Clearly they didn't go to college. We can hope that they didn't reproduce. |
| Cambridge or Oxford. Trinity College Cambridge alone is better than any area on any U.S. campus and there are many more beautiful colleges there. |
No, seriously it's perfectly integrated into the capital city of the world. With Washington Square Park serving as its central hub, the vibe is truly unmatched by schools stuck in the middle of nowhere with boredom. |
Not really. Just older and stuffier. |
+1. Yale has some gorgeous architecture, yes, but the campus as a whole is not more beautiful than Princeton, and Cornell’s setting is far more beautiful. |
You seem dumb. |
And more beautiful |
this is a thread about most beautiful campuses though, so take that elsewhere |
Not really. Impressive, but less inviting and, to many, not as beautiful. |
DP. It's kind of like touring a beautiful house that has a ton of dog poop in the yard. The house is pretty, but you can't forget the smell. |
I think Cambridge and Oxford have the best architecture and landscaping/gardens and are in charming cities. One of the reasons they my appear less inviting is the colleges restrict visitors and may charge fees. But they would be absolutely overrun with tourists if they didn't, which should tell you something about how they are generally perceived. |
The thread is really about college campuses in the United States. Some of you always bring up Cambridge and Oxford, not necessarily because you think they are the most beautiful, but simply because you want to rebut any claim that a particular American campus stands out. |
It didn't say U.S. only, and I simply think Cambridge and Oxford are the nicest. |
| I would rank Trinity College (CT) amongst the most beautiful if it was in a bucolic rural setting instead of Hartford. |
I find this is bs from someone who’s never been. “Less inviting?” These colleges everyone’s calling beautiful are literally based off of Oxbridge. There’s nothing in the design of Trinity college, especially, that you wouldn’t also feel is less inviting at Yale or Princeton. |