Reading the thread on CompSci courses got me thinking. What is the best university building a member of OcUK has been taught in?
So the aim. Post a picture of the best looking building at your university (past/present) and we'll see where the nicest ones are.
What you don't do... Post any old building. You have to have spent at least a term there and it has to be a building that is actually owned/regularly used by the university you went to...
So my Undergrad was at a nondescript modern city university, Plymouth, however it did have a couple of nice buildings, firstly the Scott Building, the first university building, built in the 1800s, the other, more impressive is the Roland Levinsky building.
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The great thing is, it is the Arts building (full of Architects) and the building itself is all form over function and a massive pain to navigate and use... Hopefully the Architects take that experience with them to their careers.
My postgrad on the other hand was an old uni located in a more suburban campus, centred round a large Red Brick building modelled after a Chateau in France.
Certainly more impressive than the undergrad buildings.
So can anyone beat that?
Try and keep it to one building per university and at max a couple of pictures!
So the aim. Post a picture of the best looking building at your university (past/present) and we'll see where the nicest ones are.

What you don't do... Post any old building. You have to have spent at least a term there and it has to be a building that is actually owned/regularly used by the university you went to...

So my Undergrad was at a nondescript modern city university, Plymouth, however it did have a couple of nice buildings, firstly the Scott Building, the first university building, built in the 1800s, the other, more impressive is the Roland Levinsky building.

The great thing is, it is the Arts building (full of Architects) and the building itself is all form over function and a massive pain to navigate and use... Hopefully the Architects take that experience with them to their careers.

My postgrad on the other hand was an old uni located in a more suburban campus, centred round a large Red Brick building modelled after a Chateau in France.


Certainly more impressive than the undergrad buildings.
So can anyone beat that?

Try and keep it to one building per university and at max a couple of pictures!