"At a roomy 143,000 square feet—roughly 3 acres—the Davis Family Library on Storrs Avenue boasts 725 seats; wired and wireless networks; key service desks immediately accessible from a spacious, sunlit atrium; state-of-the-art classrooms; group study rooms; and offices for staff members supporting library and technology, as well as the Center for Teaching, Learning and Research and the Undergraduate Research Office."
2
Bicentennial Hall
"McCardell Bicentennial Hall, Middlebury College's multidisciplinary science facility, is home to seven academic departments (Biology, Chemistry and Biochemistry, Computer Science, Geography, Geology, Physics, and Psychology) and three programs (Environmental Studies, Neuroscience, and Molecular Biology and Biochemistry). Study lounges with bench seating and worktables are clustered at the end of each wing, and are used for lab breakout sessions, small group meetings, and individual study. Informal learning spaces, equipped with chalkboards, tables, and comfortable chairs, are located on the east and west sides of the Tormondsen Great Hall, and foster collaborative study, bull sessions, and conversations among students and faculty. The Tormondsen Great Hall itself, with its five story high atrium and window walls, serves as the building's 'town square,' visibly linking the various floors to create a more-intimate atmosphere, and encouraging collegial interactions among the various departments."
3
Proctor Dining Hall
"Proctor's convenient location in the middle of campus makes it the destination of '4 o'clock Proc' where friends duck in for a quick afternoon snack. Students may choose to eat in the main dining area, on the cozy couches and round tables of proctor lounge, in the more intimate booth room, upstairs or outside on the sunny patio and picnic tables."
4
McCullough student center
"The McCullough Student Center was established in 1991 to serve the students, faculty, guests of the College, and Middlebury community members by providing events, programming space, meeting space, information, food services, and a relaxing yet interesting environment at all times."
5
Axinn Center at Starr Library
"The Donald E. Axinn ’51, Litt. D. ’89 Center for Literary and Cultural Studies at Starr Library is a beautiful example of how a historic building can be updated and reintegrated into a modern campus in a sustainable way. Because of its exemplary melding of history, modernity and foresight, the building was honored with the Boston Society of Architects' Sustainable Design Award in 2009."
6
Mahaney Center for the Arts
"The Kevin P. Mahaney '84 Center for the Arts serves as a hub of arts activity on campus. Opened in 1992 as the Middlebury College Center for the Arts, this visual and performing arts facility serves the College and the surrounding communities. Its primary purpose is to provide an environment for the creation of art, and to invite audiences to experience the work of local, national, and international artists. The Mahaney Center for the Arts is home to the Middlebury College Museum of Art, the black-box style Seeler Studio Theatre, the dance theatre, and Robison Hall, a stunning 370-seat recital hall. The academic year is filled with a variety of exciting performances and exhibitions, offering our college community a unique opportunity to participate in the arts."
7
Le Chateau
"Built in 1925, the Chateau is modeled on the Pavillon Henri IV of the Chateau de Fontainebleau. It is home to the Grand Salon, classrooms, French Department offices, and residential rooms for nearly fifty students. Downstairs is a small theatre, once a student dining room, where various language departments stage plays.The Chateau was once the first and largest continuous "language house" in the country, where students were pledged to the use only of the foreign language of their study. It has long been home to the French School over the summer, serving as both a residence and an office building."
8
Forest Hall
"Forest Hall houses upperclassmen and Cook Commons sophomores. The Hall, built in 1936, derives its name from the forest that financed its construction. In 1915, Joseph Battell left the College mountain acreage, and the school sold a large portion of this acreage to Federal Government (for the Green Mountain National Forest). The building also houses the Office of the Registrar."
9
Freeman International Center
"Originally constructed as the Social Dining Units designed to foster student interaction, the facility was renamed in 1993 in honor of Stephen Freeman who served as professor of French from 1925-1970. It now houses classrooms, the offices for the German, Japanese, and Russian departments."