Anonymous wrote:Duke is amazing! The Sarah Duke gardens are off the charts no other college can match it. Plus a highly regarded 18 hole Golf course with 2 high end hotels on campus. Duke is our tops nothing close.
Anonymous wrote:No college has anything close to the Duke gardens. Phenomenal!
Anonymous wrote:Virginia Tech’s campus is beautiful. It’s a large campus, but feels cohesive with the use of Hokie stone for buildings. The central drillfield is a lovely open space and the mountains in the distance are my vision of the perfect campus.
Anonymous wrote:I am well aware that it's not a highly rnaked school by any means, but Hood College is Frederick Maryland is a gorgeous campus. I think it might be prettier in the spring than fall. There's a pergola in the middle of residence quad that is covered in wisteria, the grass lawns are beautiful, the buildings are classic brick with white columns. Truly just a pretty little jewel of a campus.
Anonymous wrote:Duke is amazing! The Sarah Duke gardens are off the charts no other college can match it. Plus a highly regarded 18 hole Golf course with 2 high end hotels on campus. Duke is our tops nothing close.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Harvard’s 1st year dining hall, Annenberg, is pretty magnificent - they aren’t taking you inside on the tours
I've visited Harvard a few times and I am always underwhelmed with the campus. I did get to check out the renovated Museum which was very impressive and spectacular but the overall campus has never done it for me.
It must be Cambridge, MA. If you look at Harvard's closest global competitors, Stanford, MIT, Yale, Princeton, Oxford, and Cambridge University, all are generally renowned for campus beauty except for Harvard and MIT.
And Harvard has only had about 400 years to do something about it. But its origins are as a Puritan school, which didn’t really value aesthetics. And no one subsequently wanted to change that. So it remains a very plain school.
I think generally, universities that did their most substantial building in the late 19th and early 20th centuries are the most pleasing to the eye today.
Anonymous wrote:Havent been to VT… how does that college compare ?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NYU
This is a sarcastic response, right? It's a bunch of incongruent buildings, some old, some new, some ugly, with no sense of campus or together-ness. NYU holds their graduation at Yankees Stadium outside of the city because they literally don't have a great lawn or area on their co-called campus where they can hold a graduation ceremony or gathering of any size larger than 200 people
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.
The "vibe" of NYU is urban, concrete, and rats. Enjoy!
Seriously who prefers drinking in the middle of nowhere vibe.
Much prefer a beautiful, pastoral setting to the crime-ridden, noisy, concrete jungle, but YDY.
Ithaca is gorges! I always loved the campus and how it overlooks Lake Cayuga providing for a lovely setting, especially in the fall.Anonymous wrote:I was just at Cornell for reunion and I had forgotten how truly beautiful it is.