Photos for download 2009
Bovey Building, home to U of G's Department of Environmental Biology.
Photo courtesy University of Guelph
Creelman Hall, built in 1914 and still used as a student dining hall.
Photo courtesy University of Guelph
MacKinnon Building, built in 1967, home to the College of Arts.
Photo courtesy University of Guelph
Ontario Veterinary College main building, built in 1922 when the college moved from Toronto to Guelph.
Photo courtesy University of Guelph
Raithby House porch with Day Hall and MacKinnon Building in the background.
Photo by John Visser
University of Guelph students enjoying a sunny day on Johnston Green.
Photo courtesy University of Guelph
Johnston Hall is the University of Guelph's most recognizable building. Built in 1931, its boasts a large front lawn and fronts onto Gordon Street.
Photo courtesy University of Guelph
The portico saved from the original farm house located on this site frames Johnston Hall, a 1931 student residence and administration building for the Ontario Agricultural College.
Photo courtesy University of Guelph
Students headed for Lambton Hall residence, University of Guelph campus.
Photo courtesy University of Guelph
Winegard Walk leading to the University of Guelph Library.
Photo courtesy University of Guelph
Massey Hall, built in 1903 as a library and now home to the Department of Drama.
Photo by John Visser
A popular meeting place on Johnston Green, the portico dates to the 1860s farm house that was purchased in 1874 to establish the Ontario Agricultural and Experimental College, founding college of the University of Guelph.
Photo by Martin Schlwalbe
Conservatory greenhouse and garden complex, restored in 1999 as a University of Guelph alumni initiative.
Photo by Anne Gordon Images
Winegard Walk in front of Johnston Green.
Photo courtesy University of Guelph
Ontario Veterinary College main building.
Photo courtesy University of Guelph
Photo by Dean Palmer/the Scenario
Johnston Green.
Photo courtesy University of Guelph
University of Guelph graduate student in the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry looking at protein structures of the toxin responsible for cholera.
Photo by Office of Research
Researchers in Guelph's Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry are developing new chemical compounds with magnetic properties that are thousands of times smaller than normal magnets and capable of storing information on a single molecule.
Photo by Office of Research
Land Resource Science faculty and graduate students study how plants take up toxins from the soil and how those plants might be used to clean up toxic waste sites.
Photo by Office of Research
Researchers at the University of Guelph are genetically engineering tobacco to produce life-saving antibodies that can be used to detect deadly bacteria in food and water.
Photo by Office of Research
Soybean field research. The OAC Bayfield soybean variety developed at U of G has contributed more than $750 million to Ontario's economy since its introduction ten years ago.
Photo by Office of Research
Researchers in Guelph's Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry are developing new chemical compounds with magnetic properties that are thousands of times smaller than normal magnets and capable of storing information on a single molecule.
Photo by Office of Research
Guelph Food Scientist Massimo Marcone tested Kopi Luwak coffee beans to determine whether passing through the gastrointestinal (GI) tract of the luwak (an Indonesian feral cat) really makes them different from Colombian beans.
Photo by Office of Research
At the University of Guelph-based Canadian Research Institute for Food Safety, scientists are studying numerous issues related to food safety, including West Nile Virus, bio-security measures, and BSE (Mad Cow Disease).
Photo by Office of Research
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