<p>UCLA is a relatively large campus (not with thousands of acreage though :) )</p>
<p>In terms of area, I think Berry College is the largest. </p>
<p>In terms of population, I think University of Texas - Austin is the biggest.</p>
<p>*edit nvm, look at the link that another poster posted on page 1.</p>
<p>UCLA is the smallest UC acerage wise :)</p>
<p>ucsd is very large. it even has a shuttle bus system to take you to your classes.</p>
<p>and i think ohio state is the largest student wise</p>
<p>There has got to be some school in the University of Alaska system that has like a 300,000 acre Glacier research facility that would make it the largest in that regard.</p>
<p>In the US, it's stanford, by acreage. Considering universities around the world, Stanford is 2nd to Moscow university (i think).</p>
<p>edit: nevermind, the stanford student tourguide lied to us.</p>
<p>I would also have to go with the Alaska</p>
<p>Ive been to Airforce academey and that thing is huge, surrounded by rockys.</p>
<p>I liked it.</p>
<p>If you are looking at land owned where the campus is, University of the South (TN) has 10,000 acres and Berry College (GA) tops them all with 28,000 acres (conceptually that is about twice the size of Manhattan Island). University of Alaska owns about 400,000 acres but that is spread throughout the state. That is also a difficult comparison to make because if you go that route you would need to count all the University of California campuses as one.</p>
<p>I think Stanford is second in the world (to some Russian university) if you include land ownership. There's so much undeveloped land around the campus that is all owned by Stanford.</p>
<p>Stanford owns 8180 acres, just a backyard for Berry.</p>
<p>I thought UCLA was the largest UC of all the campuses? (in population, right?)</p>
<ol>
<li>University of Moscow</li>
<li>Stanford</li>
</ol>
<p>However, that's just one way of calculating the total acreage.</p>
<p>...although UCLA is the smallest UC campus in terms of acreage.</p>
<p>So how does that work? People say it's a big campus compared to other UCs, yet it's a mere 419 acres -- the smallest of all UCs.</p>
<p>Berry does indeed have the largest campus in the world. All 28,000 acres.</p>
<p>Sorry, UTexas has over 2.1 million acres.</p>
<p>We're talking CAMPUS here not random land that belongs to the university.</p>
<p>To clarify, UCLA has the largest student population but the smallest campus size among the UC's. Hard to imagine because everyone thinks of the UCLA campus as huge. I think that's because it's more developed than some of the bigger campuses like UCI, UCSD, UCD, UCM, etc. </p>
<p>Stanford owns a lot of land but I highly doubt they're doing to develop their main campus into the hills.</p>
<p>As far as population, I found this:
<a href="http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d97/d97t216.asp%5B/url%5D">http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d97/d97t216.asp</a></p>
<p>It's 10 years outdated but I doubt any of the schools drastically changed in population size.</p>
<p>So whats the smallest UC campus? oops, sorry wrong topic.
Someone wanna list the UC campuses biggest to smallest? =P</p>