Foundation Year     Waldorf Teacher Education     Early Childhood
San Francisco Teacher Education & Los Altos Teacher Education 
Waldorf
Administration     
Consciousness Studies      Nature & Art for Japanese

Enter the beautiful campus, sprinkled with heritage oaks, lush vegetation & unique architectural buildings.

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. 

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.

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.

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.

Adjacent to the Alcott House is Barton House, which contains the Kitchen, Dining Room, and classroom for
Early Childhood Education.

Next to Coleridge House is the Development Office.

To the left of Barton is Coleridge Hall which currently houses our craft classes.

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.

It houses a second piano, with chairs for choir, lyre practice, and eurythmy.

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.

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.

Philadelphia Hall is a multi-purpose classroom & hall for public lectures, workshops, and festival activities.

Philadelphia Hall houses a piano, and has beautiful architechtural features.

As you walk past Philadelphia Hall, you enter our biodynamic garden & orchard, complete with sheep, ducks, flowers, vegetables &  medicinal herbs.

Memorial Rose gardens surrounding the flowform fountain and the pond offer quiet refreshment & contemplation.

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.

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.


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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