<p>I'd really like to attend a college/university with stunning scenery.</p>
<p>[The</a> 10 Most Beautiful Campuses](<a href=“HuffPost - Breaking News, U.S. and World News | HuffPost”>The 10 Most Beautiful Campuses | HuffPost College)</p>
<p>^ I disagree with the list. Most of the colleges are ugly point blank.</p>
<p>The definition of a beautiful campus is subjective, and differs from person to person. For example, i’m in favor of Gothic/Neo-Gothic buildings while others might find more modern buildings appealing.</p>
<p>Well, if you’re looking for stunning scenery, many of those on the list make sense. UC Santa Cruz (mountain views, ocean views, lots of redwood trees), Stanford (foothills, mountains, tons of trees), and CU-Boulder (most gorgeous mountain views), to name a few.</p>
<p>Ucla, unc-ch.</p>
<p>University of Vermont, for stunning scenery!</p>
<p>Colorado College, Stanford, Pepperdine, Rice, Northwestern, Berkeley, UCSB and UCSC are the most beautiful campuses/schools for me, though they appear different from each other.</p>
<p>From the StructureHub.com* perspective:
[url=<a href=“http://structurehub.com/blog/2009/09/americas-ten-most-beautiful-college-campuses/]Americas”>http://structurehub.com/blog/2009/09/americas-ten-most-beautiful-college-campuses/]Americas</a> ten most beautiful college campuses<a href=“*%20a%20community%20of%20architects,%20engineers,%20and%20urban%20planners”>/url</a></p>
<p>For beautiful settings, I like rural New England colleges (like Middlebury), mountain-side colleges (UC Boulder, Colorado College), or waterfront colleges (St. Mary’s College of Md). California and Colorado are beautiful college climate states (sunny, not too hot, not too cold, not too humid). Architecturally, the colonial colleges (most of the Ivies), and private schools founded later by individual philanthropists (Chicago, JHU, Stanford), tend to reflect a coherent design vision. Many modern public universities do not (since they were built by committees in fits and starts to accomodate the needs of vehicle traffic, very large student populations, and government budgets.) UC Boulder is a beautiful exception (built with materials and design to fit the spectacular setting).</p>
<p>Do a search on CC on this topic. Its been talked about a lot</p>
<p>I like modern campuses, so I fell in love with UCF</p>