The interior of the school was made to be a working set for several reasons; the main one being that it gave the production crew flexibility scheduling shooting days at the Avonlea village. Dealing with “losing the light” was a constant struggle when shooting exterior scenes, especially during the winter when daylight hours were quite short. Scheduling an interior school scene for the end of a shooting day gave the crew a chance to finish the day in spite of the diminishing light. If necessary, the Director of Photography would instruct the lighting crew to set up large lights that would shine through the windows to simulate daylight. Once the lights were turned on we could shoot all night… which happened more often than I care to remember.

The schoolhouse interior was also built to use for “weather cover”. The weather was always very unpredictable, so schoolhouse scenes were “floated” in the schedule in case bad weather blew in. Shooting in the school in a rainstorm though was far from ideal because it had many leaks and the rain on the roof drove the sound recordist crazy.

Shooting the schoolhouse in winter wasn’t much better because it wasn’t insulated and would get extremely cold inside. We would have to pull a large, portable diesel heater through the snow and put canvas heating tubes through the windows in order to heat the building. It was often a struggle to get the schoolhouse warm enough to prevent seeing the actor’s breath when they spoke. The cast would wear heavy coats until it was time to actually shoot the scene and then the wardrobe crew would rush to put them back on as soon as the director yelled “cut!”

The schoolhouse interior set proved very useful but in general it was quite difficult to shoot in. Space was limited, and unlike studio sets, walls could not be removed in order to accommodate elaborate camera and lighting set ups. Eventually a schoolhouse set was also built in the studio to make shooting big, elaborate scenes more easily achievable. Good examples of these are the interior schoolhouse scenes shot for “Another Point of View”, guest starring Christopher Lloyd.

The schoolhouse set at the Avonlea Village was well used throughout all seven seasons of “Road to Avonlea”. It became such a fixture to local travelers, that when the show finished production, the nearby town of Uxbridge, Ontario wanted to move it to their museum. Unfortunately the structure wasn’t built to last indefinitely though, so moving it was impossible. The schoolhouse was an integral part of the show both for the production crew and, most importantly, the citizens of Avonlea. It may not stand stoically on the grassy hilltop anymore but it will exist forever in the numerous “Road to Avonlea” episodes that it appeared in.
