
Enter the beautiful
campus, sprinkled with heritage oaks, lush vegetation & unique
architectural buildings.
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Directly
ahead of you is Carl Stegmann Hall that contains the Art Room,
the Music Room, a Teacher Education classroom, and a beautiful
performing arts center.
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To the left of the Hall, you will
find Thoreau House which is home to the Rudolf Steiner College Bookstore
and Rudolph Steiner College Press.
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Rudolf Steiner Bookstore is expanding
and adding new titles, art cards, calendars, and waldorf toys (see
below) as well as wool felting supplies, and charming children's
books.
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Across the way from Carl Stegmann
Hall is the Main Office called Alcott House. The reception area
and admissions office can be found in this building.
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Adjacent to the Alcott
House is Barton House, which contains the Kitchen, Dining Room,
and classroom for
Early Childhood Education.
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Next to Coleridge House is the
Development Office.
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To the left of Barton is Coleridge
Hall which currently houses our craft classes.
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Opposite the Development Office is
our Eurythmy classroom, affectionately known as The Barn. From humble
beginnings it was transformed into a home for artistic activity.
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It houses
a second piano, with chairs for choir, lyre practice, and eurythmy.
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Next
to The Barn is Emerson. This room now forms one wing of a larger classroom
building. It used to stand alone as the first College building whose
former incarnations included being a bicycle repair shop and a factory
for making bows and arrows.
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Emerson is now connected
to Philadelphia Hall, the first building entirely designed
and built for Rudolf Steiner College. Coleridge House, Emerson
and Philadelphia Hall form a central quadrangle where faculty
and students gather.
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Philadelphia Hall
is a multi-purpose classroom & hall for public lectures, workshops,
and festival activities.
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Philadelphia Hall houses a piano,
and has beautiful architechtural features.
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As you walk past
Philadelphia Hall, you enter our biodynamic
garden & orchard, complete with sheep, ducks, flowers,
vegetables & medicinal herbs.
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Memorial Rose gardens
surrounding the flowform fountain and the pond offer quiet
refreshment & contemplation.
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Just
past the gardens is the new Norton Complex consisting of co-ed
dormitories, library and the Commons meeting rooms.In
the future we will build an early childhood center, retirement
residence and a performing arts theater.
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The library is next
to the dorms and mail room. The library houses computers for students
to use, and many books on Waldorf education as well as Steiner
lectures.
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As you will have noticed, several of the buildings on our campus
are named for Americans who have been important thinkers, writers,
and initiators of humanitarian work: Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry
David Thoreau, Clara Barton, and Bronson Alcott. While we are dedicated
to the service of all humanity, we feel that these figures represent
a particularly American expression of our ideals and hopes for a
future harmony among all people.
Now you have completed your virtual tour of Rudolf Steiner College.
We welcome you to come for an actual visit!
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