College buildings are traditionally arranged around a courtyard, and if your buildings are already arranged that way you should celebrate. A courtyard is beneficial because it channels pedestrian traffic past a single entrance where offices and bulletin boards can be placed, and because it screens off vehicular traffic and outside noise, something that is especially important in an urban setting.
But if you are working with buildings that do not have a courtyard arrangement you should certainly not despair, especially if your college isn’t in an urban setting where a courtyard is more necessary. What you want to provide, with or without a courtyard, is a sense of enclosure, and this can be accomplished with land.
S. No. | Types of Room | No. of Rooms | Area (In mt. Sqr.) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Principal Office | 01 | 27.9 |
2 | Office | 01 | 22.3 |
3 | Staff Room | 01 | 22.3 |
4 | Art & Craft | 01 | 24.3 |
5 | ET Lab | 01 | 55.8 |
6 | Psychology Lab | 01 | 27.9 |
7 | Science & Math Lab | 01 | 27.9 |
8 | Library | 01 | 92.9 |
9 | Class Room | 14 | 55.8 |
10 | Multipurpose Holl | 01 | 200 |
11 | Girl Common | 01 | 22.3 |
12 | Boys Common | 01 | 22.3 |
13 | Sports Hall | 01 | 22.3 | 13 | Lab | 05 | 22.3 |