Garma hall is an extravagantly crafted dining hall that was constructed in a rather ingenious fashion to be able to maintain a constant comfortable temperature. The high roof has a dozen skylights which let light through during the day, which are usually shut and blocked during the night to keep the heat in. Dozens of tapestries and paintings cover the walls of the hall and the pillars placed in the hall are engraved in scenes from mythology.
The Hall itself is large enough to accommodate hundreds of guests at a time and has many intricately crafted dark hard wood tables and chairs. The room was clearly meant for large parties of very high status people, and in the current dilemma no one has thought to bring in more common furniture for the more common citizens who now eat here.
One wall of the hall is made of glass and leads to a grand patio where diners can eat out in the open air during good weather. Finely wrought wooden chairs that almost look too dainty to be sat upon surround several round gold-gilded tables. The patio faces the West and is high enough in the air that diners have an unobstructed view of the beautiful sunsets over the lands in the West. At night large covers with precious metals sewn in are placed over the windowed wall to keep the heat in. The silver and gold trace the stars and the constellations.