Just to clarify, the three circles for 380 did not fill up the ballroom by any means -- there was plenty of room. A high school basketball court might just work, depending on how much of an oval shape you have to make -- I like Joelle's suggestion to try it.
Jeff Doug, I've set up three concentric circles which held 380 people, in a ballroom probably the size Chris is describing. There was a picture window view of the morning's fresh snowfall, and I made the mistake of joking about the "law of two skis" -- so that we only had 125 people use the breakout spaces. Everyone else hit the slopes (it was one day of OST, on the second day of a four day conference. Another mistake.) I think we had reserved 20-25 breakout rooms. Jeff At 9:24 AM -0700 8/1/02, Chris Corrigan wrote: >Probably a ball room that can accommodate around 1000 people theatre >style would be big enough for you to get everyone into the circle. The >more square it is the better. I would estimate about somewhere in the >neighborhood of 20 to 30 break out spaces, but you should be able to fit >ten or more in a room of that size, needing only another ten to twenty >other spaces. > >That's my guess. > >Chris * * ========================================================== osl...@listserv.boisestate.edu ------------------------------ To subscribe, unsubscribe, change your options, view the archives of osl...@listserv.boisestate.edu, Visit: http://listserv.boisestate.edu/archives/oslist.html