It is. The trees and drive into campus |
| I hadn't heard about Chico State much before this thread — I think the CSUs get overshadowed by the UCs most of the time — but will be going there in a few weeks. I've seen a number of the campuses mentioned in this thread, though, so I'm eager to see what the Chico campus is like. Sounds like people really love it. |
| I think Yale has the best architecture. |
Behind gates |
| University of Phoenix |
That is how I felt about Miami. Pretty but didn’t feel like a college campus. |
Oxford and Cambridge are largely gated (and make you pay for a tour), but they still have great campuses and architecture. |
| Colorado |
| There’s Duke and everyone else. |
Bucknell’s campus doesn’t matter because you aren’t there long enough for it to be of consequence. You move in, take a few classes, & then whoosh, you’re Mickey Rourke in 9 1/2 Weeks & a young Kim Basinger is ripping your shirt off. |
Nice. But I think Cambridge, Oxford, Princeton, Yale, and others are nicer. |
| Syracuse is beautiful |
|
This time of the year.. no way are any of the campuses in NE or mid west on my list. Most are depressing from Nov to April.
South of Masan Dixon line or out west. UCSD or Stanford get my vote. |
This is the only answer - and also whether you are considering "best" to be the aesthetic from a visitor's POV, or the actually campus experience from a student's POV. When we toured, I loved campuses like UChicago, Yale, Georgetown. Both of my kids wanted something very different. |