HEY!!
Bah, you probably just haven’t been here in a while. The new English/Philosophy building is very impressive. And of course there’s the needlessly over-ornamented parking facility, named by students the “Garage Mahal”.
HEY!!
Bah, you probably just haven’t been here in a while. The new English/Philosophy building is very impressive. And of course there’s the needlessly over-ornamented parking facility, named by students the “Garage Mahal”.
Umph…well, I’m not too excited about the shopping mall esthetic, but I’ll give it (Texas Tech) enough points to raise it above the others mentioned.
As a UM-Rolla alum, I have to say that it’s pretty well down near the bottom, 'specially after the frat pledges have finished tearing up the Quad after St. Pats, leaving a muddy, cratered mess. And I’m just waiting for Norwood Hall to finish falling into a sinkhole. As for the Physics and EE buildings…ugh.
Stranger
Sorry! (If it helps, we’re missing a president right now… we could organize a trade?)
Good God! What did they do to Sage Hall? It looks like a modern architecture tumor has grown on the side of it. ::weeping::
What is wrong with Mines? It is an attractive campus, right at the foot of the mountains, Coal Creek runs through it. OK, it smells like beer 24/7 from Coors, but at least that is fresh brewed beer, not stale or regurgitated beer like most other college campuses.
Sage Hall was “renovated” in 1996-1998, which is Cornell-speak for completely gutting the building and rebuilding the interior. It’s now home to the Johnson School of Management. That new stuff on the side does indeed look ugly and out of place. It still looks the same from the other side, though:
http://people.cornell.edu/pages/jzs3/Downloads/cornellwp3.jpg
Maybe I was there on a bad day, and it’s been well over a decade, but the campus looked pretty…not bad, but blah and a little run-down, to me. The view is nice, but the campus…meh. And I could do without the yeast smell (though honestly, I don’t remember that.)
Stranger
Along the lines of Pepperdine, I’m going to give a shout out to my alma mater, and another local university that both are pretty good:
University of San Diego (my alma mater):
http://www.sandiego.edu/about/virtualcampustour/
and Point Loma Nazarene University, which has primo real estate:
http://www.ptloma.edu/universityinformation/campustour/Tour1.htm
A general note about the UC’s. Anyone notice they occupy some of the most awesome real estate in the world? (You can define “awesome” as “incredible” or simply as “incredibly expensive”). Santa Cruz and Santa Barbara occupy prime beachfront real estate, Berkeley’s tucked in among the Oakland hills with a view of the bay, San Diego is cuddled up next to the tony town of La Jolla (and come to think about it, doesn’t it have some beachfront space?), Irvine is (I think) right in the middle of the OC tech corridor, UCSF overlooks Golden Gate Park, and UCLA is on a hillside directly underneath Bel Air and just west of Beverly Hills.
I’ve never been to UC Riverside, and Davis takes up a bunch of farmland and thus I guess is the exception that proves the rule.
My alma mater is one of these, and while it has its share of 60’s-era brutality, also has quite a few lovely Italianate-style red brick buildings that have served as backdrop to lots of movies, TV shows, and commercials. I particularly recommend the views ofPowell Library, Royce Quad (Quicktime required for this one), Dickson Plaza,theLaw School, and the new Business School.
Well, at least the Engineering Quad still has a nice view of it.
I guess I won’t tell you what they’ve done to the Engineering Quad.
LA! LA! LA! I’M NOT LISTENING! LA! LA! LA!
Though I did hear a rumor that the green space has been taken up by a new building. If so, too bad. The green space was the only attractive feature of Engr.
No offense intended (you’re in Engineering, yes?).
I spent several years in Carpenter, so I have a distinct fondness for the Engineering Quad, despite its aesthetic shortcomings.
Wow… never made it down that direction. I stayed at Trinity College for the summer of 2003 for the graduate business school program I was with.
I don’t remember seeing an ugly college there. Some had jarring 1960’s era buildings in among 16th and 17th century buildings, but on the whole, the entire place was very beautiful.
I can’t find any good pictures, but Miami University in Ohio has a gorgeous campus. The female students there are rather aesthetically pleasing as well…
I think my university, Trinity College Dublin, has a nice campus.
Yes, there’s a new building on the Engineering Quad, Duffield Hall. As you can see from the picture, it didn’t take up all of the green space on the quad, only half of it. I guess it’s a nice-looking building and, to be fair, it hides Philips and Upson Halls, which I consider to be Engineering’s uglier buildings.
I actually work in the Ag Quad. There’s lots more green space and most of the buildings are nicer to look at. Unfortunately, I work in Cornell’s ugliest building.
In my time there, I had heard it to referred to as one of the more beautiful campuses in the US. There was some unfortunate relics from the 50s-70s, but the grounds department does a great time. There are a lot of [in the spring](http://photos.news.wisc.edu/view.php?id=1265flowering trees[/url) and the [can be gorgeous.](http://photos.news.wisc.edu/view.php?id=2699leaves in the fall[/url)
Here are some of my favorite pictures: here, here, here, here, and one of the best things about summer in Madison
Err, I previewed, but not enough.
There are some unfortunate relics, and there are a lot of flowering trees in the spring and in the fall, the leaves can be gorgeous.
For unique architecture and external beauty, I’d rate the University of Lethbridge pretty highly. Unfortunately, the interior sucks. Because it’s largely underground, there are few windows and the building is very long and narrow. The lower levels have no windows and it feels like studying in a dungeon or inside a ship or something.
The other problem is that it’s sliding downhill.
But man, it looks cool from the outside.
Pardon me for eavesdropping, but it seems to me you’ve got it better than you think.
Think of it this way: you’ve got the best view on campus. By virtue of working in the ugliest building on campus, you don’t actually have to be subjected to it’s offensiveness while you’re at work.
This must be preferable to working in the loveliest building on campus with a fabulous view of the ugliest building on campus.