Virtual Campus Tour

Photo of programme building

This is our programme building, which was redecorated in 2023 in order to house our administration and teaching staff offices, as well as five classrooms. Outside we have a small garden area.

This is one of our teaching staff offices. All desks have been designed with extra space to allow for tutorials with up to two students to happen at our teachers’ desks. All office rooms are equipped with air conditioning and air filters.

This is one of the smart classrooms in our programme building, equipped with air conditioning and air filters, moveable desks and chairs, and enormous white boards on both side walls.

This is one of our smaller rooms that can be used for group tutorials with students, small module meetings with staff or any other kind of meeting that requires a different environment than the teaching staff offices.

This is our big meeting room. Meetings happen here.

Our break area with a coffee machine, a microwave and a fridge. Around the corner is a water machine that provides hot water for warm beverages.

In the distance you can see CDUTCM’s “100-step bridge” crossing one end of the main campus lake.

Another view of the lake, with the small pagoda in the centre which houses a giant bell that was gifted to CDUTCM just about visible.

Campus has a series of boardwalks that go around and across the lake.

There are lots of picturesque little walkways through trees and flowers that can be explored around campus.

A row of gingko trees lines this canal. There are a lot of gingko trees around campus, which makes campus look great when their leaves go a golden yellow near the beginning of winter. The gingko tree is the city tree of Chengdu, and apparently they have been around since the time of the dinosaurs. Gingko trees claimed to be over 1000 years old can be found in temples and ancient towns around Chengdu.

A big grassy field on campus that is very popular with students when the weather is good.

Another small lake in the centre of campus.

Walking through the park areas of campus at different times of year is rewarding because of the different flowering cycles of the flowers and trees that have been planted there.

Last but not least, the campus geese, who seem particularly fond of the main lake area and can often be found near the “100-step bridge”.