Much prefer a beautiful, pastoral setting to the crime-ridden, noisy, concrete jungle, but YDY. |
Enjoy MAGA country for us, if cities scare you that much. I’m surprised the internet connection in your impoverished rural hellscape is strong enough to post on DCUM. |
All this vitriol for someone making the obvious point that NYU is not exactly what comes to mind when people ask about beautiful college campuses? |
Meh. They’re both in the wrong. Other poster called NYC crime ridden, which is frankly bullshit. |
It's crime ridden compared to Sewanee, TN, and Gambier, OH. |
Again, this is an Arsenal versus San Antonio Spurs comparison. Two small towns versus the most populated city in the US. My DS at NYU travels around Manhattan on the subway at all hours without any difficulty. Manhattan has a substantially lower rate of violent crime than other US cities (he’s actually much safer there than in his home Top 30 metro) and a lower rate of property crime than other US cities (again lower than his city of origin). Violent crime in Manhattan is also at historic lows, which is true of a lot of US cities. I actually feel sad for people who believe they have to send their kids to schools like Sewanee and Kenyon to feel safe. |
Different strokes. My younger kid likes a middle ground. He's at BC, where he can enjoy a traditional college campus with easy access to Boston. He's not looking to walk out his door to the bustle of a city every day, but enjoys having access to what the city offers. My older kid went to ND, where he enjoyed game days and all of the traditions of the school. He traveled to Chicago occasionally. Now that he is out of school, he lives in an urban environment. Everyone has their own path and people bickering here over what environment is good or bad is ridiculous. |
It’s a pity that you are sooo desperate to feel superior. |
Or gullible enough to fall for the hype. Museums! Fine dining! Rats! |
| Start a city vs rural area thread somewhere else. |
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I loved, loved UC Santa Cruz! The campus is literally in a redwood forest. Every building is surrounded by huge redwoods! There are trails and wooden bridges connecting campus areas. The buildings fit into the landscape. It’s high up and the views from some of the taller building and floors at sunset are amazing. There is a short shuttle or bus into downtown and the beach areas. The walkway path and cliffs along West Cliff drive are breathtaking. Natural bridges at low tide has amazing tide pools.
The campus itself is beautiful in a way that could not be recreated anywhere else. It felt like being on vacation. If you love nature, this is the place to be. Of course, my kids had no interest in living in nature or going to UCSC sadly. |
The block of Pennsylvania Ave bordered by 15th and 17th Streets in DC is the most crime ridden block in the country... |
Thank you for this. It wasn't really on our list but now I'm wondering if we should add it.... I have one kid that LOVES nature. Is there also communal green space? He really wants a school where kids are out tossing around a frisbee on a nice day, or sitting around the green with a book chit chatting. |
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I have seen quite a few campuses, albeit over a long period of time. In no particular order, the ones that stand out in my memory are:
Wellesley, Yale, Princeton, Indiana University, Scripps/Pomona, Oxford, Cambridge, Duke, U. of Richmond, William and Mary, West Point, Annapolis, Vassar, U. San Diego, Stanford, U. Colorado, Mount Holyoke, Bryn Mawr I visited Cornell and Washington on dull, overcast days, which might have negatively impacted my perceptions. |
Is Washington here WashU? I went to WashU and loved WashU. I liked its campus. But I don’t think its campus is really as pretty as what I remember of UNC’s old campus, and I think WashU’s new fake old buildings are ugly. Maybe they’ll be prettier when they get older. I think Harvard’s Harvard Square campus is beautiful. Hollins University’s campus is also beautiful. |