| MIT |
+1 |
|
Cornell. I expected it to be lovely and it was a sprawling collection of random, shoddy buildings. In general looked very poorly maintained.
I guess the view of the lake is nice but that was about it. |
| MIT is so elite that its ugly functionality is almost part of its charm. I can't say the same about Stanford though. I find it cold and soulless. I was also underwhelmed by Northwestern. They have a billion dollar football practice facility and a welcoming center on the lake, but the rest of it seemed drab and dated and charmless. Plus, Evanston is pretty boring. The rest of the T20 are all pretty nice. |
| Boston U |
Cornell has parts that look like a state school. The setting is amazing though with a pond, waterfalls, and arboretum. Cayuga lake is also beautiful. |
Wow, this is so spot on. Love what you said about MIT and it somehow being part of its charm in a way that wouldn’t work for other schools. Northwestern location and welcome center is stunning. Really dislike brutalist buildings at all schools. Cornell is sort of hodge lodge feeling. There are some buildings that are quite beautiful and setting is unique with gorges. |
| Tufts |
Not elite |
Not elite |
Has some if the coolest buildings- tha Stata center(Gehry), Kresge auditorium (Saarinen), the building by IM Pei, the McGivern/Picower buildings etc. |
Unfortunately, I find most buildings that were erected from like 1960 - 2000 (in the prevailing style at the time) made every campus uglier. Every Ivy campus has several eyesores from this time period. |
that Gehry building leaks these days. |
Wow, I grew up in Pasadena and would regularly take visitors on tours of Caltech's campus and everyone loved the beautiful fountains and the arched walkways. It's the Spanish mission style, which I guess is not for everyone. |
| I am a big Georgetown booster, but I have to admit that once you step away from Healy/Copley/White-Gravenor, it's an unattractive campus. |