If you are at least 50 miles away and in need of housing, we will provide a single room at Newman Hall (private certified housing at UofI) with a bathroom shared with 1 other person.
- 604 E Armory Ave, Champaign, IL 61820
If you are at least 50 miles away and in need of housing, we will provide a single room at Newman Hall (private certified housing at UofI) with a bathroom shared with 1 other person.
The facility serves as a human-centered design focal point on campus, bringing together people from all disciplines, cultures, and realities.
Coble Hall is home to the Center for East Asian and Pacific Studies and many other centers, including the Illinois Global Institute, Center for Global Studies, Center for African Studies, Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies, and Center for South Asian and Middle Eastern Studies.
Rare Books & Manuscript Library
Located on the third floor (Room 346) on the north side of the Main Library, the RBML is one of the largest publicly accessible special collections repositories in the United States. The collections encompass the broad areas of literature, history, art, theology, philosophy, technology, and the natural sciences. It is renowned for its outstanding collections of Medieval and Renaissance manuscripts, early printed books, English literature, American wit and humor, theater history, free speech movements, Italian history, the history of economics, the history of science and technology, mathematics, geology, and natural history.
Japan House is a unit of the College of Fine and Applied Arts at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. It has both University classes for academic credit, as well as community classes open to the general public. Although it is not a cultural center for Japanese students, it often becomes a home away from home to Asian students because of its traditional stylings and peaceful environment.
Krannert Art Museum
Krannert Art Museum (KAM) fosters engagement with the visual arts by creating meaningful connections for our diverse communities, histories, and worlds. KAM promotes knowledge and experimentation, invites critique, reckons with our past, strives for excellence in interpreting our collections, and sparks curiosity and wonder in our audiences.