Virtual Tour
Tour Stops
Tour Stops
https://seas.harvard.edu/tour/allston/1/science-and-engineering-complex-sec
https://seas.harvard.edu/tour/allston/2/114-western-avenue
https://seas.harvard.edu/tour/allston/3/east-atrium
https://seas.harvard.edu/tour/allston/4/main-atrium
https://seas.harvard.edu/tour/allston/10/engineering-yard
https://seas.harvard.edu/tour/allston/5/lower-level-1
https://seas.harvard.edu/tour/allston/6/lower-level-2
https://seas.harvard.edu/tour/allston/9/library
https://seas.harvard.edu/tour/allston/9/upper-floors
https://seas.harvard.edu/tour/allston/11/classrooms
https://seas.harvard.edu/tour/allston/12/allston-neighborhood
https://seas.harvard.edu/tour/allston/8/sustainability
https://seas.harvard.edu/tour/allston/7/active-learning-labs
https://seas.harvard.edu/tour/cambridge/1/harvard-yard
https://seas.harvard.edu/tour/cambridge/2/science-center-and-seas-history
https://seas.harvard.edu/tour/cambridge/3/labs-cruft-lise-mckay
https://seas.harvard.edu/tour/cambridge/4/pierce-hall
https://seas.harvard.edu/tour/cambridge/5/maxwell-dworkin
https://seas.harvard.edu/tour/cambridge/6/northwest-building
https://seas.harvard.edu/tour/cambridge/7/engineering-sciences-lab
1. Harvard Yard
Harvard Yard, in Cambridge, Massachusetts, is a grassy area enclosed by fences with twenty-seven gates. It is the oldest part of the Harvard University campus, its historic center, and its modern crossroads. Harvard Yard contains most of the freshman dormitories; Harvard's most important libraries; Memorial Church; several classroom and departmental buildings; and the offices of the Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, the Dean of Harvard College, and President of Harvard University.
Find out more about Harvard Yard and other areas of the University as a whole by taking an in-person, virtual, or audio tour of Harvard.
An introduction to Harvard SEAS
To address current and future societal challenges, knowledge from fundamental science, art, and the humanities must all be linked through the application of engineering principles with the professions of law, medicine, public policy, design and business practice.
In other words, solving important issues requires a multidisciplinary approach. With the combined strengths of SEAS, FAS, and the professional schools, Harvard is ideally positioned to both broadly educate the next generation of leaders who understand the complexities of technology and society and to use its intellectual resources and innovative thinking to meet the challenges of the 21st century.