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- CMU’s $50 million Health Professions Building, which
opened in spring 2004, unites the university’s reputable
health professions programs in one technologically advanced
environment that is conducive to learning, treatment,
collaboration, and discovery. The facility features
clinical, instructional, and research wings encircling a
pair of aesthetically pleasing courtyards. Each wing houses
state-of-the-art clinical facilities, laboratories,
classrooms, and other resources to support CMU’s growing
health professions programs.
- CMU’s Student Activity Center was one of the first
comprehensive recreation facilities in the nation and has
received numerous program and facility awards from national
organizations, including the National
Intramural-Recreational Sports Association and the Building
and Design Construction Engineering Society.
- CMU’s Charles V. Park Library merges the traditional
collections of a major academic library with advanced,
computer-networked information resources and services. The
library features seating for 2,655 patrons, 33 miles of
electronically assisted mobile shelving, more than 350
public computer workstations, and hundreds of open Web
connections. The library also houses the Clarke Historical
Library, which holds extensive genealogy, local, and Native
American history collections.
- Nearly 6,000 students occupy CMU’s 20 residence halls.
Three new halls opened in 2003 — Campbell, Kesseler and
Kulhavi — which provide first-class accommodations for the
growing on-campus student population. CMU’s residence halls
are home to a number of residential colleges including
Language, Music, Health Professions, Science and Technology,
Business, Honors, and Leadership.
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