<p>Michigan State is gorgeous, even in the wintertime. The architecture, layout, art displays, nature, everything.</p>
<p>Boston Univ.</p>
<p>Davis and Harvard</p>
<p>Hah... You've gotta be kidding me. BU? LOL... They don't even have a campus!! Just a bunch of buildings on a street!</p>
<p>Surely they meant BC, not BU.</p>
<p>UCLA, Stanford, University of San Diego, the private Catholic school - really surprised about that school - beautiful, Pepperdine for the great big beautiful view of the Pacific Ocean only - buildings sort of ordinary stucco modern to me, UCSB for the location near the beach only - buildings not so pretty.</p>
<p>i'm bias but still i need to say vanderbilt</p>
<p>Technically, you're bias*ed*.</p>
<p>;)</p>
<p>I couldn't stop myself. Forgive me.</p>
<p>Sonoma State. :) That was what interested me initially.</p>
<p>One that I've only seen mentioned a few times (though I didn't quite read every page) is Scripps College. I found it to be the prettiest college that I've visited so far, which is a small part of the reason I'll be going there next year :) </p>
<p>I also loved Notre Dame. Definitely on the list. </p>
<p>And one school that I didn't see, though I may have missed it, is Willamette. Maybe it isn't in the top ten, but it sure is beautiful there.</p>
<p>I really wasn't that impressed with Pepperdine...it didn't live up to my expectations, though the location is hard to beat. And I really didn't find LMU to be beautiful, but those are just personal opinions.</p>
<p>Concerning UCSD, I would agree that it is not on the list of most beautiful campuses. But, it was one of my favorite campuses because of its character and location. It was just a really interesting school to walk around. I absolutely love it.</p>
<p>Excuse me, I really meant BU. Why would BC even be here? ;)</p>
<p>KENYON!
I also though COlgate, Middlebury and Bowdoin had beautiful campuses.</p>
<p>Furman is unbelievable - fountains all around and a beautiful lake with a bell tower. The landscaping is outstanding and though I graduated from Wake I would rank Furman slightly ahead in terms of physical plant.</p>
<p>Wake Forest's campus is gorgeous with the accompanying Reynolda Village and Gardens - wonderful Georgian architecture (except for the Fine Arts building) and landscaping that is equal to Furman's.</p>
<p>Go to Fa__book and search groups for "Furman 2011" or Furman 2012" and you will see some pictures of Furman. It is beautiful and a totally enclosed campus</p>
<p>I think Michigan's campus is really nice. Not exactly pretty but big, well spaced out and nice buildings.</p>
<p>Or maybe I'm just biased ;)</p>
<p>Yale...the surroundings aren't so nice but the architecture cannot be matched by any other university or college (I've been to Harvard, Stanford, Columbia, Tufts, UC Berkeley).</p>
<p>@ Kevster:
HAH! You must be on something. Don't even joke about BU having a campus. While it may be a good school, it's just a bunch of buildings spread across a street.</p>
<p>babson maybe</p>
<p>Obviously Cornell.
Ithaca is Gorges. Lol.
Not overused at ALL.</p>
<p>I can see Pepperdine.
That must be the reason Zoey 101 is filmed there.
I still feel awkward whenever I watch that show.</p>
<p>Maybe Concordia in Austin. Post renovation. It's in a nature preserve now, not bordered by downtown/the highway, and it's like it's just a big cabin in the woods. That's all I can think of from personal experience.</p>
<p>Boston College has a great campus but I'm a little biased. They do a great job in the groundskeeping and building maintenance department. The spent hundreds of millions refurbing old buildings back in the 80s and 90s and they look great from the outside and the inside. It's nestled in a former All-American city in a pretty affluent section of town.</p>
<p>I also have a degree from Boston University and never liked the campus. But I'm not a city person.</p>