[2] The school has more than 113 classrooms (all equipped with smart board projectors and technology), a school store, a career center suite, guidance suite, conference spaces, student break-out study/collaborative rooms, weight and cardio rooms, an industrial culinary kitchen, outdoor patio cafe, a cafeteria for 700 students, and a 120,000-square-foot wing designed for science, technology, engineering, arts and mathematics classes.
A performing arts music wing includes an auditorium and theatre that can seat nearly 1,000 people, and has expansive performing/practice space.
Fall Winter Spring During the 2000s, Enfield High School has restructured and updated its security and discipline policies.
After several complaints and reports, police investigated his home to find a hit list of more than a dozen names.
"[5] After the Christmas break and the 2008 New Year, Enfield High School was closed for five extra days due to a water main break underneath the school which flooded the entire A, B, and C buildings, the lower basement level, the auditorium, and the gymnasium.
[6] Days lost due to the flood and fires at Enfield High were made up during April vacation per request of the State of Connecticut's mandatory 180-day school year.
[8] Issues of concern from the New England Association of Schools and Colleges were addressed with the construction of renovated classroom space and the library expansion in 2005.
[11] Enrico Fermi High School opened in 1971 not long after the present Enfield High School opened due to large graduating classes of the baby boomer generation when double sessions were required and graduating classes exceeded 700 students each session.
However, the facility's location on a corner lot prevented further expansion without expanding onto the newly renovated fields.
If expansion were to occur, the town would have to incur millions of dollars in expense for the remediation of the contaminated soils on the Enrico Fermi High School location.
[12] Plans for the consolidated building at Enfield High School by the firm, Silver Petrucelli & Associates, and construction company, Gilbane, called for a four floor "STEAM" (Science, Technology, Engineering, Art, Mathematics) wing addition to the south end of the building off A-wing which will include state-of-the-art science labs and classrooms.
A-wing will see a "like-new" renovation, as well the rest of the facility, that would gut the entire building to its core structure and will construct updated classrooms.
Site-plans reworked campus landscaping, traffic flow, and parking spaces for faculty and students.
The total cost of construction for the expansion and renovation to Enfield High School is approximately $103 million.
Academically, the plan is seen as high priority in order to improve the town's educational system on the secondary level.
Sports leagues regulations also have strict guidelines on mascots found offensive by different minority groups.
In February 2013, the Enfield Board of Education voted for the Eagle to be the consolidated high school's new mascot.