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HUFS is composed of two campuses, the Seoul campus located in the eastern region of the nation's capital city, and its suburban campus in Yong-in, which is about an hour and a half drive from the Seoul campus. As of 2005, the Seoul campus consists of 13 buildings, including the university Administrative Offices, Student Center, Humanities Building, Graduate Schools, Audio-Visual Education Center, Social Science Building, Foreign Language Training and Testing Center, Library, Faculty Office Building¥°, Faculty Office Building¥±, Information Building, Open Air Theater and International Center. The Yomg-in campus also consists of 13 buildings, including Administrative Offices, Humanities and Business Building, Language and Literature Building, Student Center, Women's Mo Hyun Dormitory, Men's Mo Hyun Dormitory, Information Building, Natural Science Building, Bar exam preparation Hall, Library, Information and Industry Building, Welfare Building and Center for International Area Studies.

The Seoul campus of HUFS cannot be described as either beautiful or spacious, but it is nevertheless highly convenient and efficiently designed so that all the buildings inside the campus are within a short walking distance of each other. The center of the campus used to be a pretty hilly garden called "Minerva Hill" which had served since the early days as the representative symbol of the Univrsity. But the New Main Building on the Seoul campus has built at that location. Numerous shops and boarding houses surround the campus to cater to the different needs of the students. Many students commute to the Seoul campus via the metropolitan subway, the HUFS subway stop being just a five-minute walk from most campus buildings.
 
The Yong-in campus offers a striking contrast to the urban atmosphere of the Seoul campus. Isolated from the hustle and bustle of the city life, the Yong-in campus is nestled in beautiful Wangsan valley filled with wild flowers and covered with rich foliage. Whereas the Seoul campus has virtually no more space for new construction, the 2.6 million square meters of the Yong-in campus still has many open sites for future development. At the center of the campus one finds the "Myoungsoodang" Pond, which lives fully up to its name that means the "pond with clear water". Students can choose to stay in the on-campus dormitory and use numerous on-campus facilities, or they can easily commute via commercial bus lines from Seoul. The University provides free shuttle transportation between the two campuses six times a day.