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Facilities and equipment

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​​​​​​Want to know more about the EcoCentre?

Toohey Forest Environmental Education Centre is located within the sustainably designed Griffith University EcoCentre. The building includes a number of purpose built teaching spaces providing for up to 75 students per day (age and program dependent). In addition to the internal classroom options, select programs involve students undertaking field work activities in the surrounding natural environment of Toohey Forest.  Refer to the Programs page for further details.

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Canopy Room

Canopy Room

The Canopy Room is a unique classroom that features the latest in digital AV equipment. Students are immersed in an environment that includes live native animal exhibits, preserved specimens, and a variety of interactive educational displays.

Animals that call the classroom home include pythons, lizards, turtles and others. Digital displays provide information on real-time solar energy generation and consumption.

The visual nature of the Canopy Room means that students are never short of stimulus material to engage the senses and challenge their knowledge and understanding.

Understorey Room

The Understorey Room is located on the ground floor of the EcoCentre, and is predominantly used as a wet lab to investigate water samples using stereo microscopes and a variety of technologies.  Students are able to view and record specimens in real-time via a 65” LCD screen.

The Understorey Room overlooks a freshwater pond, opening out to the heath understorey of Toohey Forest beyond.  It is a popular space for students and teachers alike, as well as some of the opportunistic reptiles and birds that have made their home in the EcoCentre surrounds.


Outdoor Classrooms

Most programs involve students learning in outdoor classroom settings, which may vary from collecting water samples in Mimosa Creek, conducting  quadrat studies in a variety of different ecosystems, to a bushwalk focused on native species and their adaptations to the environment, fire ecology and indigenous uses of select plant species.

The walking tracks in the immediate surrounds of the EcoCentre offer a relatively easy bush walk option for people of all ages and abilities.  The tracks feature signage detailing various aspects of ecology, nest boxes, as well as showcase a wide variety of native plants.  The natural surrounds are a great way to engage students curiosity, and provide rich contexts for learning.

The outdoor classrooms also offer the keen observer the opportunity to see koalas in the trees along Mimosa Creek, lace monitors meandering through the open forest areas, or the elusive Powerful Owl roosting in preparation for a night of hunting.

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Last reviewed 03 November 2023
Last updated 03 November 2023