The university campus includes: • The Rectorate: Offices of the Rector and the four Vice-Rectors, the university’s General Secretariat, central academic services, and the audiovisual center. • The Faculties: Each of the eight faculties has research laboratories, practical work laboratories, a faculty administration (Dean, Vice-Deans, Heads of Departments), a faculty research library, and various service offices. • Teaching facilities: Teaching spaces are organized in: • Two "classroom blocks": groups of lecture and tutorial rooms commonly known as the 100 and 200 (Block A), and the 300 and 400 (Block B). • Twenty-four amphitheaters (of various capacities), named from A′ to Z′. • Two practical work buildings No. 1 and No. 2 (each with 40 laboratory rooms and 16 classrooms). • The University Library, which includes a large study area on the first floor and a lending section on the ground floor. • The Computer Resources Center (CRI), managing the university’s
intranet and
internet networks. • The University Village, which includes: • a 700-seat multipurpose hall, • a
canteen, • a bookstore run by the National University Publications Office, • a post office, • a cybercafé called
La Mezzanine, offering 100 Internet terminals for students in their 5th year and above, • a Wi-Fi study room open to students, • cultural and sports activity rooms: a music club, an art club, a games club, and an operations research club. • Preventive Medicine Unit: located near the 300′ classroom blocks. • The Auditorium: covering an area of , it includes a 1,800-seat conference hall and an exhibition space. The auditorium hosts major university events and educational screenings. • The “Omnisports” Hall, which supports indoor sports activities (basketball, handball, volleyball). • A
Francophone Digital Campus: located in the Computer Resources Center and intended for distance education, reserved for postgraduate students. • The Internet Space: a new cyber area with more than 500 high-speed computers. • The Intensive Language Teaching Center (CEIL): a group of language laboratories, mainly for English teaching, currently housed in the classroom Block A. • The Graduate Employment Observatory (Observatoire de l’insertion des diplômés de l’USTHB), which functions as: • a service coordinating the work of the faculties’ internship and graduate tracking units; • a decision-making tool for the university, faculties, and program managers: • the results of surveys contribute to reflection on the university’s mission, strategy, and curriculum development; • a source of information on the professional opportunities related to the programs offered at the university. The main mission of the Graduate Employment Observatory is to collect, analyze, and disseminate information about the professional integration of university graduates. It also aims to strengthen the link between education and employment by: • Conducting studies and surveys on graduates’ professional integration; • Providing relevant data to support action plans that improve training–employment alignment; • Promoting an employment-oriented culture. == Academic system ==