1. Stanford Visitor Center (Stanford Visitor Center)
Can't find a specific building? Want to know what happened on campus the night you came? At the Stanford Visitor Center at 295 Galvez Street, our staff can make your visit richer and more enjoyable.
2. Francis Arilaga Alumni Center (Francis Arilaga Alumni Center)
Convenient transportation, located at the corner of campus and Galvez, is the home away from home of alumni. The Alumni Center includes Dwight Family Living Room, Penn Library, Franklin Fountain and Reflection Pool.
3. Arrillaga Sports Center. Entertainment (Arilaga Sports and Entertainment Center)
The center is a 75,000-square-foot entertainment facility for students, faculty and staff.
4. Montag Hall (Montag Hall)
Montag has an undergraduate admissions and financial assistance office.
5. Knight Management Center (Knight Management Center)
Knight Management Center reflects our commitment to create a cooperative space between teachers and students, between Stanford GSB University and other departments of Stanford University, and with the global business community. It is dedicated to discovering things that haven't happened yet and people who realize their dreams.
6. Hoover Building
The Hoover Pagoda was completed in 194 1, which is a part of the Hoover Institute of War, Revolution and Peace. It was named after herbert hoover, the 3rd1president of the United States who graduated from the pioneer class of Stanford University in 1895. The observation deck on 14 floor is open to tourists, and you can have a bird's eye view of the campus and most of the Bay Area.
7. Memorial Hall and Memorial Hall (Memorial Hall and Memorial Hall)
The memorial hall was completed in 1937 to commemorate the students and faculty of Stanford University who lost their lives in World War I. The hall includes plaques engraved with their names, as well as the names of people who died in World War II, Korean War, Vietnam War, Iraq War and Afghanistan War.
8. Historical corner of alley
Ryan has a history department, a philosophy of science department and a science, technology and society department.
9. Vallenborg Concert Hall (Vallenborg Concert Hall)
Vallenborg Hall is the base camp of classroom learning and research in Stanford University. Teachers in Stanford University can use their advanced resource classrooms to try new teaching and learning methods.
10. mcclatchy Hall (mcclatchy Hall)
McClatchy Hall has sociology department, communication department and urban research department.
1 1. Oval and Palm Avenue (Oval and Palm Avenue)
The oval and palm avenue mark the gates of the university. The Oval Stadium is a leisure place for students, teachers and community members to have picnics, play volleyball and enjoy California weather. About 150 canary palm trees are planted on both sides of Palm Avenue, leading to University Avenue and downtown Palo Alto.
12.420 Building (Building 420)
Building 420 is the home of the Department of Psychology and Linguistics.
13. Si Long Mathematics Center (Si Long Mathematics Center)
Mathematics is one of the oldest intellectual exploration fields, but it continues to develop rapidly in many directions and provides many basic ideas and technologies for contemporary applications (including economics, computer science, telecommunications, natural science, etc.). ).
14. david packard Electrical Engineering (david packard Electrical Engineering)
David packard Electrical Engineering Building has an administrative office of the Department of Electrical Engineering, an undergraduate teaching laboratory and a byte cafe. In 1960s and 1930s, david packard and william hewlett met while studying electronic engineering at Stanford University. Then they found HP in Packard's garage in Palo Alto.
15. Nanoscience and Engineering (Nanoscience and Engineering)
This cutting-edge equipment includes some of the most advanced nano-scale pattern and characterization equipment in the world.
16. Yang and Yamazaki Environmental Energy Building (Y2E2 for short)
(Yanghe Yamazaki Environment and Energy Building)
Y2E2 reflects Stanford University's commitment to solving global environmental problems by bringing together experts from many disciplines-biologists, earth scientists, ecologists, economists, engineers, legal scholars and policy analysts.
17. Renxun Emperor Engineering Center (Huang Renxun Engineering Center)
The Yellow Center is the seat of the School of Engineering, whose goal is to stimulate inventions in a creative and collaborative environment. It has Terman Engineering Library, named after Frederick Terman, Dean of Engineering College in 1960s and 1950s. He was widely praised for creating culture and academic and industrial cooperation in Silicon Valley. Huang also owns Google's first server and entertainment facilities in the HP garage.
18. Ruth Watt is Mitchell earth science building (Ruth watt is Mitchell earth science building)
The Ruth Watis Mitchell Earth Science Building was named after Ruth Watis Mitchell and was put into use on1970165438+10/0/9. Ruth Vardis Mitchell is a sculptor and a generous donor to this university.
19. Gay Liberation Sculpture, george segal (Gay Liberation Sculpture, george siegel)
Gay Liberation is a bronze sculpture group of artist george segal, which consists of four painted figures and two benches.
20. Main quadrilateral (main quadrilateral)
Frederick Law Olmsted planned and designed Richardson Romanesque and Revival Church style quadrangles. Quad has owned 12 original classrooms in Stanford since 189 1 started school. Today, it is the seat of the School of Humanities and the birthplace of many traditions of Stanford University, such as the four-party dinner for fresh graduates.
2 1. Hamburg in Calais, auguste rodin, 1889 (Calais citizen, auguste rodin, 1889).
Calais citizens commemorate the personal sacrifices of six outstanding French people who gave their lives for their compatriots when Britain surrounded Calais during the Hundred Years' War. Stanford has the largest collection of Rodin sculptures in the world.
22. Memorial Church (Memorial Church)
Jane Stanford designed this church in memory of her husband Leland Stanford Sr, who died in 1893. The church was put into use on 1903. Its design is centered on Christianity, but in practice it is non-sectarian and cross-faith.
23. Class plaque and. Time capsule (class card and time capsule)
The sidewalks of quadrangles are lined with commemorative class plaques, indicating the year of each graduating class. On graduation weekend, each class installed its own plaque at a special ceremony. Most plaques also contain time capsules, which contain souvenirs representing each class and graduation year.
24. Cecil H. Green Library (Cecil H. Green Library)
The two wings of the green library contain research collections of social sciences and humanities, in addition to general collections that are not found in smaller research branches. About one third of the 9.3 million physical volumes in universities are greenhouses.
25. College of Education (College of Education)
Stanford Graduate School of Education is in a leading position in developing new and better methods to achieve high-quality education for all. Teachers and students engage in pioneering and creative interdisciplinary scholarships, telling people how to learn and shape the practice and understanding of education.
26. Bell Tower (Bell Tower)
Built in 1983, the bell tower contains a set of clockwork and bells, which were originally placed in the tower at the top of the memorial church. The tower collapsed from the church during the 1906 earthquake.
27. White Square (White Square)
White Square is a 200,000-square-foot landscape area, connecting the main square and the Treside Memorial Union. From rallies to demonstrations, from job fairs to concerts, White Square is the center of student activities.
28. White Memorial Fountain (claw) (White Memorial Fountain)
The Claw was built to commemorate two Stanford students, William N. White and john wyatt II, who died in different accidents before graduation. Their parents Raymond B White donated money to White Memorial Square and Fountain.
29. Old Alliance (Old Alliance)
The Lao Lian is affiliated to the Student Affairs Office, the Student Affairs Office, the Religious Life Office and AXE & amp; Palm Cafe and various student service organizations are located in it, including El Centro Chicano, Native American Cultural Center and Asian American Activity Center.
30. Stanford bookstore (Stanford bookstore)
Bookstore is the largest supplier of books and Stanford clothes on campus.
3 1. Tracey Memorial Union (Tracey Memorial Union)
Tresidder is a student union at Stanford University. It has a variety of services, including convenience stores, restaurants, conference rooms, bicycle shops, two bank branches and a hair salon.
32. Braun Music Center
Brown Music Center is the seat of the Music Department of Stanford University. The facility has teachers' offices, classrooms and practice rooms, as well as Braun's rehearsal hall and Campbell Concert Hall.
33. Street (mayfield Avenue)
Row provides a variety of options for upper-level housing, including academic, cross-cultural and language-themed housing, as well as cooperative, self-operated and Greek-style housing.
34. Stanford Law School (Stanford Law School)
Immersion, interdisciplinary, collaborative and future-oriented —— The unique legal education mode of Stanford Law School has created unique courses for students. Because our graduates will practice in the interdisciplinary fields of law and business, medicine, engineering, technology or social sciences, we make use of the extensive intellectual resources of Stanford University to make legal research an interdisciplinary subject.
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