<p>Name the three nicest college campuses that you have physically visited. I’ll begin.</p>
<li>University of Washington</li>
<li>Stanford</li>
<li>UCSD</li>
</ol>
<p>Name the three nicest college campuses that you have physically visited. I’ll begin.</p>
<li>University of Washington</li>
<li>Stanford</li>
<li>UCSD</li>
</ol>
<p>I have only been to Stanford, UC Berkeley, USF, Santa Clara, Georgetown, Johns Hopkins, and George Washington.</p>
<p>Of those:
1. Stanford
2. Santa Clara
3. Georgetown</p>
<p>1.Washington University in St. Louis
2. University of North Carolina - CH
3. Cornell University</p>
<p>Pepperdine is gorgeous, but haven't seen any of the above except UCSD</p>
<p>UW should not be on this list, its location is nice but the campus itself is old, run down and unattractive.</p>
<p>nicest:</p>
<ol>
<li>University of Richmond</li>
<li>Wake Forest</li>
<li>Pepperdine</li>
<li>Stanford</li>
<li>Santa Clara</li>
</ol>
<p>frabdogg, that is absolutely untrue. The campus buildings are an older style architecture that is simply gorgeous. The buidings and scenery are both spectacular as is evident on the website.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.washington.edu/%5B/url%5D">http://www.washington.edu/</a></p>
<p>LOVE the University of Kansas campus. I can see it out the window of my high school, all perched on the hill and cute.</p>
<p>I also must add Dartmouth College to the list.</p>
<p>I agree with indy787. The University of Washington's campus is gorgeous! In a few weeks the cherry trees in the Quad will be in full bloom, and wow, its pretty stunning. Anyways, I'm a fan of old, gothic architecture so add that to the cherry trees, the greenery (lol, the rain isn't all for nothin'), and the location and the UW campus comes close to what I've always thought a college campus should be. (Minus the crazy squirrels that run rampant all over campus!)</p>
<ol>
<li>Duke University</li>
<li>Furman University</li>
<li>Rollins College</li>
</ol>
<ol>
<li>Vassar</li>
<li>Brown</li>
<li>Colgate (great buildings)</li>
</ol>
<ol>
<li>Yale</li>
<li>Brown</li>
<li>Dartmouth</li>
<li>Haverford</li>
<li>Georgetown, tied with:</li>
<li>Penn (but NOT Philly lol)</li>
</ol>
<p>Dartmouth, Wellesley, and Harvard were all gorgeous.</p>
<p>No Univ of Virginia? I thought it was breathtaking</p>
<p>I'm probably the only person to write this, but I loved GW's campus. I just really liked the urban and fast-paced environment. It was in the heart of the city with lots of theatres, shops, and restaurants. It did have a campus unlike NYU, and it did have a pretty quad, but it's far from traditional. The townhouses and residential buildings were attractive. </p>
<p>O, and Furman University in South Carolina has a breathtaking campus. I only rode through the campus, and it felt really nice. It's very green and the students were really "college-brochure" looking. People were playing volley-ball and riding bicycles to class. People also enjoyed the southern weather to read outside!</p>
<p>University of Washington and Stanford are very beautiful campuses...</p>
<p>Dartmouth is beautiful</p>
<p>Haverford, Swarthmore, Colgate, all beautiful.</p>
<p>I did an overnight at Grinnell and had arrived at night, and when I went outside the next morning, I was looking across this giant field at this awesome castle building with the sun on it. By far the most breathtaking thing I've ever seen.</p>
<p>1) Notre Dame
2) Point Loma Nazarene University (in San Diego on the cliffs)
3) Harvard
4) Santa Clara</p>
<p>I agree with Stanford, UVa, Washington and I would add Columbia if you are a city person who likes open lawns...during the fall it looks absolutely gorgeous.</p>