Visit

We’ll Leave the Maker Space Open For You

Duke Engineering packs all of the amenities and experiences of a big land-grant institution into a fun-sized package you’ll love to call home. Stroll through our Gothic wonderland on your way to modern classrooms and laboratories, refreshing gardens and a fun place we call the design pod. Come see it for yourself.

Freshman Class of 2027, first year students, Duke’s East Campus. August 25th, 2023

Take the Undergraduate Engineering Tour

Prospective students: Explore Duke with our knowledgeable guides—in-person or virtually. Be sure to ask about the fancy new espresso machine in Twinnies Café. 

By the Numbers

404,126

Square Feet

of occupied space

18

Buildings

on and off campus

10

Major Research Centers

externally-funded, Duke-led

Buildings

Our engineering campus is adjacent to Duke University Medical Center—proximity that facilitates collaboration with world-leading clinicians.

Aerial of Duke Engineering’s Wilkinson Building.

Wilkinson Building

This 81,000-square-foot LEED-certified facility features research neighborhoods on the upper floors focused on health, advanced computing, and the environment. On the main floor, stop by Bseisu Coffee Bar for a snack and build in the Garage Labs.

exterior of the Fitzpatrick Center for Interdisciplinary Engineering, Medicine and Applied Sciences in spring

Fitzpatrick Center

By design, this complex encourages creative interaction across a vast 125,000 square feet. Conduct research in wet labs. Fabricate nanotech materials in a Class 1000 cleanroom. Attend a seminar in Schiciano Auditorium. Meet for lunch at Twinnies.

Hudson Hall at Duke University

Hudson Hall

This elegant building opened in 1948 and has been greatly expanded and modernized many times since. On the main floor, catch a visiting speaker’s presentation in Vincent Lecture Hall or check in at your department’s office. In the labs, run an experiment in the subsonic wind tunnel or explore acoustics in the anechoic chamber.

Nello L. Teer Building at Duke University

Nello L. Teer Building

This modernist structure is where you can share a fist-bump with the dean, map out your academic plan in the Student Service Center and take a selfie with the Engineering Alumni Mural.

Research & Development Facilities

Two people in gowns work in a nanotech clean room

Duke Shared Materials Instrumentation Facility (SMiF)

This Duke-based National Science Foundation affiliate provides university and industry access to technologies vital to the development of nanoscale materials—including 4,000 square feet of class 100 and class 1000 cleanroom, and suites for electron and atomic force microscopy and X-ray analysis. Located in the Fitzpatrick Center.

Duke Robotics Student Symposium spotlights rapidly advancing robotics research on campus

Duke Robotics Lab

This 6,000-square-foot collaborative workspace in the North Building gives multidisciplinary robotics research room to thrive. Two rooms provide for private human-in-the-loop experiments. There’s also a high-bay indoor space for robot testing and drone flying.

Chemistry graduate students Jeovanna Rios and Jennifer Hennigan discuss an experiment in Mike Lynch's biomedical engineering lab in the Chesterfield Building. The Chesterfield Building, a cigarette-factory-turned-research-hub, is home to collaboration-friendly lab, office and conference spaces for parts of Duke University School of Medicine and the Pratt School of Engineering. Duke leases about 100,000 square feet of space in the downtown building. The lab is focused on genetically engineering microbes to shut off their growth circuits and turn on new pathways to produce different compounds—improving production of biofuels, pharmacological molecules and industrial chemicals.

Duke BRiDGE

Duke BRiDGE is an incubator for faculty spin-out companies in biotechnology. It’s located in a former cigarette factory near downtown Durham—fully renovated and repurposed for life sciences research. Well-appointed laboratories come with access to corporate amenities and coaching from a team of seasoned executives-in-residence.

CFCI Logo

Christensen Family Center for Innovation

For students, CFCI is a product lab in the Wilkinson Building where prototypes are designed and built. For the community, CFCI’s experts freely share what they’re learning about making innovation better, faster and cheaper.

Experiential Learning Spaces

First-year engineering students tackle a service project during their EGR101L course, Engineering Design and Communication, in the Design Pod. Here, from left, Megan Richards, Doherty Guirand, Alexis Almeida and Manav Vakil work on an inhaler device that will be easy for young children and the elderly to use. Taught by biomedical engineering instructor Kevin Caves, students work in a team to learn and apply the engineering design process to solve an open-ended, client-based problem drawn from a community partner.

Duke Engineering Design Pod

5,000-square-feet of learning lab that’s home to Duke Engineering’s First-Year Design Experience. Located in the Jinny and Ed Pratt Commons at the Levine Science Research Center (LSRC), the pod is the ultimate workspace—bristling with racks of hand, power and rapid prototyping tools.

undergraduates work to build an electric powered vehicle for competitions

The Foundry

In this 7,600-square-foot maker space, students build ideas from the ground up. Its impressive tool collection includes a 3D Systems ProX DMP320—typically set up for direct metal printing in titanium.

SMART Home - PreMiEr Engineering Research Center - Duke University - Pratt School of Engineering

Duke Smart Home

This LEED Platinum residence hall is also a living laboratory of sustainable design and residential automation. Its 10 student residents conduct research and lead public tours.

Pratt Student Shop

Pratt Student Shop

Undergraduate engineering students have access to a modern machine shop to complete course work that requires turning, milling, grinding, shaping, cutting or drilling. The shop is overseen by professional toolmakers who teach a mandatory safety course.

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