The MRED program’s administrative location is in Lee Hall, which houses planning and landscape architecture, construction science and management, architecture, and MRED. Student study space, computer workstations, studios and a lounge area are available for MRED students. Lee Gallery adds to the creative atmosphere with fine arts exhibits by students, faculty and well-known professionals throughout the year.
Sirrine Hall, the largest academic building on campus, houses the College of Business and Behavioral Science administrative offices; the departments of Finance, Business Administration, and Accountancy and Legal Studies; the Arthur M. Spiro Center for Entrepreneurial Leadership; the Small Business Development Center; and the University's stock-trading room where students can track stock trends in real-time.
Lee Hall is also home to the School of Design and Building collection in the Emery Gunnin Library. The Gunnin Library has more than 40,000 books, 85,000 slides, video recordings, and professional journals and periodicals. The Library also includes the Hughes Urban Land Institute Collection, consisting of all ULI books and access to over 400 ULI on-line Development Case Studies.
The Robert Muldrow Cooper Library, located in the center of campus, is the main library of the Clemson University Libraries system. The library's six-floor building houses more than 1.5 million items, including books, periodicals, and microforms.
The Clemson University Libraries are much more than a storehouse for books. They are a gateway to information — databases, books, journals and primary research materials — regardless of format. Collaboration with other universities, government agencies and industries allows shared access to other library holdings, turning the Clemson Libraries into a library without walls.
The University is ranked highly as one of the most wired universities. Clemson has shared class workspace and Web-based tools for communication and collaboration. All campus computers are connected by a Novell NetWare network infrastructure and maintained by the University’s Division of Computing and Information Technology.
