Gulaga Room
Located on the ground floor, the Gulaga Room offers an ideal setting for a variety of events and activities. The space is perfectly suited for dance or performance rehearsals, information forums, seminars, workshops, and smaller cabaret-style performances. The room can comfortably accommodate up to 100 people, making it a versatile option for both intimate and larger gatherings.
For presentations and visual needs, the Gulaga Room is equipped with a built-in data projector and screen. Guests are requested to bring their own laptop with an HDMI connection to utilise these facilities.
Maximum Capacities
The Gulaga Room is a versatile space that can be configured to suit a variety of event formats. Depending on your requirements, the room provides the following capacity options:
- Theatre Style: Accommodates up to 100 guests, making it suitable for presentations, forums, and performances where audience members are seated in rows facing the front.
- Cocktail Style: Holds up to 100 people, ideal for standing receptions or casual networking events where mingling and social interaction are prioritised.
- Banquet Style: Seats 80 guests at round tables, offering a comfortable setting for formal dinners, celebrations, or catered events.
- Cabaret Style: Supports up to 56 attendees, with seven people seated per table, allowing for a combination of dining and viewing a central performance or presentation.
- Classroom Style: Fits 45 participants plus one facilitator, providing a focused learning environment ideal for training sessions, workshops, or seminars where tables are required for writing or equipment.
- U-Shape Arrangement: Accommodates 33 people, creating an open-ended seating arrangement that promotes discussion and interaction, well-suited for meetings, brainstorming sessions, or collaborative workshops.
| Gulaga Room meaning |
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Gulaga Mountain is the spiritual mother and place of origin, our birthplace. Gulaga and the surrounding landscape have great spiritual significance to the local Aboriginal people, particularly Aboriginal women.
In May 2006 the mountain was handed back to its traditional Aboriginal owners in an historic agreement signed by the NSW Environment Minister and the Yuin people.
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