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Editor’s Note: The deadline for our $50,000 Tuition Giveaway is January 31. Rather than nag you every day with a post that starts and ends with “TIME IS RUNNING OUT,” we’ve decided to keep the scholarship top of mind by re-running some of our favorite college-centric stories and quizzes.
Each college needs something to make it stand out, whether it’s a famous grad, a spook legend, or an awesome architectural wonder. After searching far and wide for cool college buildings, I’m beginning to wonder if I made the right college decision after all.

MIT’s Computer, Information, and Intelligence Sciences Center contains research facilities, classrooms, an auditorium, fitness facilities, a childcare center, and even “social areas” along an “interior student street.” Designed by Frank Gehry and highly praised for its unique design, the building has not been without problems. Evidently, MIT has paid $1.5 million to fix problems that include cracks, drainage backups, and mold; the school is now suing Gehry for neglect, including the construction company as well.

The centerpiece of Union College, in upstate New York, is the 16-sided memorial to the school’s 1804-1866 president, Eliphalet Nott, whose tenure is the longest of any American college president. Over 130 years old, the building is a National Historic Landmark and houses the Mandeville Gallery for art, science, and history exhibitions.

At St. John’s University in Queens, NY, the Institute of Asian Studies is housed in Sun Yat-Sen Hall. Concerns arose at the school in fall 2006, when rumors surfaced that the treasured building would be demolished and replaced with new offices and a cafeteria. Thankfully, the pagoda was merely up for a renovation. The Dr. M.T. Geoffrey Yeh Art Gallery is also located in the building; display items in the gallery are about 50 percent Chinese, 50 percent Japanese, and include a samurai sword.

Arcadia University’s trademark castle is 110 years old and is home to the Mirror Room (the ballroom of years past), a Grand Hall (with a carved wood staircase), student residences, and, of course, gargoyles. The castle, which was designed by Horace Trumbauer, was inspired by Alnick Castle in England. If you’re ever in the Philadelphia area in October, you can stop in for the school’s annual Haunted Castle event.

Savannah College of Art and Design (SCAD) only acquired its student center four years ago. The building, now almost 100-years-old, was originally the Congregation B’nai B’rith Synagogue and has also housed St. Andrew’s Independent Episcopal Church. Featuring balconies, carved wooden pillars, Moorish-style domes, and stained glass, the student center now houses a café, a SCAD-designed bench, workstations, and Napping Pods.

The United States Air Force Academy’s 150-feet chapel actually houses three chapels—Protestant, Catholic, and Jewish—as well as two worship rooms for people of any faith. Walter Netsch, Jr.’s creation is made of aluminum, glass, and steel with 17 spires, though apparently there is no significance to this number.

The auditorium at Arizona State University was one of Frank Lloyd Wright’s last works. Built in 1964, the auditorium was designed by Wright to be “as acoustically perfect as possible.” Apparently, Wright played a joke on the school (supposedly for turning down his original idea): from overhead, Gammage looks like a toilet. (Check it out on Google Maps if you don’t believe me.)

At Evergreen Valley College, a community college in California, the combined library and educational technology center contains 21st-century resources in an environment that provides an “indoor/outdoor feel.” The building, which has no specific back, contains “branches” that support the elevated ceiling in the reading room. The many windows let in ample natural light for a comfortable reading atmosphere. Designed by Steinberg Architects, the building received an Honor Award from the American Institute of Architects’ chapter in Santa Clara Valley.

The chapel at Stanford is decorated with mosaics with tiles in over 20,000 shades of color. Known as “MemChu,” the chapel has been the wedding site for 7,500 couples in the last 105 years. The chapel contains four organs and the university organist has been known to treat early morning visitors to impromptu concerts.

In Melbourne, Australia, Victorian College of the Arts School of Drama is a whimsical building that houses class, lecture, and performance spaces. A performance was held inside before the building was even completed! Designed by the architectural firm CS+T, the school “features random balconies with perforated metal balustrades, curved and skewed walls in an array of contrasting colours and a series of non-rectilinear windows.” The drawbacks to a building this cool are the potential safety and access problems; fortunately, these were dealt with “very successfully.”
I may be biased because it’s my alma mater, but the University of Pittsburgh’s Cathedral of Learning could definitely be on this list. It’s the tallest educational building in the western hemisphere (42 stories), has amazing gothic architecture, and there are 27 “nationality rooms” inside that double as classrooms and represent different prominent ethnic backgrounds of the people of the city. Click my name for its wiki page.
posted by d_a on 1-7-2009 at 3:40 pm
i second that. and not just as a pitt alum, but because where else can you hear wind whistling through the building while you’re enjoying class on the 36th floor?!
posted by erin on 1-7-2009 at 4:36 pm
3 of my best friends attended Beaver College (pre name change to Arcadia University). And the castle truly is beautiful! My friends also lived in it during their junior year. And the castle is haunted. There is a mirror in there (not located in the Mirror Room) that is perpetually cracked. There are no structual issues that cause the mirror to crack, but whenever it is replaced a new crack in the exact same spot is found shortly after installation. Most people believe the ghost (which can also be heard sometimes) causes the crack to the mirror.
They also have a kick a$$ halloween party in the castle every year!
posted by Mavis on 1-7-2009 at 4:58 pm
Hey, cool, I didn’t know the Nott Memorial was all that notable (aside from its roundness).
posted by M on 1-7-2009 at 5:18 pm
I cannot believe you overlooked Ontario College of Art and Design’s (or OCAD for short) Will Alsop designed Sharp Centre. And yes, I am biased as a Torontonian, but regardless, it is still an impressive building.
posted by Ezra on 1-7-2009 at 5:21 pm
Where is Touchdown Jesus?
posted by partiallyDeflected on 1-7-2009 at 7:41 pm
I went to Arizona State for my undergrad, and I never heard about Gammage resembling a toilet before.
But I just checked, and it totally does!
posted by gibson8or on 1-7-2009 at 8:45 pm
I just looked up Gammage on Google Maps again and noticed there is a building just one block north of it that appears to have a smiley face on its roof.
posted by Andréa Fernandes on 1-7-2009 at 9:16 pm
UCSD Geisel (Central) Library. Now that is a landmark!
posted by Christian on 1-7-2009 at 9:40 pm
Let’s not forget the Langson Library at UC Irvine (photo linked). The whole campus is full of weird architecture – enough that the social science tower was featured in the original Planet of the Apes!
zot!
posted by Nadia on 1-8-2009 at 12:32 am
I know this isn’t quite a landmark but the statue of 3 lies at Harvard is kind of cool to check out the story behind it. It’d make for a great post.
posted by Adam on 1-8-2009 at 7:24 am
Although not nearly as neat-looking as some of the buildings on this list, La Salle University in Philadelphia, PA has the oldest used building on a college campus in America. The president’s house and offices are located in the Peale house, once owned by Charles Wilson Peale, the famous American painter (he did all the Revolutionary War portraits). In fact, a good portion of La Salle’s campus is on what was once the Peale farm.
But like the Pitt alum above, I’m sort of biased, seeing as I attend La Salle.
posted by Megan on 1-8-2009 at 10:09 am
@d_a – I agree with you! I checked your link. The nationality rooms look AMAZING!
posted by bzzyb on 1-8-2009 at 10:27 am
In addition to the Geisel library (previously mentioned) UCSD houses the Stuart Collection [linked]. My favorite were always the Sun God and Trees (especially at night in the fog). And yes, I admit some alma mater bias,as well.
posted by Tom on 1-8-2009 at 12:52 pm
How hilarious…the Gammage Memorial Auditorium looks EXACTLY like a a toilet bowl!
posted by Catherine on 2-13-2009 at 12:56 am
YA GREY TOWERS!!
being a Arcadia student i’m just really glad to see our castle on this list!!
posted by Komal P on 6-29-2009 at 11:08 pm