Courses of Study 2024-2025 
    
    Oct 08, 2024  
Courses of Study 2024-2025

Facilities


There are ten undergraduate units and four graduate and professional units in Ithaca, two medical graduate and professional units in New York City, and one in Doha, Qatar. Below are some highlights of the facilities available during normal operations.

College of Architecture, Art & Planning


Ithaca

  • AAP’s physical facilities in Ithaca include: The Foundry, Milstein Hall, Rand Hall, Sibley Hall, and Tjaden Hall, located at the north end of Cornell University’s historic Arts Quad.

AAP NYC

  • The Gensler Family AAP NYC Center is located at 26 Broadway in New York City. The 11,114-square-foot facility encompasses the entire 20th floor of the former Standard Oil building and is customized to meet a full range of programming needs with gallery space, a multi-use room for lectures and public events, and ample studio and classroom areas for up to 50 students. Its natural lighting and 360-degree views, including the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island, enhance the experience of the city as an extension of the classroom. 
  • Beginning in academic year 2022-2023, AAP has also expanded its New York City presence, occupying 10,900 square feet on the 5th floor of the Tata Innovation Center at Cornell Tech’s Roosevelt Island campus.

Cornell in Rome

  • The Cornell in Rome program is based in Palazzo Santacroce. Ample studio and classroom space, a library, and a materials shop are all housed in a spectacular 17th-century villa.

College of Arts & Sciences


The 26 structures that comprise the College of Arts & Sciences’ physical space include the first buildings on the Cornell campus and now the newest as well. From the classic lines of Morrill Hall to the futuristic design of the Physical Sciences Building, the College’s structures reflect the uncommon breadth and diversity of our community.

Klarman Hall, a magnificent new building for the humanities, now provides a gateway to the Arts Quad from East Avenue and recognizes the vitality and importance of the humanities at Cornell. It creates a space that transforms the experience of the Arts Quad, the emotional heart of the campus, by promoting student connections with the arts & humanities.

College of Agriculture & Life Sciences


The College of Agriculture and Life Sciences (Cornell CALS) maintains many unique and outstanding facilities, including two teaching wineries, a student run organic farm, an orchard, maple research forests and world-class collections of plants, insects and vertebrates. CALS students have easy access to Mann Library, home to an impressive collection of agricultural and biological sciences volumes and other materials. Also located near Mann Library is the CALSZone, a student community space accessible 24 hours a day, 7 days a week that offers advising, programming and well-being events.  

The iconic Ag Quad is home to several CALS buildings—including the main administrative building, Roberts Hall, which houses the Dean’s Office, Undergraduate Admissions, and Student Services. The Quad is located on land that was once part of the Ezra Cornell family farm, so it is fitting that greenhouses and gardens are nestled amongst the classrooms, offices, and research facilities. Cornell CALS conducts research, teaching and extension programs in over 500 facilities statewide.

The college’s New York State Agricultural Experiment Station in Geneva, known as Cornell AgriTech, is a 900-acre campus at the northern tip of Seneca Lake dedicated to all aspects of applied agricultural research. Additional CALS’ research and extension properties are located throughout New York, including Arnot Teaching and Research Forest, the Cornell Lake Erie Research and Extension Laboratory, Willsboro Research Farm, the Cornell Biological Field Station at Shackelton Point, and the Long Island Horticultural Research and Extension Center.

Cornell Bowers College of Computing and Information Science


The Cornell Ann S. Bowers College of Computing and Information Science (Cornell Bowers CIS) is committed to developing state-of-the-art computing and information technologies and studying and understanding the societal and human impact of these technologies. The college is home to three departments: Computer Science, Information Science, and Statistics and Data Science, and is involved in transdisciplinary courses, programs, and research collaborations campuswide.

Bill & Melinda Gates Hall: Built in 2014, Gates Hall is the main academic building for the college, and features 101,455 gross square feet that house a variety of offices, conference rooms, and small classrooms. Informal study and collaborative spaces are interspersed throughout the building, which was designed for ample daylight penetration and creating energizing work environments that promote student physical and mental health. 

Frank H. T. Rhodes Hall: Additional space for Cornell Bowers CIS students and activities is housed within Rhodes Hall, a short distance from Gates Hall. This includes labs, drop-in office hours rooms, an Undergraduate Learning Center, and a lounge for professional master’s degree students. The Rhodes Hall fifth floor is also the temporary home (until spring 2025) of the college’s Student Services and Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion teams. 

Comstock Hall, Mallott Hall, and Surge B: Offices and student spaces for the Bowers CIS Department of Statistics and Data Science are located across these three locations; in spring 2025 the department will relocate to the new Bowers CIS complex. 

New Cornell Bowers CIS Building: Opening in spring 2025, the new Cornell Bowers CIS building will support growth of the college’s innovative, cross-disciplinary research and teaching, and will bring its departments together into one complex. Located adjacent to Gates Hall in central campus, and comprised of 135,000 square feet, the building will provide new instructional and research spaces—including robotics, builder, and research labs, a design studio, and a large active learning classroom—as well as office space and a variety of meeting and informal study spaces.

New York City: The college’s academic footprint extends well beyond the university’s Ithaca campus to New York City, where its ties with Cornell Tech have created a powerful technology ecosystem that is unique in all of higher education. This ecosystem supports a growing range of cross-campus initiatives and highly-engaged, impact-focused research and instruction.

College of Engineering


The richness of Cornell’s scientific community is enhanced by the presence of interdisciplinary centers, institutes, laboratories, and programs in which members come together from across the campus to collaborate on research, teaching, and outreach. These collaborative partnerships allow faculty members and their students to share facilities, equipment, ideas, and inspiration.

The campus is home to more than 100 other interdisciplinary centers, institutes, laboratories, and programs that support faculty research and enhance graduate and undergraduate education. The research units listed here are of particular interest to the engineering community.

College of Human Ecology


The college is housed in Human Ecology Building (HEB), Martha Van Rensselaer (MVR), Savage, and Kinzelberg Halls; as well as the Biotechnology Building and Weill Hall. The buildings include administrative and faculty offices, classrooms, auditoriums, galleries, and lecture halls; wet chemistry and biochemistry laboratories; design studios and computer-aided design laboratories; woodworking shops; human factors and infant research facilities; and classrooms for distance learning. Also included are learning resource centers for career planning, a historical costume collection, a human metabolic research unit, an animal research facility, cold rooms, and a constant temperature and humidity laboratory.

Specialized equipment for teaching and research includes biochemical and chemical instruments for spectroscopy, chromatography, radioisotope analysis, electrophoresis, microscopy, and ultracentrifugation; physical testing equipment; and cameras, videotape, and sound recording equipment.

Learn more about the Human Ecology facilities.

Jeb E. Brooks School of Public Policy


The Brooks School is housed in the second and third floors of Martha Van Rensselaer (MVR) Hall. This building includes administrative and faculty offices, classrooms, auditoriums, and lecture halls.

The school’s Cornell in Washington program is housed in the Cornell University Wolpe Center, centrally located in the Dupont Circle neighborhood at 2148 O Street, NW, in Washington, DC. Students, faculty in residence, and academic tutors reside in the twenty-seven apartments on the upper three floors of the building. The program’s classrooms, administrative offices, computer lab, and social spaces are located on the first floor.

The school’s Institute of Politics and Global Affairs is located in the General Electric Building in Manhattan (570 Lexington Ave, New York, NY), and at 78 Forest Ave in Locust Valley, NY.

School of Industrial & Labor Relations


The ILR School at Ithaca resides in the Ives Hall complex near the west-end of Tower Road. The complex is home to the Catherwood Library and Kheel Center – library and physical archive for labor history. Other buildings include a fully-equipped conference center in King-Shaw Hall, faculty and staff offices, classrooms, auditoriums, conference and study rooms and lounges in Ives Hall West and Ives Hall East, as well as faculty offices and meeting spaces in the Faculty Wing. Ives is also home to ILR’s offices for student services, admissions, and graduate studies. There are also multi-media studios for video recording and production and distance-learning productions.

The ILR School has offices in Buffalo which provide space and resources to those working in the Buffalo CoLab and other ILR outreach and extension projects. These resources include office and meeting spaces and moderate conference facilities.

ILR in NYC provides offices and resources for a number of institutes, and extension programs. The ILR Conference Center provides flexible meeting space for conferences, seminars, workshops, training, meetings, classroom instruction, and reception space at a reasonable price. All of these resources are in the heart of New York City on the 12th floor of 570 Lexington Avenue.

School of Continuing Education & Summer Session


Most on-campus Summer and Winter Session classes are held in Cornell’s state-of-the-art classrooms and facilities.

Cornell Tech


Cornell Tech moved to its permanent, sustainable 12-acre campus on Roosevelt Island, in July 2017. When fully completed, the campus will include 2 million square feet of state-of-the-art buildings, over 2 acres of open space, and will be home to more than 2,000 graduate students and nearly 280 faculty and staff.

Graduate School


The Graduate School is a community of over 5,300 graduate and professional students enrolled in nearly 100 fields of study. The Graduate School central offices are located in Caldwell Hall on the Ithaca campus. The nearly 100 graduate field offices, and their affiliated faculty and support staff, are distributed across Ithaca, Cornell Tech and Agri-Tech campuses. The Graduate School is organized into fields of study that are independent of traditional college and department divisions. As such the facilities available are the same that are available within the colleges.

Law School


When the Law School opened in 1887, the school and its library were located on the 4th floor of Morrill Hall, one of the original University buildings, and law was an undergraduate program. The Law Library collection included approximately 4,000 volumes. The Law School and Law Library outgrew Morrill Hall after five years and moved to Boardman Hall in 1892. The Law Library has grown to 22,000 volumes. In 1932, the Law School and Law Library relocated to Myron Taylor Hall.

Today, the Law School and Law Library are housed in Myron Taylor Hall and the Jane Foster addition. The Law Library holds more than 700,000 volumes and volume equivalents.

The Charles Evans Hughes Law Residence Center (commonly known as Hughes Hall) provides student and career services support.

Nolan School of Hotel Administration 


Statler Hall: Statler Hall has been the home to the Nolan School of Hotel Administration since 1950 and is uniquely designed to meet the traditional and experiential learning needs of faculty and students. The building includes: the 700 seat Alice Statler Auditorium, state-of-the-art classrooms, 100 seat Binenkorb computer center which houses the Chartres Lodging capital markets trading room, food and beverage management labs, and our Marriott Student Learning Center which houses our Nestle hospitality library. Additionally, Statler Hall is home to the Baker Program in Real Estate, the Center for Real Estate Finance, the Center for Hospitality Research, and the Leland C. and Mary M. Pillsbury Institute of Hospitality Entrepreneurship.

The Nolan School of Hotel Administration’s Nestlé Library: The Nestlé Library resides within the Marriott Student Learning Center, which opened in August, 2012. As one of the finest libraries in the hospitality management field, the Nestlé Library is noted for its excellent collection, knowledgeable staff and service to alumni, industry practitioners, other hospitality schools and trade associations, as well as the students and faculty of the Nolan School of Hotel Administration. The library’s collection contains approximately 37,000 books and more than 500 journal, magazine, newsletter, and newspaper subscriptions. Materials on lodging, foodservice, travel and tourism, real estate, and general hospitality business topics comprise the core of the collection. 

Statler Hotel and J. Willard Marriott Executive Education Center: The Statler Hotel is a 153 room Four Diamond Hotel connected to Statler Hall. The hotel was designed to provide a distinctive lodging and executive education experience in the center of the Cornell campus, while simultaneously providing students of the Nolan School of Hotel Administration with real world industry and management experiences. During the academic year students have the opportunity to work in front line and supervisory positions under the guidance of seasoned hospitality professionals.

Learn more about the Nolan School of Hotel Administration’s facilities.

SC Johnson College of Business


From Breazzano, Sage, Statler and Warren halls on the Cornell University campus in Ithaca, New York to the bustling streets and the Cornell Tech campus in New York City, and from our finance MBA program in China to classrooms across the Americas, the SC Johnson College is transcending geographic—and figurative—boundaries. And through online executive education, lifelong learners can opt to complete certificate programs from anywhere in the world.

Learn more about the SC Johnson College of Business’ facilities.

College of Veterinary Medicine


One of only 30 veterinary colleges and schools in the United States, the College of Veterinary Medicine is located on the Cornell campus in Ithaca, New York. In the heart of the Finger Lakes region, an area of tremendous natural beauty, Ithaca provides a balanced atmosphere of city and country. The College’s central campus has seven main buildings, all part of the State University of New York (SUNY) system, on 15 acres with a total of 1.2 million square feet of space.

Learn more about the College of Veterinary Medicine’s facilities.

Cornell University Library


Cornell University Library stands at the center of intellectual life on campus. Expert librarians are available in person—and online 24/7—to help navigate our world-class collections and assist with papers, exam prep, and long-term projects. We’re a home away from home, with warm, inviting spaces for solo study and high-tech, flexible spaces for group work. Students and faculty agree that the Library is an indispensable partner in study, teaching, and research. Explore all of the libraries.

Student Unions and Dining Facilities


Want to plunge into campus activities, hang out, or grab a cup of coffee? Robert Purcell Community Center, Appel Commons, Willard Straight Hall, and Noyes Community Recreation Center are hubs of activity around campus, especially for students living in Cornell housing. These centers are great places to meet people, get a bite to eat, experience Cornell’s thriving social scene, find a place to study, or work out in a fitness center.

At the heart of the first-year experience is the Tatkon Center for New Students - an intellectual, cultural, and drop-in center on North Campus. The Tatkon Center offers programs and services to ease the transition to Cornell, encourage student-faculty interaction, and support and inspire students.

Willard Straight Hall Student Union, located in the heart of Central Campus, is considered to be the central spoke of Cornell’s wide-reaching campus activities. One of the first college unions in the country, the Straight supports the events and functions of the many units within the Office of the Dean of Students, including student activities, student support, and fraternity and sorority affairs. The Straight also contains the Cornell Cinema, two dining rooms and a café, a ticket office for campus events, an art gallery, a ceramics studio, a browsing library, and a computer lab.

Hasbrouck Community Center is a gathering spot and informational resource for our graduate and professional student residents, offering:

  • full-time staff support
  • programs and events for both adults and children, including regular pot luck dinners
  • residential service centers, where you can check your mail, ask questions, and get information
  • shared community spaces, where residents gather to study or socialize
  • support and resources for international residents, including English as a Second Language (ESL) classes twice a week
  • orientation programs to help new residents learn about Cornell, Ithaca, and life in the United States
  • the weekly “Panda Bears” gathering for parents and their young children

Big Red Barn Graduate and Professional Student Center

The Big Red Barn, an old carriage house turned student center, is located in the heart of campus and surrounded by lawns and gardens. A central place for eating and relaxing, the Big Red Barn hosts more than 200 events per year, including the ever popular T.G.I.F. (Tell Grads It’s Friday), Trivia Night, and Annual Year-End BBQ.

The Big Red Barn houses a café with a delicious breakfast and lunch menu open to the whole Cornell community for breakfast and lunch, Monday through Friday. Relax outdoors at our picnic tables, or sit inside by the fireplace in our comfortable lounge furniture.

Dining

Everything you need to know about where to eat on campus.