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Applied Magic Classroom Description
#1

CLASSROOM DESCRIPTION




[Image: 272_AMclassroomsmaller.jpeg]

The Applied Magic classroom was a mix of three connected rooms. The first, where they would spend a bulk of their time, was the main learning space. The room was your typical classroom setting, long wooden desks set up in straight rows. A raised dais at the front of the class with a lectern. There were bookcases on the far wall, filled with text books, recipe books, woodworking books, and a multitude of other specialized subject material. There were posters on the wall as well, some with basic recipe spells, tailoring guidelines, and how to guides for basic cleaning spells. Being in the dungeon, there was very little natural light, so glowing lumos orbes hovered over the classroom, giving off a warm glow. Above the bookcases, there were skinny windows, letting in a small amount of natural light.


[Image: 274_AppliedMagickitchen.jpeg]

The second room, connected to the first, was magical in nature, allowing for different spaces depending on the lesson topic.

As a kitchen space there were long wood tables where students would work in groups to craft ‘hopefully’ delicious meals. Along the walls of the classroom was a separate cooking space for students to work in groups. Cabinets lined the walls, with butcher block countertops. Each group was equipped with an oven, stove, sink, cold storage and long table. At the front of the class a sign sat above a wooden door that read PANTRY, where the students would find all the food needed for their lessons. A long wall of shelves held all the possible cooking equipment needed, from pots, pans, mixing bowls, utensils and towels.


[Image: 271_AMWorkroom.jpeg]

When the room wasn’t a kitchen, it would often be a general work space. The cooking appliances were replaced with towering bookcases and shelving units. Everything from wood, tools, flowerpots, sewing machines, metal sheets, how-to-guides, cauldrons of different sizes, glass bottles, stacks of wood, and cleaning tools. There were long workbench tables for working on projects.