The school was built by FR Eccleshare Ltd of Dixon Street,[8] to be finished by the end of June 1968.[9] The contract was for £340,000.[10] It opened on Tuesday 10 September 1968, with 600 boys, and the headteacher was Mr L Middleton. The total cost was £344,000, with a site of 35 acres.[11][12]
The next phase of construction was approved in March 1969, to cost £228,000. In November 1969, the second phase of construction was to begin by March 1971, costing £324,000, and was approved by the (Labour) government for 1970/71, for the school to become an eight-form comprehensive school.[14] The chief education officer for Lincoln was Francis Stuart. In June 1970, selection was planned to continue to 1972.[15] The swimming pool was officially opened on Wednesday 23 May 1973.[16]
The main part of the old School Building was completed in 1975 to designs by Associated Architects of Birmingham and was described in the Buildings of England as having an arresting sawtooth rhythm along the roof, repeated in the window heads and canopy.[17]
Grammar school
It was originally the City School, Lincoln, and moved from its original site on Monks Road, Lincoln in 1968. Much of the old school site was demolished in July 1976.[18]
The school competed in Television Top of the Form, broadcast on BBC1 on Thursday 3 April 1969 against girls from Cambridge Grammar School (now Long Road Sixth Form College).[19] The team was Andrew Dobbs aged 11, Raymond Yarsley, John Herrick, and Anoottam Ghosh.[20] The team won 43-38.[21] In the quarter-final the team faced boys of Whitley Bay Grammar School on Thursday 15 May 1969. The team lost 64-52.[22][23]
Comprehensive
In February 1973 boys were transferred from the former Sincil Secondary Modern School. By February 1973 the school had 1200 boys, when it went comprehensive, under the new headteacher Alan Garner. At the July 1973 prizegiving, the headteacher admitted that competition and comprehensive education did not always go together. He said that, due to comprehensive educationthe teacher must ask, that a boy should do his best, not say what his best should be.[24]
After the high standards, and reputation, of the former boys grammar school, standards started to plummet within months. By April 1974, the headteacher had to lock the toilets during class time, to prevent truancy.[25]
With federation membership, a multimillion-pound redevelopment of the site was initiated, with work commencing in 2010 and completed in 2012.
Sports centre
The academy has a sports centre which has a swimming pool, fitness suite, gym, Sportshall, Dance Studio and outside there is a field and the MUGA (multi use games area) which is used for many different sports. In mid-2014 a 3G artificial pitch was opened.[citation needed]
Notable former pupils
Boys' grammar school (1968–73)
Steve Adlard, sports coach, head boy in 1968, goalkeeper for the England school team[26][27]