Yotsuya Campus Map

1 Bldg.No.1
This red-brick building, constructed in 1932, is the oldest of the current university buildings and acts as a symbol of Sophia University.
2 Bldg.No.2
This newly reconstructed building houses the administration offices, the Media Center and many computer labs as well as faculty offices.
3 Bldg.No.3
4 Bldg.No.4
5 Gymnasium
6 Bldg.No.6
7 Bldg.No.7
8 Bldg.No.8
9 Bldg.No.9
10

Bldg.No.10
The administrators and professors in the Faculty of Liberal Arts have their offices in Building No. 10.

Lecture Hall
Building No. 10 is also the site of the campus's large lecture hall. Occupying the first and second floors of Building No. 10, the hall is equipped for simultaneous interpretation between four different languages, and is able to stage international conferences and symposia. It also boasts a full range of audio-visual facilities.

11 Bldg.No.11
12 Jochi Kioizaka Bldg.
13 Hoffmann Hall
Named after Fr. Hermann Hoffmann, the first president of Sophia University, this multi-purpose building houses a wide variety of facilities such as a health care center, rooms for students' clubs and circles, a training center, and conference rooms.
14 Central Library and Research Institutes
This core education and research building on the campus has three basement levels and nine stories, housing the Central Library, graduate school research facilities, research institutes, and centers for various other purposes.
15 Krupp Hall
The Krupp hall and Machine Hall are used as experimental and training facilities by the Faculty of Science and Technology. The Krupp Hall was built with funds donated by the Krupp Foundation of Germany.
16 Machine Hall
17 Power Station I
18 Power Station II
19 Power Station III
20 Kulturheim
In the middle of the campus stands the Kulturheim, a European-style wooden building built by a nobleman in the Meiji era. It is currently used as a Jesuit sanctuary.
21 S.J.House
22 Sophia House
23 Sophia House annex (Sophians Club)
24 Jochi Kojimachi Building
25 Cafeteria(basement)