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Dfg/lfa school in Germany
Deutsch-Französisches Gymnasium Freiburg / Lycée franco-allemand de Fribourg
The DFG / LFA Freiburg (French: Lycée Franco-Allemand de Fribourg; German: Deutsch-Französisches Gymnasium Freiburg im Breisgau) is a DFG/LFA, a public French-German secondary school in Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany. It offers free education from grades 5 through 12.
The DFG Freiburg was established in 1972 (1972). Final year students take the French-German Baccalaureate, a diploma recognised by France as equivalent to the Baccalauréat, and by Germany as equivalent to the Abitur. For the final three years, students choose between literary, social, and natural science branches (L, ES and S) as is usual in French lycées.
In 2017, on the occasion of the Treaty of Rome's 60th anniversary, the school's student representatives published a pro-European opinion piece saying "don't mess with the European Union".
Amenities
The campus consists of an old building with an annex and a gym, a new building, a sports field, and a pavilion. The old building was designed by Konrad Kuhn and built in 1976. It stands on the former site of the municipal plant nursery, which moved to the Mundenhof in the west of Freiburg in the early 1970s.
The roofs of the old and new building are equipped with photovoltaic solar panels with a combined nominal power of 55 kWp. The panels were erected by students and teachers, and belong to a registered association (e.V.) incorporated in 2002. The association also installed a small wind turbine on the new building.
The school offers rooms in its boarding school in Günterstal, which had 64 residents in 2017. Around 100 students live across the French border in Alsace and attend school using a bus organised by parents.