25 Most Beautiful College Campuses in the U.S. Greek Revival, Collegiate Gothic, and Spanish Mission are just a few of the styles you’ll see. By Travel + Leisure Editors Travel + Leisure Editors Since 1971, Travel + Leisure editors have followed one mission: to inform, inspire, and guide travelers to have deeper, more meaningful experiences. T+L's editors have traveled to countries all over the world, having flown, sailed, road tripped, and taken the train countless miles. They've visited small towns and big cities, hidden gems and popular destinations, beaches and mountains, and everything in between. With a breadth of knowledge about destinations around the globe, air travel, cruises, hotels, food and drinks, outdoor adventure, and more, they are able to take their real-world experience and provide readers with tried-and-tested trip ideas, in-depth intel, and inspiration at every point of a journey. Travel + Leisure Editorial Guidelines Updated on April 21, 2025 Close Credit: Getty Images With a collection of Rodin bronzes and stunning red-roofed buildings, Stanford is a grand university to explore.Berry College's expansive 27,000-acre campus is studded with picturesque Collegiate Gothic structures.Visit the Neo-Gothic Basilica of the Sacred Heart, an impressive gem at the heart of the University of Notre Dame.Featuring a swath of original designs by Frank Lloyd Wright, Florida Southern College is a must-see campus for architecture buffs.Nestled among the Catskill Mountain foothills, Bard College's crown jewel is the glass and stainless steel Fisher Center, designed by renowned Frank Gehry. America's most beautiful college campuses don't just attract prospective students and their families. Tourists flock to these impressive institutions to admire their perfectly manicured lawns, stunning architecture, and noteworthy landmarks. From resort-like campuses in Florida to the European-inspired Gothic universities of the Northeast, browse 25 of the country’s most beautiful colleges. 01 of 25 Stanford University, California Getty Images The entryway to Stanford's 8,180-acre campus is arguably the grandest of any beautiful college campus: A mile-long, tree-lined Palm Drive leads up to the expansive green oval Main Quad, surrounded by red-roofed buildings and the campus's crown architectural jewel, Memorial Church, with its striking mosaic façade. Beauty continues at the Cantor Arts Center's collection of 170 bronzes by Auguste Rodin, one of the largest beyond Paris. The view of campus—and all the way to San Francisco on a clear day—is best captured from the Hoover Tower observation platform. 02 of 25 Berry College, Georgia Getty Images This rural college in Mount Berry, Georgia, holds a lofty record: It's the United State's largest contiguous college campus, with more than 27,000 acres of fields, lakes, forests, and mountains. Berry makes prime use of its setting, too, with numerous reflecting pools and fountains situated near its beautiful English Gothic-inspired buildings like the Ford Dining Hall, Ford Auditorium, and Mary Hall, made possible by the school's largest benefactor, Henry Ford. 03 of 25 University of Notre Dame, Indiana Getty Images It's hard to miss the glistening golden dome of Notre Dame's Main Building, not to mention the Neo-Gothic Basilica of the Sacred Heart that defines this Catholic school founded in 1842. Besides gorgeous architecture, the campus is chock-full of lush quads, where students congregate to kick back when they're not in class or at the football stadium. 04 of 25 Florida Southern College, Florida Loop Images/Universal Images Group via Getty Images You might be surprised to learn that Florida Southern—on a hillside overlooking Lake Hollingsworth in Lakeland, Florida—has the world's largest collection of Frank Lloyd Wright buildings, including the Annie Pfeiffer Chapel with its colored pieces of glass and wrought-iron tower. It was dubbed the "first uniquely American campus" by Wright himself and was named a National Historic Landmark in 2012. I Went to Frank Lloyd Wright's Iconic 'Fallingwater' House in Pennsylvania — Here's What It's Like to Visit 05 of 25 Bard College, New York Peter Aaron/Esto Frank Gehry's Fisher Center—an undulating work of glass and brushed stainless steel—showcases Bard's thriving arts scene throughout the year. The center is on the contemporary side of the 19th-century rural campus's architectural spectrum, which includes postmodern, brutalist, and Greek Revival styles. Pathways make for easy exploring, with the Catskill Mountains visible in the distance. 06 of 25 University of San Diego, California University of San Diego Some of the most beautiful campuses are an amalgam of styles; the University of San Diego sticks to just one, and what a glorious one it has chosen—Spanish Renaissance, with elaborate façades, delicate ironwork, and carved woodwork. Ocean views and palm-tree-lined courtyards only add to the paradise-on-campus appeal. The Immaculata Church, with its piercingly blue dome and solid bronze front door, is visible from much of the city and is one of the many photo-op-worthy landmarks on the campus. 07 of 25 Rice University, Texas Getty Images Don't be fooled by Rice's urban Houston address. A double row of majestic oak trees encloses its perimeter—a harbinger of the lush 300-acre campus to come, divided into quadrangles and planted with thousands of elms, hickories, maples, and other trees. The oldest buildings, like the standout Lovett Hall, borrow elements of medieval southern European architecture, including grand, arched passageways and rose-hued brick. 08 of 25 Cornell University, New York Cornell University Ambitious campus planners at Cornell wanted to create a main quad over dramatic Cayuga Lake, the longest of the Finger Lakes. That original plan evolved, and the beautiful setting now accommodates both historic structures like McGraw Tower and contemporary ones like the I. M. Pei-designed Johnson Museum of Art and the Milstein Hall by Rem Koolhaas. Prospective students (and their parents) are always impressed by Cascadilla Gorge, where eight waterfalls drop more than 400 feet from Cornell's campus to downtown Ithaca. 09 of 25 The University of the South, Tennessee University of the South, Sewanee This 13,000-acre rural campus on the Cumberland Plateau overlooking the Tennessee Valley combines Gothic-inspired architecture with magnificent surroundings: forest, lakefront bluffs, and a garden ravine that follows a stream through campus. In spring, it blooms with daffodils, hyacinths, and tulips. The All Saints' Chapel draws inspiration from the University Church at Oxford and Notre Dame in Paris. Catch a performance at the on-site Tennessee Williams Center, named after the Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright who left his estate to Sewanee. 10 of 25 University of Washington University of Washington/University Photography The eye-catching Collegiate Gothic Suzzallo Library at UW's Seattle campus has 35-foot-high stained-glass windows and elaborately gilded vaulted ceilings that soar 65 feet in the air. But come spring, the quad's 29 Yoshino cherry trees steal the spotlight with blooms of delicate pink petals set against red-brick buildings. The Drumheller Fountain is a great spot for views of snowcapped Mount Rainier. 11 of 25 Princeton University, New Jersey Loop Images/Universal Images Group via Getty Images Princeton's gray stone buildings, like the University Chapel and Cleveland Tower, are pure Collegiate Gothic splendor. But the 600-acre campus's beauty extends beyond their doors. Courtyards, idyllic small greens, and crisscrossing footpaths dot the campus. The handsome ivy-covered Nassau Hall was the largest stone building in the American colonies and a temporary home to the Continental Congress. 12 of 25 Kenyon College, Ohio Kenyon College Office of Public Affairs Kenyon's hilltop setting in tiny Gambier makes for one of the country's most idyllic campus walks: The 10-foot-wide Middle Path, which spans the length of the college and through town, is shaded by massive trees that glow fiery orange in the fall. Veer off the path for Kenyon's castle-like Victorian Gothic Ascension Hall and the Greek Revival Rosse Hall with its elegant columns. 13 of 25 Swarthmore College, Pennsylvania Swarthmore College Just southwest of Philadelphia, Swarthmore's Scott Arboretum nurtures idyllic gardens of hydrangea, lilacs, and tree peonies, along with a courtyard devoted to fragrant trees and shrubs. The highlight is its outdoor amphitheater, a series of cascading lawn-covered stone tiers shaded by tulip trees and surrounded by Crum Woods and its holly and rhododendron collections. The Dean Bond Rose Garden has 170-plus varieties and views of stately Parrish Hall in the background. 14 of 25 University of Virginia Getty Images How's this for honors? UVA is the only university in the U.S. to be designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Thomas Jefferson designed the campus layout, hired the initial faculty, and planned the curriculum. Highlights of this elegant campus include the neoclassical domed Rotunda, modeled after the Pantheon in Rome, and the Small Special Collections Library, which showcases the most comprehensive collection of letters, documents, and early printings of the Declaration of Independence. 15 of 25 Yale University, Connecticut Michael Marsland/ Yale University While some campuses hold stubbornly onto their pasts, Yale embraces changing architectural movements. The collection spans from the Georgian-style red-brick Connecticut Hall (whose construction predates the Revolutionary War) to the Postmodernist Ingalls Rink by Eero Saarinen and the School of Management's Edward P. Evans Hall: a Norman Foster project completed in 2014. Duck inside the wondrous Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, which houses volumes in a six-story glass-enclosed tower, set against translucent grained Vermont marble panels. The most impressive items in their collection are an original Gutenberg Bible and a 1,250-year-old book of Buddhist prayers. 16 of 25 Duke University, North Carolina Getty Images Much of this Collegiate Gothic wonderland, including soaring Duke Chapel, was designed by Julian Abele, one of the country's first prominent African American architects. But Duke's campus isn't all Gothic-inspired marvel. Among its architectural gems are the glass-walled Karl and Mary Ellen von der Heyden Pavilion and the Rafael Viñoly-designed Nasher Museum of Art—with five pavilions shaped in a loose radial pattern that house contemporary works by Andy Warhol and Kara Walker. 17 of 25 University of Colorado Boulder George Rose/ Getty Images The flagship campus of the University of Colorado combines sweeping views of the snowcapped Rocky Mountains and Flatirons, a gorgeous natural setting that includes a serene lake and two creeks, and ruggedly beautiful buildings to match. Most, including the grand Norlin Library, feature a distinct Tuscan-meets-the-West architectural style of local sandstone walls, red tile roofs, and limestone trim. 18 of 25 University of Wisconsin–Madison Images-USA/ Alamy There are a number of campuses set on pretty lakes, but none commands its lakeshore setting quite like the University of Wisconsin—Madison. Its Memorial Union and outdoor stone terrace practically hug the shores of Lake Mendota. Another building on campus occupying prime real estate: the white-columned hilltop Bascom Hall. 19 of 25 Wellesley College, Massachusetts Universal Images Group via Getty Images Only 12 miles west of Boston, Wellesley's 500-acre campus is another world entirely, with pathways that meander through sprawling meadows and groves of conifers that surround tranquil Lake Waban, with 19th-century brick buildings tucked into the wooded hillsides. Several greenhouses, lush with tropical, subtropical, and desert plantings, stay green straight through the long northeastern winters. 20 of 25 The College of William & Mary, Virginia Joel Pattinson/ The College of William and Mary Named for its royal English founders, William & Mary is the second-oldest college in the U.S. after Harvard and is anchored by the brick Wren Building, whose weather vane bears the founding date of 1693. Students sprawl on the grassy Sunken Garden, which stretches from the Wren to Crim Dell Pond. Duke of Gloucester Street links the 1,200-acre campus to the town of Williamsburg. 21 of 25 University of Chicago, Illinois Massimo Borchi/Atlantide Phototravel/Getty Images Located in the South Side Hyde Park neighborhood, the University of Chicago blends traditional English Gothic style with the modern designs of Eero Saarinen and Mies van der Rohe across roughly 215 acres that include an official botanical garden. Be sure to pay attention to details: many of the gargoyles on the ivy-covered buildings date back to 1892, when the campus was constructed. 40 Best Things to Do in Chicago, From Iconic Sights to Can't-miss Museums 22 of 25 Bryn Mawr College, Pennsylvania Getty Images Bryn Mawr is the first example of the Collegiate Gothic style created by architects Cope and Stewardson (who drew their inspiration from Oxford and Cambridge universities). Campuses across the U.S., including Princeton and Washington University in St. Louis, went on to emulate the look of Bryn Mawr's Pembroke Hall. But the buildings aren't the only lookers; Frederick Law Olmsted, who designed Central Park, helped with the layout of the campus's 135 tree-covered acres. 23 of 25 Furman University, South Carolina Furman University The serene landscape of the 940-acre wooded Furman University in Greenville, South Carolina, is focused around a lake and the landmark Bell Tower. From a Japanese temple beside the school's Asia Garden—full of irises, bamboo, and camellias—to a replica of Henry David Thoreau's home, the setting on this campus is as diverse as its student body. Not to mention, there's also the 18-hole golf course and miles of walking trails. 24 of 25 Vanderbilt University, Tennessee Douglas Sacha/Getty Images Sure, Vanderbilt might be set just outside of downtown Nashville, but you certainly wouldn't know by looking around. The campus doubles as a sprawling arboretum. With some 190 species of trees scattered across 300-plus acres and sightings of hawks, owls, and cardinals, it's easy to forget you're actually in the middle of a city. 25 of 25 Flagler College, Florida Valerie de Leon/Travel + Leisure This private liberal arts college, located in beautiful St. Augustine, Florida, started out as a luxury hotel. Now the home of Flagler College, the Ponce de León Hotel was built in 1888 in the incredible Spanish Renaissance style. Today, the building is the centerpiece of the college and a National Historic Landmark. Read More: Trip Ideas Attractions Universities