
Icademy Middle East FZ LLC occupies a fundamentally different physical footprint from any other KHDA-licensed school in Dubai. Rather than a purpose-built campus with sports fields and science laboratories, iCademy operates from a single ground-floor unit at Block 5, Dubai Knowledge Park — a compact, office-style learning centre that serves as the physical anchor for what is primarily a digital school. Campus size data is [MISSING: total square meterage of the Knowledge Hub facility], and no dedicated sports halls, swimming pools, libraries, dining facilities, or medical rooms are listed in available data.
What the Knowledge Hub does offer is a focused, technology-rich environment. The school's academic infrastructure is built around the Canvas (Instructure) LMS, with live virtual classroom sessions, Google Classroom and Microsoft Teams integration, interactive whiteboards at the Hub, and an AI onboarding chatbot. This is a genuinely capable digital learning stack, and for a school whose entire model is online delivery, it is the appropriate measure of academic infrastructure. Approximately 200 students attend the Knowledge Hub in person, with flexible attendance options of 2, 3, or 5 days per week — a model that suits the school's purpose but is not comparable to a mainstream campus environment.
Physical activity is addressed through organised events rather than dedicated facilities. Sports Day activities have included paddle ball, soccer, baseball, and cricket, but [MISSING: details of any permanent sports or recreation facilities]. There are no arts performance spaces, early years specialist rooms, or on-site medical or dining facilities documented in available data. Parents considering iCademy should understand this clearly: the physical environment is intentionally minimal, and that is a deliberate design choice rather than a shortcoming.
On inspection, iCademy is not assessed by KHDA's DSIB inspection team in the same manner as mainstream schools, and carries a 'Not inspected' rating on the KHDA school profile. This means there is no independent regulatory assessment of the learning environment to reference. The school holds NEASC accreditation, which provides external quality assurance, but this does not substitute for a facilities-focused DSIB inspection.
At fees of AED 19,828 to AED 27,767 — below the median annual fee of AED 33,610 for American curriculum schools in Dubai — the fee-to-facility equation is straightforward: parents are paying for curriculum access, flexibility, and accreditation, not physical infrastructure. Among the 42 American curriculum schools in Dubai, iCademy sits at the lower end of the fee range, and its facilities reflect that positioning honestly. Families choosing iCademy are not choosing it for its campus — they are choosing it despite the absence of one.