Anonymous wrote:Pitt, Carnegie Mellon in Pittsburgh. Oakland used to be dicy but it's not anymore.
University of Charleston.
Emory.
I'd be fine with the universities in Philly, personally.
Tulane.
Most of the others I can think of have been posted.
Anonymous wrote:Drexel and Penn are fine with a lot of visible security.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Drexel and Penn are fine with a lot of visible security.
And the NEED tons of security because the area sucks.
Not true whatsoever. Penn and Drexel are on the edge of Center City Philadelphia and University City is fine. There are actually far more young professionals actually living in University City these days compared to 20+ years ago.
B.S.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:BU is an obvious choice.
It depends if your DC wants true city school like BU, NYU, GW or do they want campus within a city like NEU, Tulane, Georgetown or do they want suburban feel but city adjacent like Northwestern, WUSTL, Emory, Tufts.
+1000
Boston University is integrated into the city and is considered safe.
Although there is no clear campus boundary, the school has numerous green spots where students gather, and a large public garden is just a few stops away on the T, which you can easily access right in front of the school.
Well, that is just one way to put it. LOL.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Drexel and Penn are fine with a lot of visible security.
+1
they are in a good area, not sure what OP is talking about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Miami
What hell no.
Anonymous wrote:Genuine urban schools would be BU, Northeastern, Columbia, and NYU.
You could also include Vanderbilt and Chicago. But both have very distinctive campuses that kind of separate them from the surrounding city. Whereas at BU and NYU you wouldn't know you were at a college without the signs.
There are lots a great schools in cities that aren't quite "downtown" and have their own distinctive campuses and are only short subway or bike rides from "the city." Rice and Harvard come to mind. The University of Washington in Seattle. The LA schools are kind of weird, because LA is kind of weird. There's USC and UCLA but you are getting into cars to go anywhere else. WashU, like BC, is close to the city, but separate in their own neighborhood adjacent bubbles.
In DC, obviously GW. But DC is not urban like NY, Boston, or Chicago. It's different.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:BU is an obvious choice.
It depends if your DC wants true city school like BU, NYU, GW or do they want campus within a city like NEU, Tulane, Georgetown or do they want suburban feel but city adjacent like Northwestern, WUSTL, Emory, Tufts.
+1000
Boston University is integrated into the city and is considered safe.
Although there is no clear campus boundary, the school has numerous green spots where students gather, and a large public garden is just a few stops away on the T, which you can easily access right in front of the school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Drexel and Penn are fine with a lot of visible security.
And the NEED tons of security because the area sucks.
Not true whatsoever. Penn and Drexel are on the edge of Center City Philadelphia and University City is fine. There are actually far more young professionals actually living in University City these days compared to 20+ years ago.
Anonymous wrote:BC, Tufts, Brown, Vanderbilt, Georgia Tech, Gtown, Rice, Wash U
Anonymous wrote:BU is an obvious choice.
It depends if your DC wants true city school like BU, NYU, GW or do they want campus within a city like NEU, Tulane, Georgetown or do they want suburban feel but city adjacent like Northwestern, WUSTL, Emory, Tufts.
Anonymous wrote:Genuine urban schools would be BU, Northeastern, Columbia, and NYU.
You could also include Vanderbilt and Chicago. But both have very distinctive campuses that kind of separate them from the surrounding city. Whereas at BU and NYU you wouldn't know you were at a college without the signs.
There are lots a great schools in cities that aren't quite "downtown" and have their own distinctive campuses and are only short subway or bike rides from "the city." Rice and Harvard come to mind. The University of Washington in Seattle. The LA schools are kind of weird, because LA is kind of weird. There's USC and UCLA but you are getting into cars to go anywhere else. WashU, like BC, is close to the city, but separate in their own neighborhood adjacent bubbles.
In DC, obviously GW. But DC is not urban like NY, Boston, or Chicago. It's different.