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Campus Commons is UNC's welcome center for future students, current students and alumni. The building houses the Office of Admissions, the Pie Café, a multipurpose auditorium, an art gallery, large open areas where students can hang out and study, and a 600-seat performance hall for UNC's renowned performing arts programs. Campus Commons also houses Bear Central, where students can take care of financial aid, registration and student billing needs all in one place.
University Center
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Want to join a club or activity? The University Center, or the UC, as students call it, is the place to go. It's centrally located on campus, and it's where you'll find the UNC Bookstore and Fan Shop, computer labs, Wells Fargo Bank, Student Activities, Career Services, and the Center for International Education. A variety of student activities and student services are also located within the UC. If you're hungry, you can stop by the UC Food Court, Einstein Bros. Bagels, Subway, Sushi With Gusto or the Munchy Mart.
Davis & Kohl Houses
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Two of our four cultural centers, the Native American Student Services (NASS) and Asian/Pacific American Student Services (A/PASS), are both located in the Kohl House. All of our cultural centers offer academic and social support for all students and provide them with a place to relax with friends, watch TV, study and cook their favorite foods. The Marcus Garvey Center for Black Cultural Education is located in the Davis House. This cultural center also provides personal and academic support, as well as opportunities for professional development. You can hang out in the lounge, study in the resource room or rent out the conference room. If you get a chance, you should stop by to see their amazing collection of art and artifacts. All of our cultural centers serve as a source of cultural education for the campus by hosting popular events, programs and celebrations throughout the year. In addition to our cultural centers, our Gender and Sexuality Resource Center is located in a campus-owned house near the University Center. The GSRC advocates and provides a sense of belonging for students with marginalized identities, as well as educating the wider campus community.
Snyder Hall
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Every floor in Snyder has spacious lounges overlooking the Snyder Green. Snyder is one of the six residence halls that are a part of the Central Coalition, which have several rooms especially designed for ADA accessibility. These residence halls offer traditional-style living, which includes community kitchens and bathrooms.
If you live on campus, you can experience living in a residential learning community that can provide additional academic support, faculty and staff interaction, and the chance to explore academic themes beyond the classroom. These communities are separated into various categories to best fit your interests and area of study.
Tobey-Kendel Hall
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Tobey-Kendel is where you'll find the dining hall for central campus and the offices of Housing and Residential Education and Dining Services. Students can sit and enjoy their meal in the marketplace atmosphere or grab a bite to go with the Gourmet to Go or Bear on the Run options at Tobey-Kendel Hall.
Ben Nighthorse Campbell
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The Ben Nighthorse Campbell Center is home to the University of Northern Colorado Cancer Rehabilitation Center, a frontrunner in exercise-based cancer rehab. At the center, students and healthcare professionals alike receive training in cancer rehabilitation and participate in research to better help people recover from cancer and treatments. More than 1000 cancer survivors have been served by the UNC Cancer Rehabilitation Center.
Presidents Row
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Presidents Row, named after four former university presidents, are residence halls that offer suite-style living. This community consists of Luj‡n, Bond, Dickeson and Brown Halls and houses over 170 students. The oldest silver maple tree in Weld County marks a favorite study spot just south of Presidents Row.
Arts Annex
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The Arts Annex serves the School of Art and Design, which is under the College of Performing and Visual Arts. Most of the classes in the Arts Annex involve 3D Art, including ceramics, sculpting, metalsmithing and jewelry. The Arts Annex serves as a great resource in addition to the main School of Art and Design housed in Guggenheim Hall.
Veteran Services
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Roudebush Cottage is designed to provide a sense of place for our veteran and military students. Students can use it as a lounge or study space, or go there for benefits processing and campus advocacy. UNC maintains a full-time Veteran Services Office for the convenience of veterans, military members, and their dependents. Veteran Services is designed to be a central office for veteran benefits and support services.
Guggenheim Hall
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Guggenheim Hall was built as a gift from the former U.S. Senator Simon Guggenheim. Many of UNC's Visual Arts classes are held in this building. While you're here, you can also visit the Mariani Gallery for a variety of artworks and exhibits.
Kepner Hall
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Kepner Hall is home to the Monfort College of Business, which has received national and international recognition for its programs. MCB students regularly win business ethics competitions, and many receive job offers before they graduate. The Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB International) awards accreditation to the top business schools worldwide, and MCB is among the elite schools accredited in both business administration and accounting. Kepner Hall hosts the million-dollar Technology Education Center, several computer labs, a finance trading room, an applied networking lab, a cyber cafe and smart classrooms.
Carter Hall
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Carter Hall, UNC's library until 1944, is now the University's administration building and the oldest building on campus. You can find the President's Office, Graduate School, University Provost, and several other offices within Carter Hall.
Skinner Music Library
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The Howard M. Skinner Music Library, named after a long-time dean of the College of Performing and Visual Arts, holds music scores, books, periodicals and recordings, plus additional computers for student use and an instruction lab. The Skinner Music Library specializes in support of the School of Music and Musical Theatre programs.
Gunter Hall
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Originally designed as UNC's athletic building in 1928, Gunter Hall now has classrooms and offices for the College of Natural and Health Sciences. The Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology Clinic is located in Gunter Hall, providing services to the community by graduate students under the supervision of certified faculty and staff. Our state-of-the-art nursing labs are also housed in Gunter.
Scott-Willcoxon Hall
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The Women's Resource Center and Stryker Institute for Leadership Development are located in Scott-Wilcoxon Hall. The center provides a welcoming environment and open forum for discussion of issues important to women, activist and leadership opportunities.
Ross Hall of Science
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Ross Hall is home to many Biology, Chemistry, Earth Sciences, Physics, Mathematical Sciences, English and History programs. Several of our state-of-the art multimedia classrooms and high-tech labs are also located here, in addition to a mathematics tutoring center and a writing center.
STEM at UNC
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UNC students in the STEM programs, even as undergraduates, get experience researching alongside professors and professionals in the field. Students have researched cancer treatment, studied meteorology using the National Science Foundation-funded Doppler on Wheels, partnered with NASA, and gone on to work in cyber defense, tech startups and more.
McKee Hall
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McKee Hall is home to the College of Education and Behavioral Sciences, as well as future psychologists, educational leaders and counselors. The Colorado Legislature has designated UNC the premier institution for teacher education. More than one in five of Colorado's Teacher of the Year Award winners are UNC alumni, so they've spent many hours in this hall.
James A. Michener Library
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Michener Library, named after famed Pulitzer Prize author and former UNC student and faculty member James A. Michener, contains more than 17 miles of shelves filled with books, periodicals, government publications, maps, and DVDs. Students have access to computers, latest online journals and digital collections. The library has quiet places to study and do research and a Coffee Corner that serves food and beverages. Local and national art is displayed in the Mari Michener Art Gallery. In addition to the library, the Michener building houses classrooms, Academic Support and Advising, Disability Support Services, Center for Honors, Scholars, and Leadership, and Center for Human Enrichment.
Candelaria Hall
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Candelaria Hall is home to the majority of programs within the College of Humanities and Social Sciences including Africana Studies, Anthropology, Criminal Justice, Economics, Geography, Hispanic Studies, Foreign Languages, and Sociology. A beautiful mural depicting the life of Martin Candelaria, the buildings namesake, decorates the main staircases.
Judy Farr Center
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The Judy Farr Center is home to the Division of Development and Alumni Relations as well as the UNC Foundation. Each year the Alumni Association adds more than 2,000 graduates to the Bear Network and currently serves more than 130,000 living alumni in Colorado and around the globe. Membership in the Association is free and affords alumni with a myriad of benefits and opportunities.
Cesar Chavez Cultural Center
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The César Chávez Cultural Center is located in the Patton House and offers students who identify with the Latino and Latina community support to ensure their academic and social success in college. The Center provides a computer lab, study room and resource room that provides space for conferences and holds several types of publications, videos, and scholarship and employment information.
Nottingham Field
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Nottingham Field is UNC's home football stadium and accommodates 8,500 spectators and fans. As a UNC student, you get into all home sporting events for free. Nottingham Field is also where you'll walk if you graduate in the spring.
Bank of Colorado Arena at Butler-Hancock Athletic Center
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Bank of Colorado Arena and Butler-Hancock Athletic Center house UNC's intercollegiate athletic offices, athletic training room, and a strength and conditioning center. Inside is an arena that holds 2,700 spectators for athletic and other other campus events. If you're a fan of disc golf, you might be interested to know that our public nine-hole course begins near Butler-Hancock.
Campus Recreation Center
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The Campus Recreation Center contains three multi-purpose gyms, two group fitness rooms, weight lifting and cardiovascular equipment, and two racquetball courts. You also get access to the 31-foot climbing wall, the suspended track and UNC's indoor swimming pool.
Gear Shop
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The Gear Shop is a place for students to check out outdoor gear and equipment free of charge. Available gear includes tents, other camping and backpacking supplies, snowshoes, snowboards, kayaks, cruiser and mountain bicycles, and more. Also located in the gear shop is UNC's Outdoor Pursuits Program. Outdoor Pursuits offers "college-priced" trips that cover costs that often include the equipment, any fees associated with admission to the destination, transportation, lodging and food. They also offer various workshops and outdoor education.
Turner Hall
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At 13 stories tall, Turner provides a place to call home for 330 students. Most residence halls have study areas, conference rooms, fully-equipped kitchens, laundry rooms and lounge areas. Turner Hall has single bedrooms within suites where students share a living room, vanity and bathroom.
Harrison Hall
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Harrison Hall is home to more than 500 UNC students. Harrison has suite-style rooms as well as lounges located on each floor that are great for studying or hanging out with friends. You can feel safe knowing that all residence hall exterior doors are locked and require a student ID card to swipe for entrance. Harrison Hall, as well as Lawrenson Hall, remains open during the Winter and Spring breaks.
Holmes Dining Hall
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Holmes Dining Hall serves as a dining room for the West Campus. At UNC, professional chefs prepare delicious meals every day. You can sit and enjoy a meal with a friend, or if you are in a hurry, use the options Gourmet to Go and Bear on the Run . Students who have special diets or food allergies can enjoy here meals prepared by our chefs with advice from registered dietitians.
Lawrenson Hall
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At 17 stories, Lawrenson Hall is the tallest building between Denver, Colorado and Cheyenne, Wyoming. Students have a fun residential experience living in the apartment-style environment of Lawrenson and enjoy the five patios with amazing views. Lawrenson Hall, as well as Harrison Hall, remains open during the Winter and Spring breaks.
North/South Hall
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These two halls are the newest residence halls on campus. Together they hold more than 700 students in suite-style living. There are a variety of social spaces, lounges and unique family rooms for each hall. Students also have the chance to interact with faculty outside the classroom with UNC's Faculty in Residence program, where faculty live in residence halls and sponsor both social and academic opportunities for students living on campus.
Downtown Greeley on 9th Street
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Downtown Greeley is full of fun places to hang and great places to enjoy yourself. Greeley has many restaurants and shops downtown including STUFT Burger, Batter Up Cakes, Rio and Moody's Grill. The downtown area has a way of creating a big city feel within a smaller area with all the various places to go. The Moxi Theatre is a unique venue for local bands and traveling artists. The Kress Cinema is always showing films in the genre of indie, historic, or classic. You have the ability to order food and have it delivered right to your seat during the movie as well. Lincoln Park offers a place to relax and enjoy our 320 days of sunshine that we receive around the year. Our shops downtown give you a boutique atmosphere with a lively environment. So, if you are looking for a place to have a relaxing, enjoyable, and unique time, Downtown Greeley is the spot to be.