Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am not sure that I believe the Reddit poster really plans to leave H, they seem like they are just venting.
Yes H has an ugly campus.
Princeton has the most beautiful campus in the suburbs, if that is your thing.
Yale is in a city with all the misgivings of a big city in a small town. The buildings are ugly because the stone is not the best choice. Have you seen the architecture building there, wow, eyesore brutalist.
Brown has a pretty campus in the middle of a town similar to Yale, but not nearly as bad.
U Penn is terrible.
Columbia has a beautiful campus in a great city. Just don't go north of campus or down into Morningside Park.
Dartmouth is pretty but out in the middle of nowhere.
Cornell is pretty, but also not in the best location.
Having difficulty believing you’ve ever seen Yale’s campus. Not at all what you describe
It depends on if you’re obsessed with gothic architecture. I find it very ugly too and misplaced; additionally, the non-immediate surround area of New Haven is pretty shady an crumbling in parts.
You people display all the maturity of the posters who were complaining a few weeks ago that T20 dorms weren't the best. You try to sound sophisticated but just end up coming across as obtuse and snide.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am not sure that I believe the Reddit poster really plans to leave H, they seem like they are just venting.
Yes H has an ugly campus.
Princeton has the most beautiful campus in the suburbs, if that is your thing.
Yale is in a city with all the misgivings of a big city in a small town. The buildings are ugly because the stone is not the best choice. Have you seen the architecture building there, wow, eyesore brutalist.
Brown has a pretty campus in the middle of a town similar to Yale, but not nearly as bad.
U Penn is terrible.
Columbia has a beautiful campus in a great city. Just don't go north of campus or down into Morningside Park.
Dartmouth is pretty but out in the middle of nowhere.
Cornell is pretty, but also not in the best location.
Having difficulty believing you’ve ever seen Yale’s campus. Not at all what you describe
It depends on if you’re obsessed with gothic architecture. I find it very ugly too and misplaced; additionally, the non-immediate surround area of New Haven is pretty shady an crumbling in parts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am not sure that I believe the Reddit poster really plans to leave H, they seem like they are just venting.
Yes H has an ugly campus.
Princeton has the most beautiful campus in the suburbs, if that is your thing.
Yale is in a city with all the misgivings of a big city in a small town. The buildings are ugly because the stone is not the best choice. Have you seen the architecture building there, wow, eyesore brutalist.
Brown has a pretty campus in the middle of a town similar to Yale, but not nearly as bad.
U Penn is terrible.
Columbia has a beautiful campus in a great city. Just don't go north of campus or down into Morningside Park.
Dartmouth is pretty but out in the middle of nowhere.
Cornell is pretty, but also not in the best location.
Having difficulty believing you’ve ever seen Yale’s campus. Not at all what you describe
Anonymous wrote:I am not sure that I believe the Reddit poster really plans to leave H, they seem like they are just venting.
Yes H has an ugly campus.
Princeton has the most beautiful campus in the suburbs, if that is your thing.
Yale is in a city with all the misgivings of a big city in a small town. The buildings are ugly because the stone is not the best choice. Have you seen the architecture building there, wow, eyesore brutalist.
Brown has a pretty campus in the middle of a town similar to Yale, but not nearly as bad.
U Penn is terrible.
Columbia has a beautiful campus in a great city. Just don't go north of campus or down into Morningside Park.
Dartmouth is pretty but out in the middle of nowhere.
Cornell is pretty, but also not in the best location.
Anonymous wrote:I am not sure that I believe the Reddit poster really plans to leave H, they seem like they are just venting.
Yes H has an ugly campus.
Princeton has the most beautiful campus in the suburbs, if that is your thing.
Yale is in a city with all the misgivings of a big city in a small town. The buildings are ugly because the stone is not the best choice. Have you seen the architecture building there, wow, eyesore brutalist.
Brown has a pretty campus in the middle of a town similar to Yale, but not nearly as bad.
U Penn is terrible.
Columbia has a beautiful campus in a great city. Just don't go north of campus or down into Morningside Park.
Dartmouth is pretty but out in the middle of nowhere.
Cornell is pretty, but also not in the best location.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can someone please immediately link the reddit thread
DP but I assume they are referring to this: https://www.reddit.com/r/ApplyingToCollege/s/3aZj9N01pV
Interesting. These students seem miserable. My kid wanted the flagship vibe and got his wish at UVA. His two friends who went Ivy were sharing a similar sentiment to the Reddit thread this summer as they were going into senior year (Penn/Yale). The one from Penn came down to UVA last spring for the playoff game and joked about not going back because they had so much fun.
Anonymous wrote:Harvard yard’s grass is terribly maintained considering the resources available.
The buildings are copy and paste Georgian brick and not done well.
Cambridge is nicer than New Haven or Providence but Yale and brown have way better campuses
As for the vibes and kids — a lot of convergence with MIT
I don’t remember the difference between Harvard kids vibes/look being this different from BC kids 20 years ago but in 2024 they seem to be starkly different
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can someone please immediately link the reddit thread
DP but I assume they are referring to this: https://www.reddit.com/r/ApplyingToCollege/s/3aZj9N01pV
Anonymous wrote:The campus has always been underwhelming. I remember the first time I was there a gazillion years ago and thinking that I somehow missed the "real" Harvard. That it was around here somewhere, but clearly I couldn't quite find it. But nope. What you see is what you get. Just follow the tourists.
At least back in the day Harvard Square was somewhat interesting. But with gentrification, even that's gone. That whole area of Cambridge has become rather charmless. Not sure what the plan is. A striver, grinder school surrounded by chain stores seems to be the vibe of Harvard today. It doesn't seem like a fun place. But the better parties were always at MIT anyway, so nothing new there.
Anonymous wrote:Can someone please immediately link the reddit thread