Lake Forest Academy is situated on a wooded 150-acre (0.61 km2) campus, which includes a small lake. There are over 30 buildings on campus, including Reid Hall (formerly the estate of Chicago meat entrepreneur
J. Ogden Armour), Corbin Academic Center, Hutchinson Commons, the Student Union (which houses the dining hall), five dormitories and several faculty housing buildings. The Cressey Center for the Arts (formerly the Fine & Performing Arts Center, or FPAC) is the site for all-school meetings, concerts and student theatrical productions; the Reyes Family Science Center; and a new student union building was opened in the fall of 2016, housed within it is the Stuart Center for Global Learning. Approximately three-quarters of the faculty of Lake Forest Academy live on campus.
Dormitories Lake Forest Academy houses its approximately 200 boarding students in five different campus dormitories. The dorms are single-sex and are of varying size.
Ferry Hall Dormitory Ferry Hall Dormitory was completed in the winter of 2012, and the first girls moved into their rooms in February of that year. Named in honor of Ferry Hall School, and taking design elements from that campus, Ferry Hall Dormitory is the first building to be built on the campus of Lake Forest Academy specifically and originally for girls. With 36 beds, Ferry, as it has come to be known by students is the newest dormitory and is located across the Silver Family Field from Atlass Hall, forming a quad with the Crown Fitness and Wellness Center and Reid Hall. In addition to housing students, Ferry Hall Dormitory is also the home to four faculty apartments.
Atlass Hall Atlass is the newest boys' dormitory. Located in the center of campus, it is closest to the academic buildings and dining hall. In addition to generously sized rooms and new furniture, Atlass also sports a comfortable lounge area with a television, sofas, and
pool table. Atlass is a two-story building that houses 70 boys and four faculty members in apartments on either north or south end of the dorm. Atlass opened in January, 1999 following a grant from H. Leslie Atlass Jr., class of 1936, in honor of his father (class of 1912). According to the inscription on the dormitory, Atlass Sr. was a "broadcasting pioneer and innovator." The financial gift was given with the condition that it be used to construct a new boys' dormitory, since Bates House, the previous boys' dormitory constructed in 1948 and meant to be only temporary, was in extremely poor condition.
Warner House Warner House houses about 30 boys and five faculty members; four in the actual structure, and one family in the attached Remsen Cottage. Warner is acknowledged to be the oldest structure on the Lake Forest Academy campus, thought in campus lore to have been a horse stable in the years before the academy when J. Ogden Armour occupied the campus space. Upon the academy's relocation to its current physical plant in 1948, the Board of Trustees dedicated the building to Ezra J. Warner Jr., class of 1895. Warner is located near the former football field and with its relatively large number of faculty, has always been a dormitory that epitomizes the strong connection between students and faculty at LFA.
Marshall Field House Marshall Field House (or simply "Field") is the home to 72 female boarding students. Field is older than the Atlass dorm with its first season of housing students in 1965 but Field House is the closest dorm to the Student Center and has the most spirit of all of the academy dormitories. Marshall Field House was named after
Marshall Field, the founder of
Marshall Field and Company, the
Chicago-based chain of
department stores. A substantial donation was made by Field to the academy, and the Marshall Field House was dedicated to him on October 9, 1965.
McIntosh Cottage McIntosh Cottage (known simply as "Mac") is a unique dormitory, housing only nine girls in five rooms. In addition to the nine student residents, McIntosh houses two faculty members in apartments. McIntosh was named for Arthur T. McIntosh, class of 1896, by his son. == Athletics ==