| University of Texas - Austin |
| Harvard, MIT, Columbia - once inside the gates, doesn't feel like NYC. |
| Northwestern is in Evanston, which is a very dense suburb with its own downtown (think Bethesda, but with actual charm) just outside of Chicago. One of the main subway lines extends to Evanston as well. |
Disagree on Columbia. Felt cramped like sardines. One nice little area. That is it. |
The OP did not say "Urban" they said "urban amenities (food, music, culture)" There is a food, music element in Ithaca and Ann Arbor. Another area to think about might be University of Cincinnati. A PP mentioned Emory - although you fly into Atlanta to get there - it is not "urban amenities (food, music, culture)" |
Yeah, agreed. Ann Arbor is a proper small city -- it has 115,000 people in it (all of whom can fit in the Big House, btw! ) I think it fits OP's bill pretty well.
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| McGill. |
| Johns Hopkins |
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GMU
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Add my vote for Michigan. Food (a good mix of unique places and familiar chains), music (a regular stop for college type bands) and culture (as a college town Ann Arbor has more culture than a typical small city). The nearby Detroit area, as the auto capitol of the US, offers a lot of STEM related research opps in areas directly and indirectly related to the automotive field. However, the Engineering School is on the north campus, which is a bus ride from the activity on the main campus. The winter weather can also get a bit depressing. But overall Michigan probably best fits what you are looking for in a school. Good luck and Go Blue! |
| University of Wisconsin-Madison. Madison is probably my favorite city I've ever been to - such a great vibe. And of course the academics are top notch as well. |
| UW-Madison, Michigan, UT-Austin. The trifecta of amazing college towns. |
If it wasn’t covered in feet of snow from November to March. I rather go to school there in the summer. |
| Where do studemts co-op and internship at Michigan? |
+1 Somerville has become a hipster haven |