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1 a B C D E 2 3 4 5 Legend Palouse Ridge DR. Valley Road Play Fields Courtyard Marriott VALLEY RD. WHEATLAND DR. COVE WY. Banyans Marriott Driving Residenc Range VALLEY RD. HILLSIDE DR. e Inn Palouse Ridge Sand Volleyball Courts Golf Club A B C D E McGee MCGEE WY. Park LEGEND Student Recreation STADIUM WAY Center E UPPER DR. Tour highlight Elevator LAKE ST. LOWER DR. 32 To Palouse, Hwy. 27 Outdoor Recreation Explore inside Parks and fields MYRTLE ST. LYBECKER RD. Rental Shop View outside Residence halls GAINES RD. 1 ORCHARD DR. Driving Tour Campus buildings Walking Tour Greek housing HARVEY RD. STADIUM WAY LOWER DR. Auxiliary Routes Tracks and courts RD. GAINES Tennis Courts Native ADA Routes Parking American NORTH FAIRWAY RD. Heritage ALPHA RD. Perham House Talmadge Anderson House Residence Life & ORCHARD DR. Beasley 33 CRESTON LN. CRESTON DUNCAN LN. DUNCAN Housing Services Casa Latina LN. ALFRED Coliseum LAKE ST. LAKE Bailey-Brayton Field Aux. Route C Heritage House South Fairway AAPI Streit Intramural Playfield STADIUM WAY Cultural FAIRWAY LN. House 31 Scott-Coman Northside FLAG LANE CALIFORNIA ST. Stearns SHAW ST. 2 Barnard COUGAR WAY MONROE ST. MONROE Regents Valley Crest A ST. B ST. C ST. D ST. Indoor Village Adams Lower Soccer Practice Mall Trans- McGregor portation Field PARKING Facility Teaching Services 29 30 Global Mooberry Greenhouses ROUNDTOP DR. 18 The Coug Track Ruby St. Scholars Hall FERDINAND’S LANE COLORADO ST. COUGAR WAY Park THATUNA RD. Veterinary & Biomedical Ferdinand’s 26b Hollingbery Research Bldg 34 LINDEN AVE. Bohler Fieldhouse 1 2 Duncan Smith Physical Athletic Davis 26a Cougar Biotechnology ELLIS WAY Dunn Chinook Gym Ed. Complex STUDENT PLAZA Life Sciences Food Sci./ OPAL ST. RUBY ST. Pride Human Nutr. 28 26c Statue Community 26 CROSS RD. Wilmer Martin Stadium Athletic Animal Sci. ANIMAL SCIENCES RD. 19 Kimbrough E Ticket Plant Growth Center Oce Clark MONROE ST. Music Animal Lab Alumni CAMPUS ST. 27 Arboretum 20 Van Rogers Field 25 3 Johnson 17 McCroskey OAK ST. 16 Doren ➔ Avery Football Hulbert ELLIS WAY Meats President’s Operations Vogel House Honors Stevens E Lab 3 GRAY LN. 21 Goat Barn Terrell Thompson Bryan Holland Bookstore Historic Arch Veterans Library Reaney Park 15a Library Cattle Feeding Memorial E WILSON RD. Lewis Cattle Feeding Lab- Sloan Compton Union Ensminger 35 Commodity Storage Lab Annex SPOKANE ST. 23 Alumni Ctr. USDA Grizzly Bear Jackson E 24 (CUB) Pavilion Bldgs. REANEY WY. 15 Goertzen Lighty Facility Swimming 15d Student WILSON RD. Albrook 15b 22 TERRELL MALL Elect/Mech Jordan French Services Grimes Way Plant Sci. Hyd. Lab VETERANS MALL Engr. Murrow College Wilson- 4 Schnitzer Admin. Playfield Morrill Museum Fine DR. LINCOLN Cooper Food Services to Pullman-Moscow Airport Thermal E Todd Short of Art Arts Publications Feed Plant Fluids 15c Addtn. Cattle Feeding 5 Lab Environmental LENTIL LN. Lab Museum Eastlick Smith GRIMES WAY To bears GRIMES WAY Health Services WSU Daggy Todd 7 Center PACCAR GRIMES WAY Arboretum Carpenter Johnson (CUE) L.J. Public Safety Twr. Smith Environmental Agronomy College Engr. Technology Seed House (Campus Police) Engr. LANE TROY Cyber Café Hall Brelsford WSU SPRING ST. Avenue Lab Math Grounds Shop Terre View RD. Visitor Center Steam Teach. Learning 8 LIBRARY MALL to Grizzly Bear Plant Res. Annex Fulmer McCluskey Facility Lab Dana Heald Abelson Troy Aux. Services Route A COLLEGE MALL Receiving TACOMA ST. Bustad Animal MAIN ST. 9 Disease Jewett Observatory and Delivery 4 Paradise Creek Owen Stimson Shock Biotech. Sci.& Webster Physics Creamery Phys. Sci. 6 Fac. Cleveland Eng. Vet. Farm Annex 14 Lib. Aux. McCoy Shops Route B COLUMBIA ST. IDAHO ST. Education Surplus Neill Wegner OTTRD Stores City Play Fields to downtown Pullman Addition 10 E Terre View RD. The Veterinary OBSERVATORY DR. DAIRY RD. Commons Spark Gannon Teaching Waller Hospital OLYMPIA AVE. WASHINGTON ST. Goldsworthy Washington ST. NEVADA STADIUM WAY Health and 11 Olympia Avenue Wellness 12 Hall Allen Fire Services Kruegel Rotunda Center Arts Tokyo 13 for Global Hitchcock Equine Track Seoul Kmac Flix Café Animal Health Elson S. Floyd & Market McEachern Cultural Center Hall North Stauber OLYMPIA AVE. Raptor Facility Vet. Shelters 5 N Zoe’s to Moscow, IdahoStephenson Columbia Village Coeehouse Complex Rogers WSU Orton Rogers-Orton East Children’s Playfield W E Sella’s Ctr. South Way Forest S WELCOME! We invite you to explore the rolling hills of the Palouse here on our beautiful 640-acre Pullman campus. While the self-guided tour does not encompass every campus landmark, the featured research facilities and community centers will allow you to experience the Cougar spirit firsthand! We encourage you to explore the buildings listed here, which are typically open 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. when classes are in session. You can create your own path, or follow what we have designed. Either way we hope that the information that we have included will introduce you to life at WSU! WALKING TOUR You can begin the walking tour wherever you would like, but if you’re open to suggestions we recommend beginning at stop number one (D-2/3), which is conveniently located near the recommended parking lot. Be sure to check posted signage for the parking regulations. For your convenience, the route loops around so that you will end in the same place that you began the tour. We’ve included three auxiliary routes if you have time to step off the main walking tour and see a few more highlights. DRIVING TOUR The driving tour begins at the Brelsford WSU Visitor Center. This route is meant to be flexible. If you decide to stop and explore, please be cognizant of parking signs and zones as many lots on campus require a parking permit at all times. 1. COUGAR PRIDE STATUE (D-2/3) 8. ABELSON HALL (B-4) 15. THOMPSON FLATS (B-3) This campus icon was donated by WSU alumni Abelson Hall is a bioscience treasure trove. Endearingly referred to as the “vintage” as a tribute to the live cougar mascot housed Inside are the cutting-edge Franceschi quadrant of campus, Thompson Flats is largely in its place from 1927-1978. It is a popular spot Microscopy and Imaging Center and a zoolog- where the university began as Washington for photos, especially on football game days ical museum with the largest public collection State College in 1890. The flats are the largest and graduation. Take your own picture and tag of birds and mammals in the Pacific Northwest. open area on campus, and the grass is host to it with #GoCougs or #FutureCoug. The rooftop greenhouses hold rare and exotic sledding daredevils in the winter and plants too. 2. RAWLINS RESEARCH & water-slide enthusiasts in the summer. • 15A. Thompson Hall: The oldest EDUCATION COMPLEX (D-3) 9. OWEN SCIENCE LIBRARY (B-4) building still standing on our campus, This interdisciplinary research complex is a cut- Named after the first woman to serve on the Thompson Hall was built in 1894 as the ting-edge research facility which encompasses WSU Board of Regents, Frances Penrose Owen, administration building. Today it houses a broad range of disciplines such as molecular the Owen Science Library was intentionally the College of Arts and Sciences offices biology, agriculture, and veterinary medicine. designed to make electronic resources more and the School of Languages, Cultures, These are the first of what will become six accessible. The library houses a map room, and Race. interconnected buildings. computer labs, and a creativity station. • 15B. Goertzen Hall: Named for notable 3. MARTIN STADIUM (D-3) 10. THE SPARK (B-4) alumna and news broadcaster Kathy The home field of Cougar football and one Opened in fall 2017, the Spark Academic Goertzen, this building provides class- of very few Pac-12 stadiums available for Innovation Hub is a state-of-the-art facility that rooms and student services for the intramural sports. As a true college town, the utilizes the most innovative technologies in Edward R. Murrow College of population of Pullman doubles on game day digital classrooms to enhance learning. This is Communication. when the stands fill with alumni, community the first building on campus to feature a 360- • 15C. Morrill Hall: WSU’s Morrill Hall members, and current students cheering on degree lecture room! honors Congressman Justin Smith the Cougs. Morrill, whose bills in 1862 and 1890 11. SOUTHSIDE (C-4/5) established the first land-grant colleges. 4. JORDAN SCHNITZER MUSEUM The most populous residential quadrant Today, you’ll notice the lower windows (C-3) OF ART of campus. are blacked out because they are home Completed in the spring of 2018, the Jordan • Residence halls: Gannon-Goldsworthy, to—yup, you guessed it—the human Schnitzer Museum of Art is designed as a Stephenson towers (East, North, and anatomy lab. The lab is one of only a beacon for the arts. Admission is free to the South), Rogers, Orton, Olympia, handful in the U.S. that offers public, so step inside the Crimson Cube and McEachern, and Stimson offer a undergrads the priceless experience of enjoy the museum’s permanent collection and multitude of living options. working with human cadavers. seasonal exhibits. Next door to the museum, • Dining: Southside Café is one of the • 15D. Voiland College of Engineering you will find the Fine Arts Building, where three campus dining halls. Next door, Flix and Architecture: This college is budding artists hone their craft alongside Café and Market is the late night option housed in six buildings across the west- acclaimed faculty and showcase their work to for students studying for their morning ern edge of campus that offer education the WSU community. finals. Grab a milkshake at and research in engineering, computer 1 a.m.
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