Best campuses

Submitted by Chaz_Smash on July 28th, 2019 at 2:31 PM

Just did a 21-college tour of the NE with my daughter and have to say, I came away convinced Michigan has one of the best campuses in America. The diag is an ideal centerpiece, the buildings are distinctive and the campus blends into the town. Cornell might be more picturesque, but campustown is like a mile down a steep hill.

Haven't been everywhere, but I haven't seen a better campus when it comes to character and functionality. What do people think?

Side note -- Rutgers is much nicer than I expected.  

Jasper

July 28th, 2019 at 4:07 PM ^

Never been to Bloomington. On Madison: In isolation the campus doesn't have much, if anything, on Michigan, but it's on a lake (which is somewhat picturesque and not too stagnant) and the surrounding area feels more "collegy" and less corporate than Ann Arbor (where you see mostly establishments that can afford really high rents). Madison has the capitol and is a more interesting place in some ways (not all).

I've heard people complain that Michigan's buildings don't fit together well and that the campus boundaries are murky. I think those are fair points.

A few I really like: Stanford, U Chicago, and (a bit of a dark horse here) South Carolina.

Unicycle Firefly

July 28th, 2019 at 4:31 PM ^

Wisconsin also has what has to be one of, if not the best student union in the country (actually, they have two, but one is more famous and popular).  Their Memorial Union has an outdoor terrace that sits right on the lake, with great food, beer and paddlboards/kayaks for rent, as well as an indoor German Rathskeller that's an awesome place to hang out.  Madison might be one of the best places imaginable to spend a summer and fall.  Winter is definitely a different story, though.

stephenrjking

July 28th, 2019 at 10:50 PM ^

My grandfather went to Wisconsin, and in 2002 when he heard I was visiting there to watch hockey (back in the old Showcase days) he told me about how he used to hang out in the Rathskeller a lot. So I went and hung out there and gave him a phone call.

Took my daughter when we went for the Michigan-Wisconsin football game in 17, too. Multiple generations. They've updated parts of it to look more modern, but there's still a lot of the old character there. 

LSAClassOf2000

July 28th, 2019 at 9:01 PM ^

I guess if there is a knock against the Michigan campus, it might be that it does not always meld very cleanly into the surrounding sections of Ann Arbor, and has outposts in sections where you might not expect them in other setups. It does create a situation where you truly get to see the city, but I can see where this might be confusing / frustrating to some people. 

meechholliday

July 28th, 2019 at 9:35 PM ^

Bloomington is a beautiful campus, Lake Monroe also a fine lake for summer time fun. But the town itself isn’t ideal outside the campus IMO. Very rural, coming from someone that lives in that environment it’s nice to be in the metro area. Born in Ann Arbor living in Pendleton IN. I’d still say UofM campus is better a lot more diverse eating as well.

TCW

July 28th, 2019 at 4:54 PM ^

Can't ignore the town in which the college sits, and you can't even say Bloomington is like a poor man's Ann Arbor.  It's more like a homeless man's Ann Arbor.  People can disagree about Ann Arbor/UM vs Wisconsin/Madison, but arguing for IU/Bloomington is tough.

MJ14

July 28th, 2019 at 5:23 PM ^

I live in Bloomington. Have worked for IU. I enjoy B-Town, but it’s not even half as nice as Ann Arbor and the neighboring towns are worse than they neighboring towns to Ann Arbor. Bloomington has a lot to offer, but if my family wasn’t from the area I would never have considered Bloomington over Ann Arbor. 

WhoopinStick

July 28th, 2019 at 2:45 PM ^

Based on personal bias UM and Ann Arbor will always be by far the best for me. 

I have a son that goes to Miami (Ohio).  Beautiful campus with a decent and adjacent small downtown.  For a mid sized school in a smaller town it has a very nice campus and feel.  

Roanman

July 28th, 2019 at 4:34 PM ^

Calvin has just a gorgeous and exceptionally well maintained campus as well as a truly exceptional athletic building. On the downside it is in a suburban and fairly nondescript part of town.

Hope has the great soccer stadium. Downtown Holland is a nice walk. The bars are ok; the food is mediocre with the exception of the Windmill for an expensive breakfast.

The Calvin men's soccer team are perennial conference champions and have three, maybe four losses in the national championship game over the past 10 or 12 years. Five or so final fours. Women's soccer is not as good. D3 ... they'll have to finagle your money.

jpo

July 28th, 2019 at 5:40 PM ^

Calvin’s campus is monochromatically dull. There’s not one interesting or beautiful building on that campus. It’s also isolated. 

Downtown Holland has many good bar and food options, all within a short walk of the dorms. Interestingly, The Windmill has about the worst food there. 

Roanman

July 28th, 2019 at 8:03 PM ^

Spent a lot of time in Holland, sent a kid there. Go to GR for dinner. The food in Holland is mediocre and not worth the money from one end of 8th Street to the other.

Curragh has an adequate steak and an ok shepherd's pie, along with a nice kind of chamber-ish Irish jam band mostly made up of professor types, occasionally on a random afternoon. Beyond that, they could roll up the sidewalks most nights by 10 ... 11 on a big event night were they not now cement. Sidewalks are heated though. After that it looks a lot better than it tastes.

Great guitar store, more pedals than you've ever seen in your life.

And should you want some pug ugly architecture, check out the building housing Hope's school of architecture. The rest of the campus is a thrown together mess with the exception of Graves Hall which is gorgeous. 

Nice school full of real good kids, reasonably priced by comparison to other liberal arts colleges, pretty strong in science and the arts, but not real pretty and in a seriously overrated town.

jpo

July 28th, 2019 at 9:08 PM ^

Hope doesn’t have a school of architecture.

Hope has some ugly buildings, but also some beautiful ones. Calvin’s buildings all look alike, and they’re all about the equivalent of the ugly buildings on Hope’s campus  

You can get an excellent steak at either Butch’s or 76 in downtown Holland. Hops prepares some good food as well, as does Waverly Stone. The beer scene is outstanding. 

Oddly, roanman identifies downtown Holland’s two weakest restaurants as his favorites, while overlooking the two best. 

wigeon

July 29th, 2019 at 10:49 AM ^

Don't knock Holland, because it's 10x better than it was 10-15 years ago. BTW, Calvin blows.  Zero atmosphere. 

I'll toss a big vote in for University of Washington.  Say what you will about Seattle, but the campus is amazing in every way.  

jpo

July 28th, 2019 at 4:01 PM ^

Kenyon has a beautiful campus. Hope's campus is a very nice one in the middle of a beautiful MI town. Bryn Mawr's campus is beautiful. Princeton's is great, as is Penn's. The rest of the Ivy's don't impress me much. UVA, of course. 

Gambier OH is pretty much non-existent, but Kenyon's campus is picturesque.  

littlebrownjug

July 28th, 2019 at 4:08 PM ^

Look at Kenyon College in Gambier, Ohio. Forbes Magazine ranked it #1 in the world when it released its rankings in 2010. I did my undergraduate work at Kenyon, and then I went on to grad school at Michigan. Kenyon's campus would remind you of Princeton. Lots of collegiate Gothic architecture and green space.

JonSnow54

July 29th, 2019 at 11:26 AM ^

I grew up in Holland, went to Calvin, and live in Chicago now but am still back in the Holland area fairly often to visit family.  Both Hope & Calvin are great liberal arts colleges in my opinion. 

Hope has better architecture and the better town.  I wouldn't cite the Curragh (like the poster above) when talking about the food - New Holland Brewery, Hops, Butch's, Boatwerks, Captain Sundae (for dessert)...for a town that size I think there food options are respectable at minimum, depending on your taste.  Downtown Holland has a nice feel to it, plus there are multiple nice beaches very close (Holland State Park, Tunnel Park).

Calvin's architecture is fairly boring, but they do have some state of the art facilities now and there is a lot of beautiful green area throughout the campus.  It is much more isolated than Hope, as it is not intermingled with the town.  As others have noted, it is located in a fairly boring part of town, but it is a short drive away from Eastown and a reasonable drive from downtown GR, so there is plenty to do.

Mgoeffoff

July 28th, 2019 at 2:47 PM ^

I thought Wake Forest was really nice. My alma mater is beautiful, but it's a small school in PA that no one has heard of... Susquehanna University. It more well know school down the road, Bucknell is also very pretty.

njvictor

July 28th, 2019 at 4:07 PM ^

Wake Forest is a beautiful campus and a very manageable size, but my biggest issue with it is you need a car to get anywhere off campus to buy groceries, go out to eat, etc. But besides that it feels like a country club private school with great weather

MIMark

July 28th, 2019 at 2:52 PM ^

It is a great campus indeed. The diag is one of the great cornerstones of any campus.

A few others I love. UVA, Maryland, Ohio University, Arkansas, Texas Tech. UVA and Maryland both have beautiful green areas surrounding their campus centerpieces. Ohio is situated in as pretty of an environment as one could pick for a rural university. Arkansas has the Senior Walk which is among the greatest university traditions anywhere. And Texas Tech with the Spanish roofing.

Lloyd's Boy

July 28th, 2019 at 8:29 PM ^

Having lived in Charlottesville for six years, I can say their campus is the only one I've seen that compares to Michigan's. Definitely a different feel to it though, and I can see someone preferring one over the other. #1 and 2 in my book. Closely behind are UNC, Duke, Wisconsin. Dartmouth is pretty but small and it was frigid there when I visited. 

Durham Blue

July 28th, 2019 at 10:31 PM ^

Duke and UNC are nice but neither hold a candle to Michigan.  Between Duke and UNC I give the edge to Duke.  Durham is a small town that has really come a long way.  It was a run down city just a short number of years ago but a ton of money is being invested in the city to build up the infrastructure.  There are so many good restaurants, bars and shops now.  It has become a foodie town.  The Durham Bulls stadium looks like a MLB facility.  Durham is a really cool place.