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SAIT (Southern Alberta Institute of Technology) has undergone as much growth as the industrial sectors it serves, and its latest expansion plan promises to keep the momentum going.
As Canada’s first public technical school, SAIT has a long history of meeting the increasing demands for skilled technical workers, beginning with its opening in 1916 as the Provincial Institute of Technology and Art.
The original school trained returning World War I veterans in makeshift accommodations in a former police and fire station in southeast Calgary until relocating to 1301 16th Avenue NW in 1922.
Providing a home at times for a teacher’s college, the University of Alberta, and the Royal Canadian Air Force, the Collegiate Gothic building has served since 1946 as the main campus for the school, renamed the Southern Alberta Institute of Technology in 1960.
The Mayland Heights Campus includes the Bob Edwards Building at 2015 Centre Avenue East and the NR Buck Crump Building at1940 Centre Avenue NE.
At these campuses and through distance learning courses, the Southern Alberta Institute of Technology trains more than 75,000 workers per year and is the alma mater for more than 150,000 alumni in fifty-five countries across the globe.
This instition has kept up with the unprecedented growth in various technical fields by constantly expanding its programs to satisfy industry needs. These areas include energy, construction, transportation, information technology, engineering technology, manufacturing, automation, transportation, communications, media/broadcasting, and business, but SAIT also serves industries that may not seem overtly technical in nature.
Some of these equally important fields are English language foundations, health and public safety, tourism, trades, and culinary arts.
The Southern Alberta Institute of Technology is committed to the development of the aboriginal labor force and works with twenty-seven Alberta First Nations in partnerships throughout western Canada.
With an average class size of twenty-seven, the school gives students the individualized, hands-on training that they need for today’s world economy. That economy is always at the forefront of SAIT curriculum considerations, and the institute excels at designing programs that put the employer’s needs first.
SAIT works with over a thousand business professionals in sixty-five advisory committees to gain invaluable input about the needs of various industries from people who work in those fields on a daily basis.
That workforce is currently experiencing an extreme labor crunch, and the school is unable to accommodate all the students that it attracts.
To address this imbalance, SAIT recently announced an expansion project to create a new trade and technical centre to serve an additional 8,600 full-time students.
With a staggering projected cost of $353 million and a completion date of 2011, the new centre will offer diploma, certificate, and apprenticeship programs for the energy and construction sectors, the industries with the most urgent need for skilled workers.
That need is so great that school officials expect the new space to be filled as soon as it becomes available.
The brainchild of renowned architect Bing Thom, the project involves the eventual construction of new student housing, a new media centre, a hospitality/tourism complex, and additional parking and pedestrian areas.
Learn how you can contribute to this growing technical workforce by visiting
The Southern Alberta Institute of Technology
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