The Institute is located in Louisiana, where Joffrey Bennet was born and raised. There are five buildings on the Bennet Estate, the main one being the remodeled Victorian mansion that served as the Institute in its entirety when Joffrey founded it in the 1940s. Now, there are four additional buildings spread out across twenty-three acres.
The mansion, known as the main house by the staff and residents of The Institute, houses Alexander Bennet, as well as one doctor, and a few staff members. There are several dormitory-style rooms, as well, that serve as temporary rooms for the newest students, until they get settled enough to move to one of the other housing buildings. There is also a large library, and three private testing rooms in the main house. It's cold in the winter, hot in the summer, and the plumbing is incredibly noisy, but it's surprisingly homey for such a large, old house.
Two of the remaining four buildings are dedicated to housing. They are larger and more modern than the main house, having enough space for twenty residents each. Each house is three stories, the ground floor containing a kitchen, a small common area, and a study room. The houses are all co-ed, but the bedrooms are gender-specific.
The fourth building on the Estate is dedicated to the main laboratories and testing rooms. This is where the students will learn to hone their skills. There are simple machines for psychokinesis testing, secluded ares for telepathy experiments, even a sensory deprivation tank, which has been proven to significantly raise the level of psychic abilities in many subjects. This is also where the staff works, keeping record of the progress of the residents, and charting the results of the experiments performed. It is always locked at night, to prevent off-the-book experimentation and illegal activity.
The last building on the Estate is the two-story barn that was the only other building on the property when the Institute was founded. It has been updated and renovated into a space where current and past residents of the Institute can get together and socialize. It's the place where people will gather to unwind after testing, where birthday parties take place, and where movie nights are held. There's an ancient ping-pong table, a small kitchen, and right out the back door is a swimming pool and a kidney shaped hot tub.
The Bennet Estate is near the heart of New Orleans; it is secluded enough to provide peace and quiet, but close enough to the city so one does not feel cut off from the outside world. Bourbon Street and the French Quarter are a quick bus ride away, and many of the residents who graduate from their studies at the Institute find apartments nearby, so they can take part in occasional additional testing.