
Abu Dhabi Indian School - Muroor
Campus & Facilities in Abu Dhabi
Last updated
Campus & Facilities
Abu Dhabi Indian School - Muroor occupies a 175m x 150m campus in Hadbat Al Za'faranah, on land gifted by the late H.H. Sheikh Zayed Bin Sultan Al Nahyan — a founding legacy that underscores the school's deep roots in Abu Dhabi. The campus has been in continuous operation since 1975 and today serves 4,930 students across KG through Grade 12, making it one of the largest private K-12 schools in the emirate. The sheer scale of the student body — spread across separate boys' and girls' sections with staggered timetables — shapes every aspect of how the physical environment functions.
Academic facilities are functional and reasonably comprehensive for the fee level. The school operates 5 computer laboratories with approximately 100 client machines, 3 dedicated science laboratories (Physics, Chemistry, and Biology), a Mathematics laboratory, and an Audio Visual room with 60+ seating capacity equipped with a Smart Board and LCD Projector. All classrooms and laboratories are fitted with Interactive LED Panels or Projectors. A Robotics facility operates within the computer labs, supporting the school's Gears Robotic Club. Art and Craft rooms provide creative space, and a dedicated KG Activity Room, established in 2011, serves the Foundation Stage. Four libraries are distributed across campus — serving girls and boys separately across different blocks — with multilingual collections in English, Arabic, Hindi, and French, and access to the virtual Freedom reading platform up to Grade 8. However, the inspection noted that only two computers are available in each library, limiting access to digital reading resources during school hours, and the borrowing system is active only for Grades 6–12.
Sports provision includes a swimming pool and sports grounds where inter-house competitions are held on campus. The school participates actively in CBSE cluster and national competitions across swimming, football, badminton, athletics, chess, and tennis — a strong co-curricular record given the fee level. That said, detailed specifications for the pool and grounds are not publicly disclosed, and no gymnasium, indoor courts, or performance auditorium are listed among the school's facilities. [MISSING: gymnasium, indoor sports hall, and performing arts space specifications]
The medical room is well-resourced, staffed by 6 BLS-certified licensed registered nurses and equipped in line with Health Authority requirements. First Aid kits are stationed in high-risk areas including laboratories and the swimming pool. An annual SEHA vaccination programme operates on-site. There is no information available on dining facilities. [MISSING: canteen or dining hall details]
The 2024–25 ADEK inspection rated Management, Staffing, Facilities and Resources as Good, but the findings carry a candid warning: health and safety regressed from very good to good because facilities are now described as very old and maintenance checks are less regular than previously reported. Inspectors specifically recommended developing realistic maintenance budgets and capital plans, and providing more shaded outdoor areas and seating. The inspection also flagged that the Digital Campus system is not yet used effectively for day-to-day operations monitoring. New governors are noted as bringing corporate experience to facilitate long-term capital planning — a positive signal, but one that reflects work still ahead rather than completed.
At fees ranging from AED 5,560 to AED 11,690, ADIS sits firmly at the value end of Abu Dhabi's private school market. Among Indian curriculum schools in Abu Dhabi, the median fee is approximately AED 15,000, meaning ADIS charges below the peer-group median. At this price point, the breadth of facilities — four libraries, five computer labs, dedicated science and maths labs, a swimming pool, and a well-staffed medical room — represents reasonable provision. Parents should not, however, expect the specialist performing arts centres, modern sports complexes, or maker spaces found at schools charging AED 40,000 or above. The honest picture is a well-used but aging campus that delivers solid functional infrastructure, with facility investment now a stated governance priority.