📸 Photo Gallery
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Stanford Visitor Center
Stanford Memorial Auditorium
Hoover Tower
Welcome to Stanford!
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Illustration of Stanford's main quad with large green area and mountains in the background.
Long view of Palm Drive, the road leading to Stanford's Main Quad at the front of campus, lined on each side by palm trees
An aerial view of Stanford's central campus shows its proximity to downtown Palo Alto and the San Francisco Bay nearby.
Winged lions mark the pathway leading to the Stanford Family Mausoleum and the Arizona Cactus Garden, located in the heart of the Stanford Arboretum.
This bronze statue of the Stanford family (Leland Stanford, Sr., Leland Stanford, Jr., and Jane Stanford) stands to the right of the Stanford Family Mausoleum.
The amazing Arizona Cactus Garden is located to the left of the Stanford Family Mausoleum.
Stanford's free Marguerite Shuttle serves as a convenient part of the Stanford's local public transportation network.
Two images, the first showing the front of the Cantor Center for the Visual Arts building, featuring stone columns and marble statues; the second features the glass-fronted entrance to the Bing Concert Hall
Large oval-shaped lawn area leading up to the sandstone Main Quad and foothills in the background.
Front of a four-story sandstone building engraved with "Department of Chemistry" and "1900" and newly marked as the "Sapp Center for Science, Teaching and Learning"
Science and Technology Gateway
Elevated view facing east of the Science & Engineering Quad Courtyard with Hoover Tower in the distance
Sandstone arches connecting mission-style arcades surround the center of the Main Quad - the geographic, academic, and historic center of the Stanford campus.
"Mem Chu" (as it is commonly referred to) is the architectural centerpiece of the Main Quadrangle. "While my whole heart is in the university, my soul is in that church." - Jane Lathrop Stanford
Tresidder is Stanford's student union. It offers a wide variety of services and amenities, with several retail eateries (including the popular “CoHo” coffeehouse), two bank branches, the campus bike shop, a ticket office, hair salon, convenience store, meeting spaces, and more. Multiple student services are situated in the areas surrounding Tresidder Union.
Central and scenic, The Row offers over 30 student-managed houses ranging in occupancy from 30 to 65. Many are themed, and each has a distinctive personality. In co-ops, students do their own cooking and cleaning, whereas in self-ops, meals are prepared by a chef. Both have open kitchens.
White Memorial Plaza is an often-lively hub connecting two popular student areas – Meyer Green and Tresidder Memorial Union. It includes the Stanford Bookstore, a post office, Old Union, and White Memorial Fountain, and plays host to rallies, career and activity fairs, demonstrations, and ad hoc concerts and events.
Meyer Green is a popular spot for students to soak up the sun between classes, study, enjoy items from the popular adjacent cafe, or catch up with friends. This open, landscaped bowl provides a perfect venue for performances.
The largest of Stanford’s 20 on-campus libraries, Green Library houses the Humanities and Social Sciences collections, Special Collections & University Archive, the Rumsey Map Center, and multiple large reading rooms. Green is a popular research destination for scholars of all disciplines.
The iconic Hoover Tower stands 285 feet (87m) tall, and is one of four buildings comprising the Hoover Institution. The tower includes the Hoover Library and Archives, exhibition spaces, offices, a 48-bell carillon, and an observation deck on the top floor where visitors can get a beautiful view of the campus and surrounding area.
Stanford offers top-ranked undergraduate degree programs in six primary social science departments ‒ Anthropology, Communication, Economics, Political Science, Psychology, and Sociology ‒ as well as numerous interdisciplinary fields, including International Relations, Public Policy, Human Rights, and Urban Studies.
Montag Hall is home to the Offices of Undergraduate Admission and Financial Aid. Stanford is committed to enrolling a vibrant, intellectual, and diverse community of students. Applicants are selected for admission holistically and within their own individual contexts based upon a combination of academic excellence, intellectual vitality, and their experiences, interests, and impact outside the classroom.
The Stanford Alumni Association serves current and former students and members of the Stanford family by hosting events and providing networking, programs and services that help maintain a lifelong connection to the university for its students. The Frances Arrillaga Alumni Center also houses the Office of Development.
Stanford's Department of Athletics, Physical Education, and Recreation (DAPER) is housed in the Arrillaga Family Sports Center, one of the finest collegiate athletic facilities in the country. Be sure to visit the state-of-the-art “Home of Champions” located within ‒ a free, interactive showplace honoring Stanford’s history of athletic excellence ‒ and grab a bite and some refreshment at the popular Sports Café located within.
With a seating capacity of 1705, students come to Memorial Auditorium (“Mem Aud”) in droves to attend events and performances ranging from New Student Orientation to speaker events featuring world leaders and celebrities to “Gaieties” – a traditional comedy-musical performed during the annual Big Game Week. The Division of Drama, various makerspaces, and the campus radio station KZSU 90.1 are also headquartered in Mem Aud.
Made of stone and marble and situated in the tranquil Arboretum, the Stanford Family Mausoleum is the final resting place for all three members of Stanford's founding family.
McMurtry Building for Art & Art History
"The Thinker" in the Rodin Gallery of the Cantor Center for the Visual Arts
The Rodin Sculpture Garden, adjacent to the Cantor Center for the Visual Arts.
The Anderson Collection at Stanford University feature over 120 pieces of contemporary, modern art.
The Bing Concert Hall seats over 800 patrons in a start-of-the-art acoustic environment.
The newly-renovated Frost Amphitheater seats thousands for outdoor performances and events in a beautiful forest-like setting.
The renovated Roble Arts Gym facility is an innovative makerspace that provides a variety of spaces for rehearsals, performances, and the creation of all types of art.
Originally built in 1917, the renovated Stanford Art Gallery is an exhibition space featuring works by students from the Department of Art & Art History.
Bass Biology Research Building
ChEM-H and Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute
James H. Clark Center, home of Stanford Bio-X
Li Ka Shing Building at the Stanford School of Medicine
William Gates Computer Science Building
Paul G. Allen Center for Integrated Systems
David Packard Electrical Engineering Building
William R. Hewlett Teaching Center
The Anderson Collection at Stanford University feature over 120 pieces of contemporary, modern art.
The Bing Concert Hall seats over 800 patrons in a start-of-the-art acoustic environment.
A beautiful landscaped courtyard provides a pathway past the bronze Burghers of Calais, leading to the center of the Main Quad.
The six bronze casts of Rodin's "Burghers of Calais" accent the entrance to the Main Quad in Memorial Court.
The Main Quad - with its sandstone columns, arches and arcades, and iconic red clay tile rooftops - is comprised of a blend of two primary architectural styles: Richardsonian Romanesque and California Mission Revival.
Diamond-shaped brass plates representing graduating classes from Stanford line the pathways of the arcades of the Main Quad., starting in front of Memorial Church. The laying of a class time capsule underneath is an annual Commencement Weekend tradition..
The cavernous interior of "Mem Chu" features a breathtaking array of mosaics from the Salviati Studios of Italy, stunning stained glass windows from the Lamb Studios of New York/San Francisco, intricately detailed carvings, and five pipe organs.
The Center for Inter-Religious Community, Learning & Experiences (CIRCLE) is a safe haven for diversity, worship, ritual, meditation, reflection, spiritual and intellectual growth.
Located in a stately house on The Row, Hillel at Stanford aims to empower Jewish students at Stanford to explore and deepen their Jewish identities, and to envision their futures with choices inspired by Jewish values and commitments.
The Markaz is a centrally-located center that supports a vibrant community of students who identify with or are interested in Muslim experiences both here and around the world.
Windhover is a spiritual refuge and contemplative center designed to provide an environment for quiet reflection throughout the day for Stanford students, faculty, and staff.
With its opening in Fall 2022, Stanford’s newest school brings together and expands upon the former School of Earth, Energy, and Environmental Sciences (Stanford Earth), the Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment, the Precourt Institute for Energy, the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering (joint with the School of Engineering) and the facilities at Hopkins Marine Station.
The Y2E2 Building, located in the Science & Engineering Quad, houses Stanford University’s interdisciplinary initiative for the integrated study of energy and natural systems and aims to be a model of sustainability and energy efficiency. It houses the Precourt Institute for Energy, which concentrates the talents of the university on energy research and education, from basic science and technology to policy and business.
The Bechtel International Center, often referred to as the "I-Center," welcomes and provides resources for new international students, scholars, and their families. They offer guidance and counseling services on logistical matters specific to international members of the Stanford community. With a firm belief that international educational exchange nurtures lifelong global perspectives, the I-Center offers interactive programs to increase international awareness and understanding for Stanford students, faculty, staff, and members of our local community. Also housed here is the Overseas Resource Center (ORC), which works with undergraduates and graduate students, post-docs as well as recent alumni pursuing scholarships for study and research abroad.
Aerial view of the central campus area of the main Stanford University campus
The central area of Stanford's main campus, with neighboring communities and San Francisco Bay in the background. Stanford University is located at the northern end of Silicon Valley, midway between San Francisco and San Jose in Northern California,
"Stanford sits on the ancestral land of the Muwekma Ohlone tribe. This land was and continues to e of great importance to the Ohlone people. Consistent with our values of community and inclusion, we have a responsibility to acknowledge, honor, and make visible the University's relationship to Native peoples."
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Campus Tour for Students