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Without knowing at least the height of the ceiling there is no way to know. The possiblities are endless. Even with the height it would be the wildest guess. Assuming it would be twice as long as wide. It could just as well be square. to illustrate and improve on the point, if length multiplied by width, multiplied by height, gave you the dimensions of the building, you could invent any dimensions so long as their product is 65000. Ex: A building 65 feet wide, 100 Feet long, and ten feet high would contain 65000 cubic feet.
It is impossible to answer the question without knowing what the "64 feet" refers to. The perimeter, or a misstated measure of area.
2.5 million cubic feet...well according to the following website that is how much air is circulated throughout the building so it stand to reason that this is the volume. but it does have a few dimensions for the building listed i just don't have the time to figure it out
On paper = 2 dimensions Physical = 3 dimensions Examples: a square is 2 dimensions and a cube is 3 dimensions a circle is 2 dimensions and a ball is 3 dimensions
4.25 inches by 9.375 inches