Excellent facilities attract fine
researchers and teachers, and they provide the platform for your learning
experience. Missouri S&T has the sophisticated laboratories and
computing facilities expected at a premier technological university. Every
amazing facility presents an opportunity – to study in a lounge or simply
tinker in a lab.
In 2006, Forbes.com named
Missouri S&T a top 25 "connected campus" and CIO Magazine
named Missouri S&T to its CIO "Top 100" list. Top corporations
know that our widespread wireless access, high speed internet,
technology-enabled classrooms, Computer Learning Centers and state-of-the-art
distance learning classrooms add value to every Missouri S&T student's
degree program, regardless of major.

Our Top 10 list of
facilities:
- The Havener Student Center is the heart of the campus community and
student activities at Missouri S&T.
- The Experimental Mine is the only on-campus research mine in the
country, if not the world.
- You need look no farther than the atrium to appreciate the monument to
civil engineering that is Butler-Carlton Hall.
- The highlight of Toomey Hall is the Product Innovation and
Creativity Center housing design facilities utilized by many student design
teams.
- This isn’t your parents’ college dorm room. The Residential College
is our new suite-style residence hall with state-of-the-art amenities.
- As a national powerhouse in student design teams, S&T’s Student
Design Center is one of the most active buildings on campus.
- Completed in 1961, Missouri S&T had the first Nuclear
Reactor in the state.
- A partial reconstruction of the world’s oldest calendar and “computer” is
right in the heart of campus. Our half-scale Stonehenge serves as a
reminder of human ingenuity.
- Open 112 hours a week, the Curtis Laws Wilson Library links students
and technology.
- One of the few on-campus facilities in the world, the Foundry is a
state-of-the-art laboratory for metallurgical research. And if you’re lucky,
the foundry has been known to occasionally cast Missouri S&T paper
weights for campus visitors.