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The 322-acre campus of California State University, Long Beach is home to eminent academics, accomplished former students, and a diverse student body prepared to take on the world with a well-regarded education.

California State University, Long Beach, which is three miles from the Pacific Ocean and has more than 38,000 students, is a town unto itself with its own zip code.

84 buildings, 63 academic departments and programmes, 24 centres, four institutes, and four clinics make up the 322 acre urban campus. The architect Edward Killingsworth constructed the buildings with a focus on minimalism, which emphasises landscaping and gives CSULB an organic, park-like arrangement that has won multiple architectural honours.

The first of its type in the California State University system, The Beach just launched a cutting-edge, net-zero energy classroom for the College of Professional and International Education.

The most energy-efficient building on campus has a Platinum LEED rating thanks to it.

LEED Gold or Silver certifications have been attained by five buildings.

The University Student Union, which is run by students and is situated in the middle of campus, serves as a hub for the student body. Offices, a study lounge, ballroom, food court, bowling alley, arcade, and a movie theatre are all located within the 180,000 square foot, three-story glass structure.

Administrative offices and numerous consolidated campus services can be found in Brotman Hall, which is next to the University Student Union. There are further specialised facilities for nursing, industrial and interior design, music, molecular and life sciences, and engineering technology.

In 1991, the College of Business Administration opened a cutting-edge structure outfitted with decision-support labs, multi-media capabilities, and contemporary lecture rooms.

The largest and best-equipped dance instruction facility in the country houses the Department of Dance's offices.

The 3,200 Helen Borcher blossoming peach trees that the residents of Long Beach donated for planting, as well as the other works of art that can be found there, are largely responsible for the campus's attractiveness.

The International Sculpture Symposium donated nine imposing sculptures and designs to The Beach in 1965.

The Carlson Memorial Tower, which was designed by French sculptor Andre Bloc, was completed in 1972 with the help of additional community contributions in the form of a trust. These works were credited in 21 national and worldwide publications.

Through the inclusion of pieces by artists including Guy Dill, Michael Davis, Robert Irwin, Bryan Hunt, and Woods Davy, the campus sculpture collection has continued to grow.

Private gifts and funds from the National Endowment for the Arts to the University Art Museum enabled these purchases.

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The 322-acre campus of California State University, Long Beach is home to eminent academics, accomplished former students, and a diverse student body prepared to take on the world with a well-regarded education.

California State University, Long Beach, which is three miles from the Pacific Ocean and has more than 38,000 students, is a town unto itself with its own zip code.

84 buildings, 63 academic departments and programmes, 24 centres, four institutes, and four clinics make up the 322 acre urban campus. The architect Edward Killingsworth constructed the buildings with a focus on minimalism, which emphasises landscaping and gives CSULB an organic, park-like arrangement that has won multiple architectural honours.

The first of its type in the California State University system, The Beach just launched a cutting-edge, net-zero energy classroom for the College of Professional and International Education.

The most energy-efficient building on campus has a Platinum LEED rating thanks to it.

LEED Gold or Silver certifications have been attained by five buildings.

The University Student Union, which is run by students and is situated in the middle of campus, serves as a hub for the student body. Offices, a study lounge, ballroom, food court, bowling alley, arcade, and a movie theatre are all located within the 180,000 square foot, three-story glass structure.

Administrative offices and numerous consolidated campus services can be found in Brotman Hall, which is next to the University Student Union. There are further specialised facilities for nursing, industrial and interior design, music, molecular and life sciences, and engineering technology.

In 1991, the College of Business Administration opened a cutting-edge structure outfitted with decision-support labs, multi-media capabilities, and contemporary lecture rooms.

The largest and best-equipped dance instruction facility in the country houses the Department of Dance's offices.

The 3,200 Helen Borcher blossoming peach trees that the residents of Long Beach donated for planting, as well as the other works of art that can be found there, are largely responsible for the campus's attractiveness.

The International Sculpture Symposium donated nine imposing sculptures and designs to The Beach in 1965.

The Carlson Memorial Tower, which was designed by French sculptor Andre Bloc, was completed in 1972 with the help of additional community contributions in the form of a trust. These works were credited in 21 national and worldwide publications.

Through the inclusion of pieces by artists including Guy Dill, Michael Davis, Robert Irwin, Bryan Hunt, and Woods Davy, the campus sculpture collection has continued to grow.

Private gifts and funds from the National Endowment for the Arts to the University Art Museum enabled these purchases.