| NYU |
|
[quote=Anonymous]NYU[/quote]
For those wanting a school somewhat in the urban European style with more modern architecture, yes |
Wut? Uh no, half the campus is horrible mid century Brutalism. |
there is no campus |
| Stanford was the best i went to. Few schools have the majesty of palm drive on a sunny day along with resort like palm trees around campus with ample foutains plus arches. |
| U of Wisconsin-Madison has a wonderful campus. Very scenic and active campus. |
| Flagler. Looks like a resort. |
Wisconsin is beautiful |
Meh… that’s exactly it - it felt like a resort/golf club. Didn’t feel like a university campus. Went to HYP for undergrad and went to Stanford for grad school - absolutely hated the campus. |
| My sister went to UC Santa Barbara and it's spectacular. |
| They are not campuses in the U.S. sense, but Cambridge and Oxford. |
Do you mean they aren't American colleges, because most people would look at Oxbridge and go "that's a college campus" |
Oxford and Cambridge are collections of numerous constituent colleges with their own buildings and grounds. There are some shared facilities like libraries and museums, but the majority of the campus is the colleges. |
|
Vanderbilt:
Buildings are kind of blah except for the Peabody campus across the street. The iconic tower is kind of lame & uninspiring. The hospital in the middle of campus is the worst part. The incessant ambulance sirens are really annoying. |
| This is subjective. Of the ones I've visited the ones that have made the biggest lasting impression are: Oxford, Cambridge, Yale, Princeton, West Point, Colorado, William and Mary, Duke, and Sewanee. |