The University of Florida (UF) is a major, public, comprehensive, land-grant, research university. The state's oldest,
largest and most comprehensive university, UF is among the nation's
most academically diverse public universities. UF has a long history of
established programs in international education, research and service.
It is one of only 17 public, land-grant universities that belongs to
the Association of American Universities.
In
1853, the state-funded East Florida Seminary took over the Kingsbury
Academy in Ocala. The seminary moved to Gainesville in the 1860s and
later was consolidated with the state's land-grant Florida Agricultural
College, then in Lake City. In 1905, by legislative action, the college
became a university and was moved to Gainesville. Classes first met
with 102 students on the present site on Sept. 26, 1906. UF officially
opened its doors to women in 1947. With more than 51,000 students, UF
is now one of the five largest universities in the nation.
UF
has a 2,000-acre campus and more than 900 buildings (including 170 with
classrooms and laboratories). The northeast corner of campus is listed
as a Historic District on the National Register of Historic Places. The
UF residence halls have a
total capacity of some 7,500 students and the five family housing
villages house more than 1,000 married and graduate students.
UF's
extensive capital improvement program has resulted in facilities ideal
for 21st century academics and research, including the Health Professions, Nursing and Pharmacy Building; the Cancer and Genetics Research Center;
the new Biomedical Sciences Building; and William R. Hough Hall, which
will house the Hough Graduate School of Business. Overall, the
university's current facilities have a book value of more than $1
billion and a replacement value of $2 billion.
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