Campus Ideaz

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One of the most common struggles I’ve seen as a student is simply finding my way around large campuses. Google Maps helps outdoors, but the moment you step inside a building, its usefulness ends. Freshers often feel lost trying to locate classrooms, labs, or administrative offices. The same happens in malls—hundreds of shops spread across multiple floors, but no easy way to find the exact store. That’s the gap I want to solve with CampusMaps: a mobile app that extends navigation indoors.

The concept is simple but powerful. Using only the phone’s built-in sensors like the accelerometer (for counting steps) and gyroscope (for direction), the app can estimate your movement and guide you in real time without relying on Bluetooth beacons, Wi-Fi routers, or any extra hardware. Just one tap, and CampusMaps becomes your personal indoor guide—pointing you toward your lecture hall, the library, or that café in a crowded mall.

The benefits are huge. Students, especially newcomers, gain confidence and independence navigating their campus. Shoppers save time and stress when locating specific stores. Universities and mall managers benefit too, since happier visitors means smoother operations and better experiences.

This problem matters to me because I’ve personally experienced the frustration of being lost in a new campus. What should be an exciting first day often turns into stress and confusion. With CampusMaps, we give people not just directions, but freedom, confidence, and time saved.

Of course, there will be challenges—accuracy, data mapping of interiors, and UI design—but if solved, CampusMaps could redefine how we navigate the world indoors.

Votes: 14
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Comments

  • This is a very practical idea. It solves a problem that every student faces at dinner point, but in q way that anyone can use instantly. Definately something that can help a lot of people.
  • Love this idea! Indoor navigation is such an overlooked challenge, and CampusMaps addresses it beautifully without needing extra hardware. Using built-in phone sensors for real-time guidance is both smart and scalable. This could genuinely transform first-day experiences for students and make malls much easier to navigate.
  • This is awesome — basically Google Maps for inside buildings without all the extra hardware. If you can keep it accurate and make mapping easy, CampusMaps could totally become the go-to app for students and shoppers.
  • Such a helpful idea! Indoor navigation is still such a pain point on big campuses and malls.
  • That’s a really thoughtful idea! Indoor navigation is such an overlooked problem, and your approach of using just the phone’s built-in sensors makes it practical and scalable
  • Great idea . CampusMaps tackles a real problem—getting lost indoors—by using just phone sensors, no extra hardware. If accuracy and mapping challenges are solved, it could really improve navigation for students and shoppers alike.
  • This is such a relatable problem! I still remember wandering around campus for 20 minutes just trying to find a lecture hall during my first week. The idea of using built-in sensors is really smart since it doesn’t require any additional infrastructure. Have you thought about starting with a pilot at your own university to test the accuracy and get user feedback?​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​
  • I like how this idea is directly solving a student problem we’ve all faced — getting lost on campus. The best part is that it doesn’t need any additional setup like routers or beacons. Using Mahindra University as the first pilot campus is a great way to test and improve the concept while helping students at the same time.
  • That’s a brilliant idea—solving a very real problem students and shoppers face daily. If you crack accuracy and mapping, CampusMaps could become a game-changer for indoor navigation.
  • I think this idea really addresses a pain point that almost every student has experienced, especially during the first days on campus. What makes it stand out is that it works without relying on Wi-Fi or beacons, which means anyone can use it immediately with just their phone. Piloting it at Mahindra University feels like the perfect choice, since it gives the opportunity to test the app in a real, complex environment and make improvements based on actual student feedback.
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