<p>I recently read a book in which a different campus was identified as the largest college campus in the country, so it’s interesting to see this discussion of the area of Stanford’s campus. And the relief from the chances threads here is very refreshing.</p>
<p>“Stanford owns that much land (and it can’t be sold, I believe); the actual campus only takes up a small part of that.”</p>
<p>6,200 acres is used for educational purposes right? I assume that figure pertains to the said campus; and that is a big proportion of the 8,000. That area is almost as big as Berkeley, if I’m not mistaken, and Berkeley services over 30,000!</p>
<p>Thanks for sharing the links. It does appear that there are some definitional issues here. Maybe I should open a thread in my alma mater’s forum about the similarly contentious issue of which university has the largest enrollment (which is certainly not Stanford, but might be my alma mater some years).</p>
<p>It’s a huge campus, but Stanford also owns Jasper Ridge, a huge nature preserve. Plus, most activities are centered around main campus (aka the Quad and White Plaza).</p>
<p>“Educational purposes” doesn’t mean the campus itself. There’s also Jasper Biological Preserve and other resources, I assume. But the campus itself is pretty large. I walked from FloMo to Frost Ampitheater and it took me about 20 minutes (but I have planar fascitis…).</p>
<p>Educational purposes definitely is not just the campus. The campus is large (but not that large)
Another part of the educational purposes is also SLAC (the linear accelerator that is ginormous). </p>
<p>A large part of the owned land is not open to the public (protected land that is completely fenced in)</p>