A place of uncommon beauty and seriousness
Our campus is at 23 Third Street and Kwame Nkrumah, Tanganyika House, Harare. It is a single, carefully designed home that will be expanded and refined over decades. It will never be franchised. It will never be replicated. Our campus is well secured due to the calibre of our students. Situated at the centre of Defence House, the Supreme Court of Zimbabwe, the Commercial Court of Zimbabwe and the NPA.
Every physical detail on this campus is an expression of one idea. That serious thought deserves a beautiful and serious place.
The Areopagus
This is our open-air debate chamber, sunken below ground level and clad in stone. There are no microphones. Every voice must carry its own weight. Students descend into it to speak with clarity and listen with intensity. It is where the hardest national conversations are hosted and where the nation is welcome to join them.
The Hall of Craft
This is our public exhibition space, open to all of Harare. It displays the leather-bound Opus masterpieces of our graduates, award-winning engineering prototypes, published research, and artwork from the Archbishop Tutu Residency. It is not a trophy cabinet. It is living proof that TGS is a productive institution, not merely a teaching one.
Maker-spaces and studios
Workshop spaces, professional recording and editing suites, and a black-box theatre sit alongside our academic buildings. The architecture refuses to separate the hand from the mind.
The Quiet Tech Lab
A dedicated research unit where artificial intelligence systems are built and audited according to one non-negotiable principle: human dignity comes first, always.
Public gardens
Our grounds are designed as a botanic garden of indigenous Zimbabwean flora, with a sculpture walk featuring commissioned works by African artists. The gardens are open to the public on weekends. This campus belongs to the city, not only to its students.
A visit to TGS College is not like visiting a typical college campus. You will notice the quality of the light, the weight of the stone, and the seriousness of the silence in the reading rooms.
We would love to show you around.