth. The site chosen was what at the time was the edge of the city. The architect Ludvig Petersen had previously and recently worked on the Samsøgade School from 1914 and was chosen for the new project. The school was finished in 1921 and inaugurated on 16 April. The new school proved an expensive project at 1.5 million Danish Kroner compared to the 400.000 the Samsøgades school had cost. Lassøgade School was larger but the causes of the cost difference can mainly be found in the First World War and the ensuing inflation.[1] The school initially had 31 class rooms and between the years 1930 and 1960 it had an average of 1000 to 1300 students. The student body has since grown steadily smaller and by 1999 it was down to 350 students across 31 class rooms. Co-ed classes were not introduced until 1946. In 1961 Læsseøgade School became the first school in Aarhus to offer the optional and voluntary 10th grade.

From November 1942 during the occupation of Denmark in the Second World War the school buildings were used to house German troops. Students were moved to Ingerslevs Boulevards School where they were taught under difficult conditions. In spring of 1945 Ingerslevs Boulevards School also had to be closed and school activities were suspended. However, in June the occupation was over and Læssøgde School had been cleaned, renovated and restored.[1]

In 1920 Aarhus City Council gave permission to move a zoological collection, hosted by the Freemasons in a building in Christiansgade, to Læssøgade School. Between 1923 and the fall of 1939 the school hosted the collection on the top floor of the building. The collection was finally moved when a new museum building had been completed on the university campus where it remains to this day as the Natural History Museum.[1]

Architecture

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