ABOUT A leading Ivy League institution Brown is a leading Ivy League institution with a distinctive undergraduate academic program, a world-class faculty, outstanding graduate and medical students, and a tradition of innovative and rigorous multidisciplinary study. A commitment to diversity and intellectual freedom has remained a hallmark of the since its establishment. UNIVERSITY CAMPUS MAP The s mission is to serve the community, the nation, and the world by educating and preparing students to discharge the offices of life with usefulness and reputation, through a partnership of students and teachers in a unified community known as a university-college. Founded in 1764, Brown was the third college in New England and the seventh in America. Established as Rhode Island in the town of Warren, Rhode Island, the moved to its present location on Providence s Hill in 1770. In 1804 the was renamed to honor a $5,000 donation from Providence merchant Nicholas Brown. Over the years the grew steadily, adding graduate courses in the 1880s, a women s college in 1889, a graduate school in 1927, and a medical education program in 1973 (now the Warren Alpert Medical School). The men s and women s undergraduate colleges merged in 1971.
VISITING Directions Construction projects in the city may require adjustments to the routes below. From the north, south, or west: From either I-95 South or I-95 North, take Exit 22A, Downtown, Memorial Boulevard. At the fifth traffic light, turn left onto. Cross the bridge and proceed up the hill following to the end. At the top of the hill, where intersects with Prospect, you will see Brown s Van Wickle. Turn left onto Prospect. At the next light, turn right onto Waterman. At the second light, turn right onto Brook. The visitor parking lot will be on your left immediately after turning onto Brook. In 2002 Brown launched a comprehensive Plan for Academic Enrichment, the s largest investment in teaching and scholarship in its 240-year history. Under the plan, Brown is increasing the size of its faculty, adding more undergraduate classes and research opportunities, improving support for grad uate and medical education, and investing in information tech nology and new academic space. The also instituted a need-blind undergraduate admission policy to ensure that all worthy applicants can enroll, regardless of ability to pay. Brown s main campus covers 146 acres, all of it within a 10-minute walk of its hub, the. The is situated on a historic residential hill overlooking downtown Providence, a city of some 175,000 people. From the east: Follow I-195 West until exit 2, South Main. Travel down South Main to the first light. Turn right onto. At the next stop sign, go straight up the hill. At the top of the hill, you will see Brown s. Turn left onto Prospect. At the next light, turn right onto Waterman. At the second light, turn right onto Brook. The visitor parking lot will be on your left immediately after turning onto Brook. Campus tours Led by undergraduate students, campus tours are popular introductions to Brown s campus. Tours begin at the Stephen Robert 62 Campus at 75 Waterman and last about an hour. During most of the year, tours depart Monday through Friday at 9, 11, 1, and 3 o clock. Note that tours may not be available on holidays and when classes are not in session. brown.edu/go/campustours
THE CAMPUS A MICROCOSM OF ARCHITECTURAL STYLES This is a partial listing of important campus buildings. Map coordinates appear after each building s name. () The original college building, completed in 1770, this brick structure houses the offices of Brown s senior administration. It served as a dormitory through much of the 19th century. A straightforward American version of the English Georgian style, was modeled on Nassau at Princeton. It is one of seven existing college buildings in the United States that predate the Revolution. In 1939 it underwent an extensive renovation and restoration, at which time it was discovered that only portions of the cupola and two large beams on the fourth floor were the original woodwork of the 1770s. The 300-pound bell within the cupola is the original. The Perry and Marty Granoff for the Creative Arts The Perry and Marty Granoff for the Creative Arts () The Perry and Marty Granoff for the Creative Arts at Brown is a 38,815 square-foot, threestory, interdisciplinary arts center at the heart of the Hill campus, designed by Diller Scofidio + Renfro. udewicz cal arpe use The Walk (North) Urban Environmental The Walk (South) Granoff Brown Office Bookstore 169 Hemisphere Angell Churchill TUNNEL PORTAL Lippitt H /Chapel () Standing between Hope and on the, was built in 1834 as a memorial to Brown s first president, James. Constructed of stone and stucco, it is an adaptation of 6th-century B.C. Greek Doric temples in Sicily and Paestum. The building houses the Uni versity s 200-seat chapel on the top floor and a satellite gallery of Brown s Haffenreffer Museum of Anthropology on the lower level. THAYER E Prospect Blistein List Art John Hay Rockefeller Carrie Hope /Chapel Slater Theater Faunce Stephen Robert '62 Campus (Main ) Salomon Sayles Wilson John Carter L Carrie Hope /Chapel Slater Rhode Island Stephen Ro G (Main G Chapel
Smith-Buonanno () John Hay () The former Sayles Gymnasium on the Pembroke Campus received new life as the renovated and rechristened SmithBuonanno, opened in 2000. The building contains nine classrooms with room for about 400 students. Named for a Brown alumnus who was Abraham Lincoln s personal secretary and who later became Secretary of State, the John Hay was completed in 1910 as the s John Hay main library. Today it houses most of the s rare books, manuscripts, special collections, and archives. use John Hay /Chapel Pembroke L John Carter Brown Rhode Island Alumnae Emer s y Wilbour Mo H Sayles Wilson kefeller brary Champ Pembroke Campus Smith-Buonanno Salomon Slater Miller Metcalf Smith-Buonanno (Main ) 21 Bow Stre Andrews Watson for Information Technology Marston John Carter Brown () The JCB was designed in 1904 by the firm of Shepley, Rutan, and Coolidge, and constructed of Indiana limestone. The library was built to house the priceless collection of books and maps dealing with the New World from its discovery through the 18th century, begun by John Carter Brown (1797 1874) and donated to the by his son, John Nicholas Brown. The 15,000-squarefoot Caspersen wing was added in 1990. John Carter Brown Barus llan l Watson for Information Technology (CIT) () Minden P Visitor Pa P Eng Wa 29 341 Mannin Brook Walk 333 Brook The Thomas J. Watson Sr. for Information Technology, completed in 1988, is the home of Brown s computer science department and a variety of classrooms and computing clusters for student use. 180 Watson for Information Technology (CIT)
() The, which face down Hill toward Providence, were dedicated in 1901 after a bequest from Augustus Stout, class of 1876. The middle gates are opened only twice a year, swinging inward at Opening Convocation to admit new students and outward at Commencement to send off graduates. Prospect Blistein List Art John Hay Carrie Carrie () Carrie, which stands on the northwest corner of the front green at Waterman and Prospect streets, is a memorial to the granddaughter of Nicholas Brown, for whom the is named. The tower was erected in 1904 by Carrie Brown s husband, Paul Bajnotti, of Turin, Italy. Ninety-two feet tall, the tower is inscribed Love is strong as death. Waterman t Faunce Arch Faunce Hope Stephen Robert '62 Cam /Chapel (Main ) Carrie T Say Sidney E. Frank Sidney E. Frank () The five-story Life Sciences, opened in 2006, is a $95 million research center housing more than 60 laboratories and state-of-the-art equipment. At 168,800 square feet, the building is Brown's third largest after the Rockefeller and Barus and Holley. Bio-Medical Sidney E. Frank Grimshaw- Gudewicz Medical oratories for Molecular Medicine (E1) Brown 's oratories for Molecular Medicine opened in August 2004. Once a watchband manufacturing building, the 105,000- square-foot space at 70 Sidney E. Frank Brown Office Ship was retrofitted to house 150 researchers, laboratory and administrative staff, and student research assistants. SHIP 70 Ship CHESTNUT ELBOW oratories for Molecular Medicine 233 Richmond 222 Richmond 222 Richmo Parki Garage E RICHMOND STREE
Sayles () Corliss-Brackett () Sayles, site of classes, concerts, parties, and lectures, is a memorial to William Clark Sayles, class of 1878, who died in his sophomore year. ComSayles pleted in 1881, the building has a granite exterior inscribed Filio Pater Posuit and is trimmed in brownstone. At the east end of the high-ceilinged, wooden interior is a stage, backed by stained-glass windows; on the walls are pictures of past Brown presidents and other luminaries from the s history. Sayles houses the largest Hutchings Votey pipe organ in the world. Built in the late 1800s and modeled after an Italian villa, the Corliss-Brackett home to the undergraduate Admission Office was Corliss-Brackett built as a private home between 1875 and 1882 by George Corliss, an inventor and owner of the country s largest steam-engine factory. It was the first radiantly heated house controlled by a thermostat, and it boasted one of the country s first elevators, concealed insect screens in the windows, and discreet bathrooms at the ends of corridors one of which was accessed by means of a swinging bookshelf. The house was renovated for use by the Admission Office in 1973. Stephen Robert 62 Campus (&4) Carrie Hope 1/2 Brown Mencoff Robinson Robinson 70 Waterman Partridge J. Walter Wilson Walter Norwood Watson Institute for International Studies () Opened in early 2002, this 56,000-square-foot building houses the Thomas J. Watson Jr. Institute for International Studies. It was designed by internationally renowned architect Rafael Viñoly and includes 70 research offices, three classrooms, a television production studio, and state-ofthe-art video-conferencing facilities. Thayer atriots Chapin Court Stuart Faunce Arch Theater Faunce Stephen Robert '62 Campus /Chapel ALLEY 68 Environmental The Walk (South Salomon (Main ) Harkness L G ad ate Sayles Wilson Watson Institute Watson Institute for International Studies D THAY Waterman St t FONES 70 Brown CorlissBrackett 8 Fones Alley Dedicated in 1904, Faunce originally was named Rockefeller and extended only as far as Faunce Arch. The building was the gift of Brown parent John D. Rockefeller, who donated it for the social and religious use of the. Designed by McKim, Mead, and White, its most disstephen Robert 62 Campus tinctive feature is its great arched window. In the 1920s the building was expanded, thanks to a gift from John D. Rockefeller Jr., Brown class of 1897. Renovated in 2009 as Stephen Robert 62 Campus. Starr Plaza
Robinson () Built as the s library in 1878, this is a splendid Venetian-Gothic structure that includes a central rotunda with an octag onal cupola. The upper floors have balconies circling the rotunda. Robinson Whimsical carvings by James C. Brierly grace the exterior of Danvers pressed brick trimmed with sandstone. Renovated in 1989 90, the building houses the Department of Economics. Slater Slater () Built in 1879 as the s second dormitory, Slater is a Ruskinian Gothic design by Stone and Carpenter. It remains one of Brown s most popular residence halls. Horatio Nelson Slater, a longtime supporter, pledged $25,000 for the building if Ezekiel Gilman Robinson would assume Brown s presidency. (He did, in 1872.) rospect hn ay ary er Corliss Brackett 70 Brow 8 Fones Alley 68 1 Brown S Wilbour FONES ALLEY Mencoff Robinson 70 Waterman t Carrie Hope /Chapel Slater Rhode Island Partr Ho Stephen Colleg (Main Brown Providence, RI 02912 401 863-1000 www.brown.edu Produced by Brown Graphic Services
ACADEMIC Africana Studies Churchill Alpert Medical School 222 Richmond Alumnae American Studies Norwood Ancient Studies Annmary Brown Memorial Annenberg Institute of School Reform Hoppin Annmary Brown Memorial Ancient, Medieval, Renaissance and Early Modern Studies Anthropology Giddings Applied Mathematics 182 George Arnold Barus and Holley Engineering Physics Barus Education Department Bell Gallery List Art Bio Medical Blistein Brown Institute for Brain Sciences 2 Stimson Avenue Chemistry Geo-Chem Churchill Africana Studies Rites and Reason Theatre Classics Macfarlane Cognitive, Linguistic and Psychological Sciences Metcalf Chemistry Metcalf Research Cogut for the Humanities Pembroke Commerce, Organizations, and Entrepreneurship Sayles Community Health 121 South Main Comparitive Literature Marston Computation and E2 B5 D2 Visualization, for 94 Waterman Computer Science Watson for Information Technology Dyer for the Study of Race and Ethnicity in America East Asian Studies 333 Brook Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Walter Economics Robinson Education Barus Education Alliance 4 Richmond Square Egyptology Wilbour Engineering Barus and Holley English 70 Brown Environmental Change Initiative MacMillan Environmental Studies Urban Environmental Not shown Faunce Stephen Robert 62 Campus Information and Welcome Student Activities Office Feinstein Anthropology French Studies Rochambeau Fulton Rehearsal Geo-Chem Chemistry Geological Sciences Geological Sciences Geo-Chem Genomics and Proteomics, for 70 Ship Gerard Philosophy German Studies 190 Hope Gerontology and Health Care Research, for 121 South Main Giddings Anthropology E1 D2 Granoff for the Creative Arts Creative Arts Council Grant Recital Grimshaw-Gudewicz Medical Haffenreffer Museum of Anthropology Hispanic Studies Rochambeau History Peter B. History of Art and Architecture List Art Hoppin Annenberg Institute of School Reform Hunter Psychology Institute for Molecular and Nanoscale Innovation Medical Research International Studies Watson Institute Italian Studies 190 Hope John Nicholas Brown Nightingale-Brown Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World Rhode Island Judaic Studies 163 George Kassar Mathematics oratories for Molecular Medicine 70 Ship Ladd Observatory Leadership Alliance Brown Office Leeds Theatre Lyman Theatre Arts and Performance Studies Lincoln Geological Sciences Lippitt Sheridan for Teaching and Learning List Art Bell Gallery History of Art and Architecture Visual Art E1 Not Shown Literary Arts Program 68 1/2 Brown Lyman Leeds Theatre Theatre Arts and Performance Studies Macfarlane Classics MacMillan Environmental Change Initiative Chapel Haffenreffer Museum of Anthropology Marston Comparitive Literature Slavic Languages Mathematics Kassar Maxcy Sociology Spatial Structures in Social Sciences Medical Research Institute for Molecular and Nanoscale Innovation Medieval Studies Program Annmary Brown Memorial Meiklejohn Portuguese and Brazilian Studies Mencoff Population Studies and Training Metcalf Chemistry Cognitive, Linguistic and Psychological Sciences Metcalf Research Cognitive, Linguistic and Psychological Sciences Modern Culture and Media 155 George Molecular Biology, Cell Biology and Biochemistry Sidney E. Frank Molecular Microbiology and Immunology Bio Medical Molecular Pharmacology, Physiology and Biotechnology 70 Ship Morrison-Gerard Chamber Studio Orwig E1 Neuroscience Sidney E. Frank
ACADEMIC continued Salomon for Teaching Wilson Faunce Nightingale-Brown John Nicholas Brown Norwood American Studies Orwig Pathology and Medicine 70 Ship Pembroke for Training and Research on Women Pembroke Peter B. History Philosophy Gerard Physics Barus and Holley Plant Environmental E1 Sayles Commerce, Organizations, and Entrepreneurship Sharpe History Sheridan for Teaching and Learning Lippitt Shirley Miller Religious Studies Sidney E. Frank Slavic Languages Marston Smith-Buonanno Sociology Maxcy Spatial Structures in the Social Sciences Maxcy 67 George Taubman for Public Policy and American Institutions 68 1/2 Brown Literary Arts Program 70 Brown English 70 Ship E1 oratories for Molecular Medicine 70 Waterman Economics 121 South Main D2 Community Health Institute for Computational & Experimental Research in Mathematics Public Health 131 Waterman Education 133 Waterman Education Advancement Office 110 Elm Andrews Health Services Brown Bookstore Brown Office Brown/Fox Point Early Childhood Education Brown Card Office Brown / RISD Hillel Brown Office Administrative Offices Brown Bookstore Copy Career LAB Hemisphere Chaplains and Religious Life F1 Political Science Prospect Population Studies and Training Mencoff Political Theory Project 8 Fones Alley Portuguese and Brazilian Studies Meiklejohn Prince Engineering Engineering Prospect Political Science Public Health 121 South Main Race and Ethnicity in America, for Study of Dyer Religious Studies Shirley Miller Renaissance and Early Modern Studies Program Annmary Brown Memorial D2 Rhode Island Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World Rites and Reason Theatre Churchill Robinson Economics Rochambeau French and Hispanic Studies Steinert Stephen Robert 62 Campus Faunce Information and Welcome Student Activities Office Stuart Theatre Faunce Taubman for Public Policy and American Institutions 67 George T.F. Theatre Arts and Performance Studies Lyman Urban Environmental Environmental Studies Urban Studies Program 29 Visual Art List Art Walter Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Watson for Information Technology Computer Science Watson Institute International Studies Wilbour Egyptology and Ancient Western Asia D6 135 Thayer Modern Culture and Media 137 Waterman Anthropology 155 George Modern Culture and Media 163 George Judaic Studies 180 George for Computation and Visualization 182 George Applied Mathematics 190 Hope German and Italian Studies 195 Angell for Language Studies 222 Richmond E2 Alpert Medical School 333 Brook East Asian Studies 341 Brook East Asian Studies ADMINISTRATIVE Administrative Offices Brown Office Admission Office Corliss-Brackett Admission Office Information and Welcome Computing and Information Services F3 3 Davol Square Continuing Education 200 Dyer Corliss-Brackett Admission Office Dean of the Dean of the Faculty Facilities Management 295 Lloyd Avenue Financial Aid Office Gardner Saunders Inn General Counsel Benoni-Cooke Graduate E Res Life Graduate School Horace Mann Health Services Andrews Hemisphere Career LAB Graphic Services Horace Mann Graduate School International Programs, Office of E2 A6 D2
ADMINISTRATIVE continued International Student and Scholar Services Brown Card Office Financial Aid Office Registrar s Office Student Employment Office Transportation Office Mail Services Mail Services Maddock Alumni Nicholson Partridge Third World Pembroke house Pembroke Cogut for the Humanities Pembroke for Teaching and Research on Women President s President, Office of the Provost, Office of the Psychological Services Public Safety 75 Charlesfield Registrar s Office Research Protection Office 2 Stimson Avenue Residential Life Wayland RI for Innovation and Entrepreneurship 1 Davol Square Sarah Doyle Women s 26 Benevolent Saunders Inn at Brown Gardner Senior Administration Student Life, Office of 20 Benevolent Swearer for Public Service 25 George Third World Partridge B5 B5 F3 Transportation Office Senior Administration Mail Services Vice President for Research, Office of the Horace Mann Wayland Residential Life WBRU Radio Station 88 Benevolent 3 Davol Square F3 Computing and Information Services CIS Administration 5 Benevolent 20 Benevolent Office of Student Life 25 George Swearer for Public Service 26 Benevolent Sarah Doyle Women s 88 Benevolent WBRU Radio Station 110 Elm F1 Advancement Office 169 Angell Computing and Information Services CIS Academic Services 295 Lloyd Avenue A6 Facilities Management ATHLETICS Berylson s Brown Stadium David J. Zucconi 55 Varsity Strength & Conditioning Erickson Athletic Complex Katherine Moran Coleman Aquatics Marston Boathouse Marvel Meehan Auditorium Meister-Kavan Nelson Fitness Olney-Margolies Athletic A6 Not Shown Not Shown Not Shown Pizzitola Sports Softball Stevenson Terrence Murray Stadium Varsity Tennis Courts DINING Blue Room Cafe Faunce Campus Market Faunce Faculty Club Friedman Cafe Sciences Gate, The Alumnae Ivy Room, The Sharpe Refectory Josiah s Dining Vartan Gregorian Quad A Nelson Fitness Sharpe Refectory Verney-Woolley Fitness B6 A6 A6 B6 RESIDENCE HALLS Andrews Archibald Barbour Bronson Buxton Caswell Champlin Chapin Diman Emery Everett Goddard Graduate A, B, C, D Harkness Hegeman Hope Jameson King Littlefield Machado Marcy Mead Metcalf Miller Minden A4 Morriss New Pembroke A4 1, 2, 3, 4 Olney Perkins Poland Sears Slater Vartan Gregorian Quad A, B Wayland West Woolley Young Orchard 2, 4, 10 111 Brown 219 Bowen A4 LANDMARKS Carrie Faunce Arch Campus Hughes Court Keeney Quad Lincoln Walk Patriot s Court Pembroke Campus Pembroke Soldier s Arch Starr Plaza Walk, The Wayland Arch Wriston Quad Ittleson Quad LIBRARIES Annmary Brown Memorial John Carter Brown John Hay Orwig Rockefeller Sciences B5 Partial list, effective February 2012, subject to change For information regarding accessibility and parking, please refer to the campus accessibility maps available through the Department of Facilities Management Web site, or call SEAS at (401) 863-9588.
PECK T ST ET RAMP B 295 Lloyd EET COOKE STRE COOKE GOVERNOR 1 2 3 4 5 6 JENCKES BARNES Brown Stadium 112 Sessions St. (Left on Elmgrove Ave. proceed to Sessions St.) Corner Football THAYER A STAR KEENE Ladd Observatory 210 Doyle Ave. (Hope St. and Doyle Ave.) LLOYD AVENUE Pizzitola Gymnasium Central Heat Plant Stevenson Berylson Family s A ARLINGTON AVENUE B C D T GASPEE PARK ROW W ONASQUATUCKETT EMORIAL XCHANGE TER ST EXCHANGE STILLMAN BLVD UNION MIDDLE WESTMINSTER MOSHASSUCK CT RIVER PARK CANAL SMITH ROW STEEPLE EXCHANGE KENNEDY PLAZA KENNEDY PLAZA DORRANCE MOSHASSUCK CANAL RIVER CHURCH HOWLAND ELIZABETH DOWNTOWN CANDY BENEFIT NORTH COURT SOUTH COURT MEETING GERRY GANGWAY POST OFFICE CT PECK ORANGE THOMAS First Baptist Church WATERMAN NORTH MAIN CRAWFORD HAY PRATT WHEATON ST BENEFIT COLLEGE CONGDON WA S. WATER TERM RMAN 121 South Main LLOYD LANE BOWEN DEFOE PLACE PROSPECT ANGELL LLOYD Rochambeau CUSHING HOPKINS Benoni-Cooke MEETING Macfarlane PACKET Gerard BENEFIT GEORGE Machado First Church of Christ Scientist PROSPECT 111 Brown West Metcalf Andrews Smith-Buonanno Pembroke Bio-Medical Miller Pembroke Campus Alumnae Sidney E. Frank 219 Bowen 3 2 New 4 Pembroke Champlin Dorms 1 Morriss Emery Verney-Wooley Dining Wooley Sidney E. Frank Pembroke house Meehan Auditorium Pembroke 2 Stimson Avenue Meister-Kavan Central Congregational Church BENEVOLENT PLANET AVENUE OLIVE FONES MAGEE ALLEY CHARLESFIELD POWER Olney- Margolies Athletic Grimshaw- Gudewicz Medical Brown Office The Granoff Peter B. Sharpe Walk Bookstore (North) Brown Hillel 195 169 Angell Hemisphere Angell Urban Churchill 382 Environmental Brook Corliss- Brackett The 70 Brown Walk 8 Fones J. Walter (South) Alley Wilson Lippitt 190 68 1/2 Mencoff Brown 94 131 133 Hope Walter Partridge Norwood Waterman Waterman Minden Robinson 70 137 Waterman Plant Watson Waterman Environmental for P Visitor Parking t Faunce Arch Stuart Hunter Arnold Sciences Information Theater Faunce Psychology Prospect Carrie Blistein Hope Medical Metcalf Technology Prince Stephen Robert '62 Campus Research Chemistry Engineering Marston Metcalf Research Walkway List Salomon Lyman Barus and Holley Art John Hay /Chapel Soldier's 29 37 341 Arch Brook Lincoln Barus Walk Walk (Lower ) Sayles Caswell 333 (Main ) Brook Lincoln MacMillan 37 180 182 Cooke Maxcy Wilson Hegeman Geo-Chem George George Slater Rockefeller Littlefield St. Stephen's John Carter Church Gardner Rhode Island Brown Meiklejohn 155 163 Wilbour George George Sears Kassar Shirley Nicholson Maddock 88 25 Horace Miller Alumni Sharpe Wayland Benevolent George Mann 67 Refectory Hughes Court George 135 Morrison-Gerard Wayland Thayer Chamber Grant Recital Arch Wriston King Studios Fulton Rehearsal Faculty Quad Club 20 26 Benevolent Marcy Brown Fox Point Olney Buxton Early Childhood Orwig Education 5 Diman Chapin Patriots T. F. Benevolent Poland Archibald Starr First Unitarian Court Watson Mead Plaza Church Annmary Institute Brown Public Safety Keeney Quad Memorial Goddard Young Orchard Avenue Dorms 4 10 Andrews Harkness 2 Jameson Everett Bronson Barbour A Feinstein Graduate D Perkins B Giddings Vartan Gregorian Steinert Dyer E Quad Nightingale- Brown President's WILLIAMS TUNNEL PORTAL BROOME LANE A THAYER STR BROOK HOPE BOWEN CUSHING EUCLID TREET FONES ALLEY BROOK STREE MEETING COLLEGE HILL C THAYER B Power Parking Garage ANGELL FONES ALLEY WATERMAN BROOK GEORGE The Ittleson Quadrangle BENEVOLENT Erickson Athletic Complex CHARLESFIELD David J. Zucconi 55 Varsity Strength & Neilson Fitness Conditioning Katherine Moran Coleman Aquatics WILLIAMS POWER STIMSON AVENUE STREE ET HOPE HOPE DIMAN PLACE EAST ST Men's Practice WILLIAMS ANGELL WATERMAN YOUNG ORCHARD POWER MANNING GEORGE BENEVOLENT Terrence Murray Baseball Stadium Varsity Softball Courts AVENUE GOVERNOR Women's Practice IVES IVES STR B C D DYER BENEFIT EDDY STR JOHN DAV REET PROVIDENCE RIVER VE GARNET 200 Dyer DOUBLOON Hoppin JOHN ARNOLD EAST TRANSIT STRE E T RICHMOND PAGE FREINDSHIP 60 Clifford CLIFFORD RI 1A JAMES ARNOLD TRANSIT FOX POINT SHELDON TRANSIT Marston Boathouse 254-260 India St. (Left on Wickenden St. follow signs for India Point Park) GOULDING E NUT 196 Richmond Jewelry District (Right on Wickenden St. proceed over Point St. Bridge) WICKENDEN ANN PINE ARMSTRONG AVENUE F CLIFFORD CLAVERICK BASSETT IMPERIAL PL SHIP 222 Richmond 70 Ship CHESTNUT ELBOW 233 Richmond ELM SOUTH EDDY 222 Richmond Parking Garage 339 Eddy 349 Eddy 43 Elm RICHMOND JEWELRY DISTRICT 3 Davo Square l 1 Davol Square To Main Campus POINT BRIDGE POINT SOUTH WATER SOUTH MAIN TOCKWOTTON AIVES WAY BENEFIT INDIA GEORGE M COHAN BLVD F HOPPIN 110 Elm PARSON ONAGE POINT 10 Davol Square EDDY 0' 200' 400' HOSPITAL 1 2 3 4 5 6