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WSU (Campbelltown Campus) at night – 2006. The Campbelltown Campus is located in the semi-rural Macarthur region in South Western Sydney. Together with the Bankstown campus, the Campbelltown campus was originally part of the Macarthur Institute of Higher Education, founded in 1984. The campus offers degrees (among many others) in medicine ...
Campbelltown is a suburb located on the outskirts of the metropolitan area of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. It is located in Greater Western Sydney 53 kilometres (33 mi) south-west of the Sydney central business district by road. Campbelltown is the administrative seat of the local government area of the City of Campbelltown.
[1] It became the third medical school offering degrees for medical practice in Sydney after The University of Sydney and The University of New South Wales . In 2007, the Bachelor of Medicine/Bachelor of Surgery (MBBS) degree was offered for the first time and in 2019, the Doctor of Medicine (MD) program was introduced to replace it.
Eventually though, construction began and the 30-bed Campbelltown Hospital was officially opened by then NSW Premier Neville Wran on 1 October 1977 (this building is now referred to as Block B of Campbelltown Hospital). [2] By April 1978, the hospital had increased its beds to 120, including a 10-bed Pediatric Ward.
The site of the campus is a former brownfield site that was once occupied by rail lines and a waste incubator. [4]On April 23, 1988, Washington State Governor Booth Gardner signed an appropriation that allocated $800,000 for purchasing land east of Downtown Spokane for the eventual development of a higher education campus. [5]
[1] [2] Before the Parramatta campus was developed, classes were held at Westmead, which is now part of the Parramatta campus. The oldest building on the campus was the home of the St Vincent's Boys' Home (active 1891-1985 [3]) at Westmead. [citation needed] The Parramatta campus was established as a campus of WSU in 1998. [citation needed]
The university will soon begin construction on a new indoor practice facility, called the Taylor Sports Complex, with a ribbon-cutting ceremony scheduled for Sept. 9 — the day WSU hosts ...
The Bryan Hall clock tower is a prominent landmark of Washington State University and is used frequently in iconography for both the university and the surrounding area. Silhouettes of the clock tower are featured in the logos for the WSU Student Entertainment Board (SEB), the Allegro Student Association for Music Advocacy, and the City of Pullman.