University of Georgia Self-Guided Campus Tour 320 E. Clayton St. LA E C YTO The Arch T N S 110 E. Clayton St. ST OAD New College Candler LACSI Baldwin LeConte Park R D ST TY Joe Brown Correll Hall Hull Street Deck Psychology Center Teaching and Learning Reed Re V R D D Geology Lab F IE L D Chemistry Annex Physics Oglethorpe House l oks B ro E AV E Campus Tour Route Legend Driving tour Walking tour Visitor Parking H O C Tucker EE Performing Arts Center Deck Performing Arts N S T Hugh Hodgson School of Music Georgia Museum of Art Lamar Dodd School of Art VE R RD Locomotive Diagnostic Center N S T RI Wildlife Health Parking Services Joe Frank Harris Commons CAR LTO East Campus Village East Campus Deck Ramsey Student Center RD DG GR Animal Health Research Center Vet Med Diagnostic Lab Family & Graduate Housing University Village SO UTHV EAST CAMP US LE T Aderhold A G R IC U L T U R E D R IL R Printing Veterinary Medicine Driftmier Engineering Center M ST US Forest Service BioResources Omega Tau Sigma Vet. Frat O Ceramics CAES Activity Center University Health Center Rooker Hall Vandiver Hall CO Intramural Fields LL EG E S T 1516 B Rhodes Animal Science Center C A Visitors Center (Four Towers) IE W D R Family & Graduate Housing University Village McWhorter George D. Hall Busbee Hall AT IO N RD P 1 0 DR OKS BRO DW R Henry Lindsey Hopkins Indoor Tennis Feild Tennis Stadium Stadium EA N Visitors Center R VE D Coverdell Center Davison Life Sciences Environmental Health Sciences Miller Plant Sciences Alpha Epsilon Pi RI T T Alpha Psi DW S Coliseum Training Facility Carlton Street Deck Dan Magill Tennis Complex Science Learning Center Physical Plant Grounds E N S Foley Baseball Stadium Pharmacy South Ecology NE O E D Kappa Sigma EITS/Statistics /Natural History Hardman GRE EN ST R. C. Wilson Pharmacy Forestry Resources O LT R OR Dance Pi Kappa Alpha Greek Park WE ST R C RF Rankin M. Smith Student Athlete S TAcademic Center ST Tau Epsilon Phi Phi Delta Theta Food Science RD A ST E E TH Stegeman Coliseum Barrow Boyd Grad Studies R C H IN Butts-Mehre Building RU Snelling Dining Commons McPhaul Child Development IT P Vince Dooley Athletic Complex LE Marine Science RI VE R Sigma R D Nu Poultry Science M al Hoke Smith Annex Science Library SOU South Deck Georgia Center For Continuing Coop Ext Service Education /Hoke Smith Spec Towns Track K S DR Auxiliary Services SM L Sigma Delta Tau UM Soule Mary Lyndon Treanor House Woodruff Field OO Myers JW Fanning Building ST Speirs Rutherford Conner BR Dawson Alpha Chi Omega N DW T CEDAR S Office of Service-Learning Biological Sciences Lumpkin House Oglethorpe Dining Commons Cobb House ST Chemistry VE T H S N SA Church FO RI CL O RC V Clark Howell Hill R H U R Legion Pool R Boggs I PK Pla Sanford Stadium T S T EY S CHU E Geography Geology Public Service & Outreach ed za A West Campus Deck Office of International Education Payne Milledge E F IN L Russell ST Memorial Hall PUS RD Georg Bolton ia Qu ad Dining Mell Commons Lipscomb Tate Center Deck Tate Student Center Creswell Brumby PER HOO UGA Bookstore AM EAST C Miller Learning Center ST Social Work B A L D W IN S T Military Fine Arts Journalism ER BAXT Jackson Street Cemetery Main Library Dean Rusk Sanford LL HU Learning Ally Morris Brooks ST DE Founders Memorial Garden R S HE Russell Special Collections Building Peabody Hirsch Hall Staff Training & Development Jackson Street Building MA S Caldwell Bishop T N S T LL S Lustrat Waddel Law School Denmark Government Relations Old College Law Library THO ST North Deck Administration KSO AY WR Human Resources JA C Hosch Law Library Annex Gilbert Wray-Nicholson House (Alumni Association) WAD Terrell Chapel DR Moore Chicopee Complex Hodgson Oil Business Services Building Annex Thomas Street UGA Police Tanner Art Complex Phi Kappa Demosthenian TY Meigs ST HULL Drawing & Painting Interior Studios Design Studios Holmes/Hunter Academic D ST Business University Services Architects ® ER N H BR Environmental Design Studios A E B RO AMS ST Downtown Athens N WILLI ® East Village Deck ® ® University of Georgia V isitors Center Campus Tour T he University of Georgia SelfGuided Campus Tour is a synopsis of the daily student-led campus tour offered by the UGA Visitors Center. The self-guided tour is divided into two parts: a detailed walking tour of historic North Campus (pages 3-9) and brief overviews of the highlights of West, South, and East Campuses (pages 10-12). T he daily student-led campus tour begins with a 15-minute driving tour through East Campus, South Campus, and West Campus before stopping at the historic UGA Arch on Broad Street in downtown Athens. The tour then begins a 45-minute walk through North Campus and into the heart of campus, including a stop inside the Zell B. Miller Learning Center and the Tate Student Center. Upon reaching the Tate Student Center Plaza, the tour resumes with a 15-minute drive through South Campus and back into East Campus before ending back at the Visitors Center. T he self-guided walking tour begins at the Arch on Broad Street in downtown Athens and follows the path of the student-led tour. Following are driving directions from the Visitors Center to the North Campus Parking Deck and the Arch. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Turn right out of the Visitors Center parking lot onto College Station Rd. Head west and turn right onto East Campus Rd at the first traffic light. Travel north on East Campus Rd for 1.3 miles. Turn left onto Baldwin St at the fourth traffic light. Turn right onto South Jackson St at the first traffic light. Travel north on Jackson St for 0.2 miles. Turn right into the North Campus Parking Deck. Once you have parked, exit the North Campus Parking Deck and continue walking north on Jackson St toward Broad St. Turn left at the traffic light at Broad St. Continue to the next traffic light at College Ave. The Arch will be on your left. We hope your enjoy your tour. 2 ® University of Georgia North Campus Walking Tour Downtown Athens Start at the Arch N D ST 1 Holmes/Hunter Academic R Y D ERT N H A BRO Phi Kappa Demosthenian Terrell New College Old College Law Library LL LeConte R D ST TY HU 5 ST R S HE Main Library Jackson Street Cemetery MA S Dean Rusk 4 Park T N S Brooks THO Peabody Hirsch Hall Sanford Joe Brown 3 KSO Denmark Lustrat Waddel Law School Caldwell Founders Memorial Garden Administration JA C W ST RAY Hosch Law Library Annex North Deck T ST Candler Gilbert 2 AMS S HULL Moore Chapel College WILLI Meigs Military LU M PKIN Fine Arts PER HOO 7 ST Memorial Hall PUS RD UGA Bookstore Geor gia Q uad Tate Student Center D D R Sanford Stadium R Tate Center Deck Center Teaching and Learning Journalism 6 Miller Learning Center Psychology AM EAST C ST B A L D W IN S T S AN FO FIELD 3 ST Visitor Parking The Arch Erected in 1858, the Arch is modeled after the great seal of Georgia. The pillars stand for “Wisdom, Justice, and Moderation,” which is also the Georgia state motto. The University of Georgia was chartered in 1785 and was the first state-chartered institution of higher education in America. However, classes did not begin on campus until 1801. Holmes-Hunter Academic Building STOP Originally, this building was two separate buildings: the Ivy building, which contained classrooms, and the Library. At the turn of the 20th century, the buildings were joined. Today, the building houses offices for Student Financial Aid, the Registrar, Institutional Diversity, and others. In January 2001, the building was renamed the Holmes-Hunter Academic Building in honor of Hamilton Holmes and Charlayne Hunter-Gault, the first African-American students to enroll at the University of Georgia. 1 Demosthenian Hall / Phi Kappa Hall The homes of UGA’s two literary and debate societies, these buildings remain very much the same as they did during the antebellum period. During the Civil War, Union troops occupied Phi Kappa Hall. Chapel Dedicated in 1832, the Chapel served as the site where students and faculty attended church services each week. Today, assemblies, concerts and lectures are held here. A large framed oil painting of “The Interior of Saint Peter’s in Rome” is housed inside. A bell tower originally crowned the roof, but the bell was later placed at the top of a wooden tower at the back of the Chapel. Now the bell is rung only to mark athletic victories or other special occasions. Terrell Hall The Office of Undergraduate Admissions is located on the second and third floors of Terrell Hall. Information sessions for prospective students are conducted here regularly. The Graduate School office is located on the first floor. 4 New College First built in 1822 and rebuilt in 1832 after being destroyed by fire, New College was most recently renovated in 2010. Over the years, the building has been a residence hall and home to various university departments and offices including the bookstore, pharmacy school, and most recently the the Vice President for Instruction. STOP 2 Administration Building The Administration Building houses the offices of the university president and senior vice presidents. Originally, the building was constructed as a library for students but quickly became too small to house all library materials. In 1948, the Georgia Museum of Art opened in the basement. In 1982, the General Assembly designated the Georgia Museum of Art as the state’s official art museum. The museum was eventually moved to its current location on East Campus. Old College The oldest building on campus, built in 1806, Old College is modeled after Connecticut Hall at Yale. (UGA’s first two presidents graduated from Yale.) Crawford W. Long, a pioneer in the use of anesthesia, lived here when he was a student at UGA. A commemorative plaque is located on the building’s north wall. The Franklin College dean’s office is located here. A statue of Abraham Baldwin, who wrote the charter creating the university, was erected in 2011. Moore College/Herty Field Moore College houses the Honors Program and includes advising offices, computer labs and classrooms for Honors students. About 10 percent of each incoming freshman class is admitted to the Honors program. Honors students enjoy special opportunities for research, study abroad programs, and scholarships. Herty Field was UGA’s first athletic field and was the site of UGA’s first intercollegiate football game in 1892 when UGA defeated Mercer 50-0. The field is in the university’s wireless internet cloud and is a popular place for students to study and relax. Candler Hall This building is home to the School of Public and International Affairs (SPIA), where students can earn bachelors degrees in political science and international affairs. SPIA was created in 2001 from the department of political science. Now a distinct unit within UGA, the school also offers a nationally acclaimed masters degree in public administration. 5 Gilbert Hall Gilbert Hall was the previous location of the university’s health center. The building currently houses the Department of Romance Languages. The department, one of the largest and most productive at the university, offers undergraduate and graduate programs in French, Italian, Portuguese, and Spanish. Law Library/Law School The UGA School of Law is located in Hirsch Hall with the Law Library adjacent to the school. Currently, Georgia Law ranks among the top public law schools in the country according to annual rankings by U.S. News & World Report. STOP 3 Lustrat House Built in 1847, the Lustrat House was originally located on the site of the Administration Building and was moved to its present location in 1903. Named for professor Joseph Lustrat, the building has served as a faculty house, an office for the university’s president, and a house museum. Today, it houses the Office of Legal Affairs. Waddel Hall Built in 1821, Waddell Hall was once known as Philosophical Hall. The second oldest building on campus, it has served as a chapel, gymnasium, and meeting facility. It currently houses the Office of Special Events. When he served on the Law School faculty from 1977-1996, former U.S. Secretary of State Dean Rusk had his office in Waddel Hall. Peabody Hall Home to the Departments of Religion and Philosophy, Peabody Hall is named for George Peabody, a New England merchant who directed in his will that his estate be distributed to promote public education in the South. The religion department offers a diverse curriculum for both undergraduate and graduate students. The philosophy department also provides undergraduate and graduate level degrees. 6 Ilah Dunlap Little Memorial Library (Main Library) Built in 1952 with support from an initial gift from Ilah Dunlap Little, the main library was designed in the neoclassical style. The seven-story annex was added in 1974. Together, all of the units of the UGA Libraries own more than 4.6 million volumes and 6.6 million microfilm units. Dean Rusk Hall STOP Named for the U.S. Secretary of State in the Kennedy and Johnson administrations who served on the UGA law faculty for 20 years, Rusk Hall includes multi-purpose classrooms, an electronic courtroom, space for the Institute of Continuing Judicial Education, faculty offices for the Law School, and the Dean Rusk Center for International and Comparative Law. 4 Caldwell Hall (behind Law Library) Caldwell Hall opened in 1981 and was named for Harman Caldwell, who served as university president from 1935-1964. Many Terry College of Business classes meet in Caldwell Hall classrooms. Brooks Hall Brooks Hall is the home to the Terry College of Business, which consistently ranks among the top business schools in the country. The college offers undergraduate and graduate level degrees in multiple disciplines. The University of Georgia was the first southern university — and one of the first in the nation — to establish a school of business. Sanford Hall Funded through private gifts and dedicated in 1997 as a primary classroom facility for Terry College students, Sanford Hall has a student lounge, academic advising center and 13 seminar rooms and classrooms with seating capacity ranging from 10 to 330. The building accommodates wireless computer access, and every desktop in Sanford Hall — 900 seats in all — is equipped with a network connection for laptops. 7 Park Hall STOP The Departments of English and Classics are housed in Park Hall, which was built in 1938. The undergraduate English program offers courses ranging from Old English and Contemporary American Literature to linguistics, film, and creative writing. The graduate program offers two masters degrees and a Ph.D. degree. The building was named for Robert Park, who was head of the English Department from 1900-1942. 5 LeConte Hall The Department of History is located in LeConte Hall and offers bachelors, masters, and Ph.D. degrees. The department has a strong tradition of expertise in subjects ranging from early American to modern African American history and popular culture to foreign policy. The building opened in1938 and was named for John and Joseph Leconte, brothers who had graduated from UGA and later served on the faculty. Military Science Building Built in 1931, the Military Science Building houses the university’s Army ROTC program. The program’s curriculum is an elective curriculum and is designed to train and develop future leaders. Courses cover management, ethics, tactics, law, military history, and Army society. Psychology-Journalism Complex The Psychology-Journalism (PJ) complex houses the Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication, the Department of Psychology, auditoriums, and general classroom space. The Grady College is home to one of the top journalism programs in the nation and offers undergraduate and graduate level degrees. It is also home to the Peabody Awards, the world’s oldest and most prestigious honor in electronic media. In addition to providing opportunities for undergraduate and graduate degrees, the psychology department also contains a fully staffed psychology clinic with services available to students and the public. The department’s graduate program is nationally recognized and APA accredited, and students graduating from the program have gone on to successful careers in a variety of academic, research, and applied settings. 8 Zell B. Miller Learning Center STOP The $42 million Miller Learning Center, opened in 2003, houses classrooms and library space in the heart of campus and is the most popular location on campus for studying individually or in groups. The building is entirely dedicated to students and houses no departmental or faculty offices. Inside are nearly 100 individual study rooms and more than 500 computer workstations plus a Mac design lab. There is a coffee shop located on the second floor. 6 University Bookstore STOP The bookstore is normally open Monday-Thursday from 8:00 a.m. – 7:00 p.m., on Friday from 8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m., on Saturday from 10:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. and on Sunday from 11:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. The bookstore sells books, computers, souvenirs, UGA apparel, supplies, etc. 7 Tate Student Center Named for the late William Tate, long-time Dean of Men, the center contains a food court, a 500-seat movie theater, dance studios, the university’s student-run radio station, an information desk, offices for a number of student organizations, and meeting rooms. A $58 million expansion and renovation to the Tate Center opened in June 2009. The expansion features a new location for Print and Copy Services as well as meeting rooms, a food court, an information desk, and a nearly 12,000-square foot state-ofthe-art multi-purpose space. Memorial Hall Built in 1925 to honor the 47 UGA men who died in World War I, Memorial Hall contains offices for the African American Cultural Center, Multicultural Services, International Student Life, Student Conduct, the LGBT Resource Center, and the office of the Vice President for Student Affairs. In May 2009, the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences moved its advising and graduation certification offices to Memorial Hall from New College. Sanford Stadium Home of the Georgia Bulldogs, the stadium seats 92,746 and is one of the largest on-campus stadiums in the country. It was the site of the medal rounds for 1996 Olympic Soccer Games. Sanford Stadium opened in 1929 with UGA defeating Yale University 15-0. 9 University of Georgia West Campus Highlights Map N Geor Bolton gia Q uad Dining Mell Commons Lipscomb Tate Center Deck T ER S E V T S R U H O RC T H S West Campus Deck Legion Pool V E R CL CHU Brumby A T EY S Russell F IN L Creswell Hill Church Boggs IN ST BAXT LUMP K ® Ch A Oglethorpe House T CEDAR S Oglethorpe Dining Commons Visitor Parking Hill Community Residence Halls A SM C M al l Oglethorpe House (”O House“) is co-ed with suite-style living arrangements with a bath between two rooms. Oglethorpe Science Dining Commons is next to the residence hall and is one of five dining commons on campus. The Hill Community also consists Library Cobb Auxiliary of several smaller residence halls, all of which have sinks in the rooms. Housing approximately 160 residents each, Hill, Boggs, SOU House South LE Services Lipscomb, and Mell are co-ed while Church is Office entirely ST of female. Deck Marine Treanor Service-Learning Science Colonial Community Residence Halls House Danc Brumby Hall is mostly female with community baths. Russell Hall is co-ed by wing and Creswell Hall is co-ed by floor, both with Snelling JW Fanning WE Georgia Center ST G community baths. All three high-rise residence halls house approximately 900 first-year students. In 2005, the University Dining made Building Public For Continuing it mandatory for first-year students to live on campus. Commons R. C. Service & Coop Ext Service Education Wilson Outreach /Hoke Smith Bolton Dining Commons Pharm Office of Bolton is the largest and newest of the five dining commons. Students can choose to purchase a meal plan contract to be a Hoke Smith International McPhaulUniversity Food part of a 5 day or 7 day mealEducation plan, which will grant them unlimited accessAnnex to any dining commons on campus. Woodruff Child Services is consistently ranked among the top in the nation. S T food service programs Development Field Pharmacy IN K South P E M U H L Sigma Spec Towns Track S Delta Science Tau Stegeman Learning Vince Dooley Coliseum Center Athletic Mille Complex Coliseum Sci Butts-Mehre Training Rankin M. Smith Building Facility Student Athlete 10 S TAcademic Center RD LT N S ST B ro O H oks R IT DW T P IN E C R E S D R DR T dP laz Tate Student Center a V A T Sanford Stadium D D N SA FO Chemistry Annex Physics Biological Sciences Lumpkin House DW T CEDAR S OO K S DR Speirs Rutherford Myers Soule Snelling Dining Commons Pharmacy South oks B ro DW EA ST GR US Forest Service DR RD R VE DW Locomotive Diagnostic Center RI N S T East Campus Village LTO Driftmier Engineering Center Athletics Family & Graduate Housing University Village East Village Deck VE R RD CAR East South Campus is home to a variety of departments, mostly scientific and mathematical in nature. Known asCampus Science Row or McWhorter George D. Deck Ag Hill, Cedar Street is home to a number of science departments, including Biology, Chemistry, and Geography, asBusbee wellHallas Hall the College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences (Conner Hall). The Paul D. Coverdell Center for Biomedical and HealthVandiver Hall Sciences opened in 2006. Two of UGA’s professional schools, the College of Pharmacy and the College of Veterinary Medicine, Rooker Hall have facilities on South Campus. CAES Activity Center University Health 1516 RI B Rhodes Animal Center The Vince Dooley Athletic Complex encompasses several athletic facilities, including Stegeman Coliseum, the Coliseum Science Center C Visitors Training Facility, Foley Field, the Spec Towns Track, the Dan Magill Tennis WComplex, and Butts-Mehre Heritage Hall, home of the A R D Center IE V H T U SO (Four Towers) Athletic Department and a sports museum. CO Family & Graduate Housing University Village Lodging LL Intramural Fields EG E S TA T IO N R /LO OP 10 D The Georgia Center for Continuing Education Conference Center & Hotel offers 200 hotel rooms and suites at competitive rates. Amenities include free wireless Internet access, in-room microwaves and refrigerators, a fitness center, restaurants, and shuttle service. The hotel offers free membership in its Parent Club, an exclusive benefit for all UGA parents and guardians that includes a free night’s lodging for every five paid hotel nights and discounts on meals at hotel restaurants. Intramural Fields Deck TER Student Life EN S P ER IM E Lake Herrick Myers Residential Community includes Myers Hall (Honors Magnet), Mary Lyndon Hall (language immersion program), Pavilion Family & Graduate Rutherford Hall (Franklin Residential College), and Hall (all female). Snelling Dining Commons offers continuous 24-hour HousingSoule Office Center for service from 7:00 a.m. Monday through 2:30 p.m. Friday during fall and spring semesters. Applied Isotope LAKE HERRICK Family & Graduate Housing A TH E C RD OKS BRO Animal Health Research Center Vet Med Diagnostic Lab EAST CAMP US RD AV O Aderhold A G R IC U L T U R E D R E H N S T Veterinary Medicine BioResources G T Tucker EE Wildlife Health Academics R R VE R Henry Lindsey Hopkins Indoor Tennis Feild Tennis Stadium Stadium O Davison Life Sciences RI D Coverdell Center N Environmental Health Sciences Miller Plant Sciences Physical Plant Grounds E Science Learning Center Ecology NE T Dan Magill Tennis Complex GRE EN ST R. C. Wilson Pharmacy Forestry Resources Coliseum Training Facility Carlton Street Deck EITS/Statistics /Natural History Hardman O S Visitor Parking T E Foley Baseball Stadium S R RD Rankin M. Smith Student Athlete T S Academic Center N C E O RF O E TH LT ST IN Butts-Mehre Building Stegeman Coliseum Food Science Boyd Grad Studies WE ST R H P Vince Dooley Athletic Complex RU A IT Spec Towns Track RD US McPhaul Child Development C P Hoke Smith Annex SM L UM N KI Woodruff Field ST R ST Georgia Center For Continuing Coop Ext Service Education /Hoke Smith VE Barrow l South Deck Science Library SOU LE ST Marine Science Dance RI Poultry Science M al Mary Lyndon Conner BR Dawson MP N ST Chemistry CA T H S F IE L D Geography Geology EA O E Geology Lab R H U R Clark Howell R CL V R S T EY S University of Georgia South Campus Highlights Map RC ® Re e Tate Center Deck E F IN L Creswell CHU ED Lipscomb T ER S BAXT Study MI Central Food Storage LL ED 11 GE AV E Family & Graduate Rive Res Lab Environmental Safety Services/ Campus Mail RD ND RBE R IV E Vehicle Tran N S T University of Georgia East Campus Highlights Map N O R l ® Ceramics M al C A T H O C NE Printing S DW EE Performing Arts Center Deck Performing Arts N S T OKS Hugh Hodgson School of Music BRO Georgia Museum of Art DW R VE GR DR ST RI T EA E N B ro O N O LT oks R Parking Services Joe Frank Harris Commons East Campus Village CAR LTO N S T RI VE R RD Lamar Dodd School of Art A G R IC U L T U R E D R East Campus Deck SO UTHV George D. Busbee Hall McWhorter Hall Vandiver Hall Rooker Hall VE R RD East Village Deck CAES Activity Center University Health Center CO LL Intramural Fields EG B Rhodes Animal Science Center C A Visitors Center (Four Towers) IE W D R 1516 RI EAST CAMP US RD Ramsey Student Center Visitor Parking E S T AT IO N RD Academics /LO OP 10 Adjacent to the Hugh Hodgson School of Music, the $40 million Lamar Dodd School of Art building opened in 2008. The Edgar L. Rhodes Animal Science Center is home to the Animal and Dairy Science Department and world-famous scientist and animal cloning expert Steve Stice. Intramural Fields Deck TER Arts IM E Lake Herrick Center for Applied The Performing and Visual Arts Complex features the state of Georgia’s official art museum, theRiverbend Georgia Museum of Art, and Pavilion Genetic Technologies Research the Performing Arts Center, which features two superb concert halls. Student Life EN S P ER Family & Graduate Housing Office A TH raduate ng Sigma WE ST G REE LAKE HERRICK Center for Applied Isotope Study Lab North Greenhouses Riverbend Food Harris The East Campus Village, a community of apartment-style residence halls, and JoeCentral Frank Commons give East Campus its Research Storage Lab South only housing and dining facilities. The Ramsey Student Center for Physical Activities is the university’s 5.5 acre workout facility Environmental Safety Services/ Mail D and features strength and conditioning rooms; courts for basketball, volleyball,Campus squash, andD Rracquetball; swimming pools; an BEN IVER R The indoor track; a climbing wall; and studios for aerobics, spinning, and boxing classes. intramural fields offer several walking Vehicle Transportation Family & Graduate & Maintenance Housing trails, tennis courts, soccer and softball/baseball fields, and a batting cage. Botany Greenhouses Redcoat Field University Health Center This facility serves currently enrolled students. Services include an at-cost pharmacy, acute care clinic, travel clinic, allergy clinic, women’s clinic, dental clinic, sports medicine clinic, and counseling and psychological sevices. A $17 million expansion opened in April 2009. Complex Carbohydrate Research Center UGA Visitors Center • (706)542-0842 • visit.uga.edu • visituga@uga.edu 12