Visit North Carolina

Duke Basketball Museum & Sports Hall of Fame

Decades of Duke University’s athletic achievements are showcased with visual and audio exhibits, theater and trophies of national championships.

  • Tours: Self guided

Schwartz-Butters Athletic Center 306 Towerview Dr. Durham, NC 27708

(919) 613-7500 www.goduke.com

Local Information

Discover durham.

Ends: 6/15/2024

2024 Outdoor NC Pledge Sweepstakes

Sweepstakes.

(919) 613-7500 - www.goduke.com

duke student doing homework on a tall bench outside on West Campus

EXPERIENCE DUKE

The best way to enjoy Duke’s warm and welcoming spirit is to meet the people who create it: our students, faculty, and alumni. When you meet us, you’ll feel the connection, collaboration, and creativity that are the hallmark of the Duke experience. Join us virtually, in person, or both — whatever works best for you. There’s no preference in the admissions process for students who have been to campus.

duke student doing homework on a tall bench outside on West Campus

See It for Yourself

Visit in person.

Duke’s campus is considered one of the most beautiful college campuses in the country. But it’s not just the physical campus that makes Duke unlike anywhere else. It’s the warmth and welcoming spirit you feel from everyone who makes up our special community. Duke’s campus is now open to visitors who adhere to the University visitor policies .

GUIDED WALKING TOUR

Led by a student tour guide, our outdoor walking tours give you a chance to see campus highlights, ask questions, and hear why we love our vibrant community. In the event of severe weather or campus closures, tours could be canceled or delayed.

90 minutes; Reservations required

REGISTER HERE

If you plan to visit campus on your own, download the Duke Admissions Tour app, which is now available for iPhone and Android users. You may also stop by the Undergraduate Admissions Office to pick up a campus map from our outside information box.

Admissions staff are not available for in-person meetings, nor are we able to accommodate walk-in visitors for student-led tours or special requests of any kind.

INFORMATION SESSION + GUIDED WALKING TOUR

This two-part event introduces you to the Duke experience. Led by an admissions officer, our 30-minute information session includes an overview of our academic opportunities and student life. You’ll also have a chance to ask questions and hear why we love our vibrant community. A 90-minute, student-led campus walking tour will follow.

2 hours; Registration required

DIRECTIONS TO CAMPUS

Duke is located in Durham, North Carolina. The closest airport is Raleigh-Durham International Airport, which is a 20-minute drive to Duke. An Amtrak train station and Greyhound bus station are located in downtown Durham, a 7-minute drive from the Undergraduate Admissions Office.

Complimentary visitor parking for Undergraduate Admissions programs is available in the gravel lot on Duke University Road, directly across from the Karsh Alumni and Visitors Center, which is located at 2080 Duke University Road, Durham, North Carolina, 27708 .

Duke Undergraduate Admissions is located at 2138 Campus Drive, Durham, North Carolina, 27706 .

Tours originate from McClendon Commons in the Duke Undergraduate Admissions Office or the Karsh Alumni and Visitors Center. Please check tour confirmation messages for details.

Most major hotel chains are located in the Raleigh-Durham area. You may find a list of hotels closest to Duke at the Durham Convention and Visitors Bureau here .

VISITING CAMPUS

Duke University Office of Undergraduate Admissions is offering a limited number of group tours .

Please review the Group Tour Policy below before requesting a visit. These are set in place to ensure the best possible visit for you and your students.  

  • Group visits are only available to High Schools, Community Based Organizations, and Educational Non-Profits working with current high school students. 
  • All group visits must include the supervision of an adult chaperone/teacher at all times. Students are expected to conduct themselves in a respectful manner and not demonstrate disruptive behavior during the presentation. 
  • Requests for group tours are accepted on a first-come, first-served basis and may be restricted during peak visitation seasons. 
  • During the 2023-2024 academic year, Group Tours are available on Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays only. Available tour times are 10:00 a.m. and 12 Noon. We do not offer visits on the weekend or on University/Federal Holidays.  
  • Group tours are not available during semester finals, winter recess, or the months of March, April, May, and August 2024.
  • To request a Group Tour, please fill out the Group Tour Request form . 
  • If you have any questions, please call our office at 919-684-3214 or email [email protected]  

After we receive your request, we will confirm whether or not we are able to accommodate your request.   Please note that w e cannot guarantee we will be able to accommodate all group requests. Y our tour is not confirmed until you receive an email that includes the tour date, time, location, and directions. If confirmed, p lease plan to arrive at least 15 minutes prior to your confirmed event.

We do not offer meetings with admissions officers at this time. However, we invite you to register for our live virtual events, which include information sessions led by admissions officers, student chats, and more.

If you plan to visit campus on your own, download the  Duke Admissions Tour  app which is now available for IPHONE and ANDROID  users. You may also stop by the Office of Undergraduate Admissions to pick up a campus map from our outside information box.  

Duke University is not associated with any organizations that promote for-profit campus tours. All official Duke University campus tours are conducted free of charge. Furthermore, the services provided by the Admissions Ambassadors, such as the campus tours and Blue Devil Student Chats are provided free of charge. Duke University is not associated with any organizations that promote for-profit college search and recruitment, and students are not permitted to participate in the admissions ambassador program while working for these for-profit organizations.

VIRTUAL PROGRAMMING

We welcome those we would have previously organized a group visit to campus to sign up for our virtual programming. If you are a community-based organization or college access program with questions about separate programming, please reach out to  [email protected] .

DISCOVER DUKE

Discover Duke events are admissions information sessions that typically last about sixty minutes. Duke admissions officers will provide an overview of the various academic and signature opportunities available to our undergraduates and will share information about our application and financial aid processes.

No events are scheduled at this time. Stay tuned for more information.

EXPLORING COLLEGE OPTIONS

If you are unable to attend a Discover Duke program, you may also join us for  Exploring College Options  with Georgetown University, Harvard University, Stanford University, and the University of Pennsylvania.

Representatives from each university will present information about their institution, discuss the application process, and answer questions on how to put together a strong and reflective application. Each program will end with breakout sessions where representatives will answer questions about their specific school and the application process. We are offering both in-person and virtual programs, with each program featuring the same content.

IN-PERSON PROGRAMS Click on the links below to register and read more information about each event. Space is limited, so register as soon as possible. Student programs are held in the evenings.

Arizona Phoenix – Tuesday, May 14, 2024

California Anaheim – Tuesday, May 14, 2024 Bakersfield – Thursday, May 16, 2024 Fresno – Wednesday, May 15, 2024 Los Angeles (LAX) – Tuesday, Sunday, May 12, 2024 Los Angeles (Downtown) – Tuesday, May 14, 2024 Oakland – Monday, May 13, 2024 Riverside – Wednesday, May 15, 2024 Sacramento – Tuesday, May 14, 2024 San Diego – Thursday, May 16, 2024 Stanford – Sunday, May 12, 2024

Colorado Denver (Tech Center) – Sunday, May 12, 2024 Denver (City Park) – Monday, May 13, 2024

District of Columbia Washington – Thursday, May 16, 2024

Florida Miami – Tuesday, May 14, 2024 Orlando – Sunday, May 12, 2024 Tampa – Monday, May 13, 2024

Georgia Atlanta – Sunday, May 12, 2024

Maryland Baltimore – Wednesday, May 15, 2024

Missouri St. Louis – Tuesday, May 14, 2024

Nevada Las Vegas – Wednesday, May 15, 2024

New Jersey Livingston – Monday, May 13, 2024

New York New York – Sunday, May 12, 2024

Ohio Cincinnati – Monday, May 13, 2024

Pennsylvania Philadelphia – Tuesday, May 14, 2024

Puerto Rico San Juan – Thursday, May 16, 2024

Tennessee Memphis – Wednesday, May 15, 2024 Nashville – Thursday, May 16, 2024

VIRTUAL PROGRAMS All virtual programs are listed in Eastern Daylight Time.

Sunday, May 19, 2024 5:00 p.m. REGISTER HERE

Monday, May 20, 2024 7:00 p.m. REGISTER HERE

INTERNATIONAL EVENTS

Admissions officers from Duke and other universities will host joint public information sessions this spring, open to all prospective undergraduates and families interested in attending. Programs will include brief presentations about the institutions’ undergraduate programs and will provide an overview of admissions and financial aid policies and procedures. Admissions officers will be available to answer specific questions at the end of each program.

Admissions officers from Dartmouth, Duke, Georgetown, Northwestern, and Vanderbilt will host public information sessions in South Asia and India.

Bangalore, India Saturday, April 27, 2024 2:00 – 3:30 p.m. REGISTER HERE

Mumbai, India Jamnabai Narsee School Monday, April 29, 2024 5:30 – 7:00 p.m. REGISTER HERE

Mumbai, India Aditya Birla World Academy Tuesday, April 30, 2024 5:00 – 6:30 p.m. REGISTER HERE

Dubai, United Arab Emirates Wednesday, May 1, 2024 5:00 – 6:30 p.m. REGISTER HERE

Admissions officers from Brown, Duke, Stanford, and the University of Pennsylvania will host a public information session at Uruguayan American School.

Montevideo, Uruguay Tuesday, May 14, 2024 7:00 – 8:30 p.m. REGISTER HERE

Admissions officers from Brown, Duke, Georgetown, Stanford, and the University of Pennsylvania will host public information sessions in South America.

Bogotá, Colombia Monday, May 6, 2024 7:00 – 8:30 p.m. REGISTER HERE

Lima, Peru Tuesday, May 7 7:00 – 8:30 p.m. REGISTER HERE

São Paulo, Brazil Thursday, May 9 7:00 – 8:30 p.m. REGISTER HERE

Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Friday, May 10 7:00 – 8:30 p.m. REGISTER HERE

Buenos Aires, Argentina Monday, May 13 7:00 – 8:30 p.m. REGISTER HERE

Admissions officers from Dartmouth, Duke, Georgetown, and Vanderbilt will host public information sessions in May in Switzerland, Germany, and the UK.

Geneva, Switzerland Sunday, May 5, 2024 5:00 – 6:30 p.m. REGISTER HERE

Zurich, Switzerland Monday, May 6, 2024 6:00 PM until 7:30 p.m. REGISTER HERE

Munich, Germany Tuesday, May 7, 2024 5:30 – 7:00 PM p.m. REGISTER HERE

Birmingham, UK Wednesday, May 8, 2024 7:00 – 8:30 p.m. REGISTER HERE

Manchester, UK Friday, May 10, 2024 6:00 – 7:30 p.m. REGISTER HERE

PRATT SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING

Explore Pratt’s newest facilities and get information on various opportunities available to engineering students. Reservations required.

CONNECT WITH FACULTY

If you would like to speak with a faculty member in a particular department or program, we encourage you to reach out directly to the Director of Undergraduate Studies in the department(s) or program(s) of interest to you.

For majors/programs in Trinity College of Arts and Sciences, click here .

For the Pratt School of Engineering, click here .

RESERVE OFFICER TRAINING CORPS (ROTC)

Duke provides Army, Navy, and Air Force Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) programs for interested students, all of which offer the possibility of financial aid. Representatives from each division are available to answer specific questions.

Air Force (AFROTC) Recruiting Officer: Prof. Ryan Allen 919-660-1869

Army (AROTC) Recruiting Officer: Jeff Daye 919-660-3091

Navy/Marine Corps (NROTC) Recruiting Officer: LT Webb Pierson 919-660-3708

OTHER TOURS

The following options are available when Duke’s campus is open to visitors.

Duke Kunshan University

Did you know Duke has launched a joint-venture university in China, where you could earn a Duke degree while studying internationally ? Request an add-on visit to the DKU Admissions House while at Duke or attend one of our weekly info sessions to learn more about DKU.

Nasher Museum of Art

Check out the collection’s rotating exhibitions and permanent installations. Plan your visit with the self-guided tour map.

Duke Chapel

A new 360-degree virtual tour presents the sights and sounds of Duke Chapel with highlights and anecdotes from the building’s history.

Cameron Indoor Stadium

Discover the Duke Basketball Museum & Duke Athletics Hall of Fame, located adjacent to Cameron in the Schwartz-Butters Athletic Center.

Tours of the Duke University Marine Laboratory , located about 180 miles east of Duke’s main campus, are available to high school or college-aged students who are interested in enrolling. To schedule a tour, please complete this Tour Request Survey  and a staff member will connect with you to schedule via email. Prospective Tours are generally available Monday – Friday from 9 am to 4 pm.

The Lemur Center

Visit Duke’s internationally acclaimed Lemur Center to acquaint yourself with more than 200 animals across 14 species housed at the noninvasive research facility.

JOIN US IN DURHAM, NC!

Make duke yours, visit virtually.

Not seeing Duke in person doesn’t mean you can’t experience everything that makes Duke an amazing place to learn, explore, live, and connect. We hope you’ll join us for some or all of our virtual programs.

For help deciding what options are best for you, click below or check out our guide here .

VIRTUAL INFORMATION SESSION

Hosted by a Duke admissions officer, information sessions introduce you to Duke University. Learn about our academic choices, signature programs, and community experience.

45 minutes; Live; Year-round; Registration Required

REGISTER NOW

If you’re unable to join us live, view a recorded session with admissions officer Milan Hamilton ’20 here:

ADMISSION & FINANCIAL AID AT DUKE

Want to hear more about applying, how Duke admissions officers evaluate applications, and what we look for when reviewing applications? Join us to get all the details!

45 minutes; Live; Year-round; Registration required

DUKE FINANCIAL AID 101

College is a significant expense, but we’re committed to making a Duke education affordable for as many students as possible. Join Duke Financial Support Officers to learn about our financial aid policies and how to apply.

If you aren’t able to join us live, you can view a recorded session with Nicole Knight from Karsh Office of Undergraduate Financial Support here:

VIRTUAL CAMPUS TOUR

Virtual tours offer an opportunity to visit campus from the comfort of your own home. Current student ambassadors guide you through popular spots on campus.

60 minutes; Live; Year-round; Registration required

If you aren’t able to join us live,  VIEW ONE OF OUR RECORDED TOURS .

VIRTUAL PRATT SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING TOUR

Interested in engineering? Join current students to explore Pratt’s newest facilities and get information on various opportunities available to engineering students.

60 minutes; Live; Registration required

BLUE DEVIL CHATS

These hour-long programs provide the opportunity to hear from current students about what it’s like to be a Blue Devil and engage with live Q&A. Blue Devil Chats serve as a casual way to connect with Duke students from a variety of backgrounds and interests to help you gain insight into the Duke experience.

More information to come.

COMMUNITY PANELS

Moderated by our admissions staff, Duke Community Panels are 75-minutes long and bring together current students, alumni, parents, faculty, and staff from across the Duke community to share their personal experiences, stories, and connections to Duke. This is your opportunity to learn more about why Duke is such an extraordinary place.

Information Session (English)

Hosted by a Duke admissions officer, our information session introduces you to Duke University. Learn about our academic choices, signature programs, and community experience.

30 minutes; Recorded; View anytime

Sesión de Información en Español

Presentado por un oficial de admisiones de Duke, nuestra sesión informativa le presenta Duke University.

18 minutos; Ver en cualquier momento

Financial Aid 101

60 minutes; Recorded; View anytime

West Campus Tour

Duke’s Gothic West Campus is central to the Duke experience. It’s home to many academic departments, residential quads for sophomores, juniors, and seniors, Duke’s professional schools, Duke Chapel, our main library, and major athletic facilities.

5 minutes; Recorded; View anytime

East Campus Tour

At Duke, all first-year undergraduates live together on East Campus, a housing community designed to support the needs and interests of students who are new to college life. On East Campus, students quickly meet classmates from diverse backgrounds and start building life-long friendships.

Virtual Reality Campus Tour

Get a feel for the student experience through our recorded virtual reality tour. The tour explores Duke’s campus highlights as well as residence halls, libraries, and dining locations. START THE TOUR

Join Us Virtually!

When Duke was founded in 1924, the construction of its campus was the single largest Depression-era project in the United States. Today, the Georgian East Campus and neo-Gothic West Campus serve as the core of Duke’s sprawling campus. With more than 250 buildings situated on 8,600+ acres of land, 7,044 of which are forest, you will immediately feel immersed in a “Gothic Wonderland.”

BALDWIN AUDITORIUM

Built in 1927, designed by Duke’s founding architect Julian Abele and situated on East Campus, Baldwin Auditorium serves as one of the university’s core venues in which leading classical soloists and ensembles, vocal ensembles, and jazz ensembles perform.

Built in 1932 at the center of West Campus, Duke Chapel, with its 210-foot tower and a 50-bell carillon, is the architectural symbol of the university.

PERKINS LIBRARY

Perkins Library, together with Duke’s other libraries, comprises one of the nation’s top 10 private research library systems. The libraries’ services and resources include more than six million volumes, more than 20 million manuscripts, more than two million electronic resources, 100,000+ items in digital collections, and tens of thousands of films and videos.

FITZPATRICK CENTER

This 322,000-square-foot collaborative research center brings together faculty in four research initiatives: biology, photonics, materials, and integrated sensors. The $97 million facility also expands the Pratt School of Engineering’s partnership with the School of Medicine by providing laboratories for collaborative research in healthcare, genomics, and biotechnology.

CAMERON INDOOR STADIUM

The crown jewel of college basketball, Cameron Indoor boasts intimate seating arrangements for more than 9,000 fans, including bleacher-style seats alongside the court reserved for students (nicknamed the Cameron Crazies).

Baldwin Auditorium

Perkins Library

Fitzpatrick Center

Cameron Indoor Stadium Information

Duke played its first-ever intercollegiate basketball game in 1906, the Blue Devils took the court in a new arena. The Ark was formally known as the Angier Duke Gymnasium. It is located on the site where Duke’s present-day East Campus is. The stadium hosted Durham, North Carolina’s inaugural college hoops matchup as the Blue Devils lost to Wake Forest College 24-10.

In 1935, basketball coach Eddie Cameron drew up plans for a new stadium two miles west of The Ark. The stadium was designed by Julian Abele. While, the architectural firm that built the Palestra was brought in to build the new stadium. At the time, it was the largest gymnasium in the country south of the Palestra at the University of Pennsylvania. The brand-new 9,500-seat venue cost $400,000 at the time and was dedicated on January 6, 1940 as Duke Indoor Stadium. It eventually became one of the most hallowed arenas in all of basketball. Currently, the official seating capacity is at 9,314.

On January 22, 1972, the stadium had a name change and was named Cameron Indoor Stadium. Its name change was to honor Eddie Cameron, who served at Duke as men’s basketball coach from 1928 to 1942, football coach from 1942 to 1945, and athletic director from 1951 to 1972. The facility is the primary indoor athletic venue for the Duke Blue Devils. It further serves as the home court for Duke men’s and women’s basketball and women’s volleyball.

Additionally, the first nationally televised game took place on January 28, 1979 against Marquette. The game was broadcast by NBC and Duke won by a score of 69–64. Regionally televised games in the Atlantic Coast Conference only begun in the late 1950s.

The stadium was first renovated in 1987–1988. Renovations included the removal of the standing room areas, installation of an electronic scoreboard and display over center court, wood paneling, brass railings and student seats. However, it brought the capacity to 9,314, though now there is sufficient standing room to ensure 10,000 could fit. For high profile games, students are known to pack in as many as 1,600 into the student sections despite being designed for a maximum of 1,100.

Prior to the 2002–2003 basketball season, air conditioners were installed in Cameron as a response to health and odor concerns for players and fans alike. Where else, before the 2008–09 season, a new video scoreboard replaced the electronic board over center court. And, prior to the 2009–10 season, more changes were made, including installing LED ribbon boards to the front of the press table and painting the upper seats Duke blue.

One can hear the “Cameron Crazies” supporting the Duke team with loud cheering from miles away. Their noise level was recorded as high as 121.3 dB, which is louder than a power saw at 3 feet or a jackhammer.

If that does not impress you on how passionate Duke fans are. This piece of information will convince you. Students reside in tents for months in an area outside of Cameron known as “Krzyzewskiville” for access to major games, including those against the University of North Carolina, . The hardwood floor was dedicated and renamed Coach K Court in November 2000. “The most important thing for me is being in this gym,” Krzyzewski said after winning his 1,000th game at Duke in November, 2017. “It’s an amazing thing when you have great moments individually, but when you can share great moments is the best.”

Cameron Indoor Stadium was originally the largest indoor arena in the South but, today, it is one of the smallest in the nation. Nevertheless, sellout crowds, top 25 rankings, and championships of every variety have become the norm for the stadium. Additionally, the “creative harassment” of student spectators has given Duke the honor of being known as “one of the toughest road games in the USA,” according to USA Today and any visiting team that has ever played in Cameron. In its June 7, 1999, issue, Sports Illustrated rated Cameron Indoor Stadium fourth on a list of the top 20 sporting venues in the world in the 20th Century. It was ranked ahead of Wrigley Field, Fenway Park and Pebble Beach Golf Club.

The Blue Devils have had an amazing amount of success in Cameron, winning over 80 percent of their games all-time. In 1999-2000, Duke established both the Atlantic Coast Conference and school record by extending its home winning streak to 46 games.

By 2018, the Duke men’s basketball team has an all-time record in Cameron of 847-157 for an .844 win percentage. The 627 wins is the most in the ACC and the fifth-highest total in the country on a current home court. Also, under Coach K, the winning percentage increased to .887 with a 489-62 record.

Despite the changes that have taken place, Cameron Indoor Stadium has remained very much the same over the last 70 plus years. Its most enduring character remains in the spirit of the Duke team and its fans.

For more information on the Cameron Indoor Stadium at Duke University please read these additional pages:

Cameron Indoor Stadium Parking : Read about parking options and rules at the Cameron Indoor Stadium.

Ticket Policies : Read about our ticket guarantee and refund policies.

Cameron Indoor Stadium Seating Chart : View the venue seating chart for most major events.

Cameron Indoor Stadium

duke university basketball tours

Affiliation

115 Whitford Dr. Durham, NC 27708

  • phone_iphone 919-613-5752
  • desktop_mac Facility Website

Duke’s Cameron Indoor Stadium, the crown jewel of college basketball’s classic venues, has hosted a variety of sporting events for more than seven decades. The intimacy of the arena coupled with a unique seating arrangement puts the wildest fans right down on the floor with the players. Legendary careers began on this court, and the feeling of history being made with every game makes for a truly unforgettable experience.  

  • Seating for 9,000
  • Home to Duke University Blue Devils men’s and women’s basketball and volleyball teams
  • Host of a variety of NCAA and ACC championships, including basketball, fencing, gymnastics, and wrestling

Be first. Subscribe and join a team of Durham sports insiders. →

  • Comments This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
  • Submit an RFP
  • Apply for an Event Grant
  • Major Events
  • Submit an Event
  • Board of Directors
  • Meeting Minutes
  • Annual Reports
  • One Team, One Durham Fund
  • Internship Program
  • Volunteer Program
  • Youth Athlete Shout-Out
  • Privacy Policy

Loading your recommendations…

Hall of Fame event space

Courtesy Duke University

duke university basketball tours

Duke Basketball Museum & Sports Hall of Fame 306 Towerview Dr, Schwartz-Butters Athletic Center | Durham, NC 27708

Duke Basketball Museum & Sports Hall of Fame

The Blue Devils have won four NCAA championships and over 20 ACC tournaments, and produced dozens of All Americans and nine national players of the year, all in addition to having a hall of fame coach in Mike Krzyzewski. You can see the trophies, the memorabilia, the videos, and more behind this storied history at the Duke Basketball Museum.Many other athletic success stories are showcased in the connected Duke Sports Hall of Fame, celebrating all 26 athletic teams and the combined 13 national championships these stars helped win.

12 Must-Have Experiences at Duke

From a Gardens sunrise to helipad tour, add these activities to your Duke “Bucket List”

duke university basketball tours

  • Share this story on facebook
  • Share this story on twitter
  • Share this story on reddit
  • Share this story on linkedin
  • Get this story's permalink
  • Print this story

It’s time to add items to your Duke Bucket List.

Whether you are a Duke employee, student or first-time campus visitor, there are unique Duke experiences that can’t be missed, such as enjoying the island scenery at the Duke Marine Lab, exploring historic Cameron Indoor Stadium or visiting the top of Duke Chapel for a beautiful view.

Here are 12 places or ways to fully experience Duke:

Watch the Sun Come Up at Duke Gardens

duke university basketball tours

All around the periphery of Sarah P. Duke Gardens, tall trees can block out the rising morning sun. But enter the gardens  from the visitor parking lots and head down the main entrance walkway and you’ll find a perfect spot to catch the sun’s rays when the Gardens open at 8 a.m. At the end of the path, at the Roney Fountain, a large crane sits atop the structure, spitting water into the air.

The light reflects off every drop, creating a shimmering reflection spotted from yards away. Grab a seat at the fountain’s edge or on a nearby bench and relax.

This is one of the best spots to catch a sunrise on campus.

Take a Duke Class at a Discount

duke university basketball tours

Enroll in an art history, ethics or women’s studies class at Duke through the Duke Special Employee Tuition Rate Program, which is managed by Continuing Studies. Eligible Duke employees who work at least 20 hours per week can save on most undergraduate courses for credit or personal enrichment.

Julianne Bartlett, the Ph.D. Program assistant for Duke Economics, is auditing her first Duke class, Korean 101, through the program . She writes short stories in her spare time and hopes to write a novel using information she learns about Korean culture.

“I have a life outside of Duke, and it kind of helps me feel like I’m something other than just an employee here,” Bartlett said about taking a Duke course. “It’s good for my self-esteem and it’s good for my identity.”

Cheer at Cameron Indoor Stadium and Athletics Hall of Fame

duke university basketball tours

Duke’s famed basketball stadium is a must see for anyone who cares to check out one of the most famed athletic arenas in the country.

Whether attending a game or not, all sports fans should take time to see the history of campus sports at the Duke Basketball Museum and Athletics Hall of Fame. The Hall of Fame is open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday to Friday and 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday. The museum and Hall of Fame honors individuals and teams, including five special displays for each of the Duke men’s basketball team’s NCAA championships.

Establish Roots at Duke Campus Farm

duke university basketball tours

Help rainbow chard, radishes and potatoes thrive by volunteering at Duke Campus Farm.

Every Thursday and Sunday, pending the weather, Campus Farm employees hold workdays for Duke community members and the public. From 3 to 5 p.m. both days at 4934 Friends School Road in Durham, volunteers help plant, harvest, pull weeds and work on small construction projects. Volunteers are asked to wear close-toed shoes and bring a reusable water bottle. Check the farm’s Facebook page for any updates regarding the volunteering schedule.

Get face-to-face with Lemurs

duke university basketball tours

Established in 1966, the Duke Lemur Center is home to six prosimian species and 15 different endangered lemur species, including Bonita, left, a baby mongoose lemur, and Murphy, right, a blue-eyed black baby lemur born this summer.

Located about two miles northwest of West Campus on the edge of Duke Forest, the Lemur Center has become a favorite stop for animal lovers with a selection of tour options to get up close to lemurs.

The basic “Lemurs Live!” tour is a discounted $10 per ticket for employees, but there are more in-depth options for $75 and $95, where visitors can come face-to-face with lemurs. It’s an educational experience unlike anything a zoo could offer.

Ascend to the Top of the Chapel

Get a breathtaking 360-degree view of Duke campus and Durham by taking the hidden stairs to the top of Duke Chapel.

The Chapel “ Tower Climb ” is restricted to groups directly affiliated with the university and must be sponsored by one full-time Duke faculty or staff member. Schedule a climb by sending email to [email protected] . Include “Tower Climb” in the subject line.

Visit Duke Hospital’s Helicopter and Helipad

duke university basketball tours

Whenever you see the Duke Life Flight helicopter take off from one of Duke Hospital’s two rooftop helipads, there are two nurses and a pilot on board who are responding to a patient in need.

Duke employees can find out more about Life Flight air transport operations by arranging a free tour to see the Eurocopter EC145 up close and walk on the helipad.

Contact the Duke Life Flight administrative staff at  1-800-362-5433 to arrange a tour. Groups can also arrange to see Life Flight’s critical care ambulance fleet.

Technology Engagement Center

duke university basketball tours

2D printing is so last year.

Anyone from the Duke community can use campus’ newest high-tech hub where 55 3D printers can spit out just about anything, from a whirling gyro sphere toy to shoes.

There’s also laser cutters and computer controlled cutting machines for wood, plastic and other materials that allow for careful and delicate creations to hang on walls or keep at your desk.

Located in the first floor of the Telecommunications Building, the center is the ideal way to see how Duke advances technology and learning for employees and students. Plus, how often do you get the chance to print a 6-inch tall statue of the Blue Devil?

Explore Nature in Duke Forest

duke university basketball tours

Take a stroll or run through Duke Forest , which is managed by the university and comprised of 7,052 acres spread across three counties. Visitors can also bike and horseback ride on forest roads, rent a picnic shelter , or fish with a valid North Carolina fishing license.

“The Duke Forest offers numerous benefits to the Duke and public communities,” said Sara DiBacco Childs, Duke Forest’s director. “Its value lies in its use as a teaching and research asset, but it also provides a wonderful opportunity for reconnecting with nature, for enjoying the beauty and renewal one can only find in a natural setting.”

Due to the start of Duke Forest’s deer herd reduction program in late September, some of the forest trails will be closed to the public on weekdays through Dec. 16. Check the schedule for details.

Discuss Art with a Guide

duke university basketball tours

The next time you visit the Nasher Museum of Art, examine artwork with a gallery guide.

The Nasher offers Highlights Tours, in which gallery guides talk about particular pieces of artwork around a weekly theme. There are also Slow Art Tours, in which visitors examine one piece of art for about a half-hour.

Both tours are free with admission, and admission is already free for Duke employees who show a valid Duke ID.

“Being able to come on the tour with the guide can give a visitor an overarching view of the exhibition and a chance to look at five or six works in depth, have some of their questions answered, and maybe be a little more prepared on that visit or another visit to explore independently,” said Jessica Ruhle, manager of public education for the Nasher Museum of Art.

View upcoming Highlights Tours and Slow Art Tours on the Nasher calendar to plan your visit.

See a sunset at Duke Marine Lab

duke university basketball tours

Located 180 miles southeast of Durham, the Duke Marine Lab on Pivers Island is worth the drive to get a sense of the cutting-edge education and research that takes place on the southern tip of the Outer Banks. Guided tours of the Duke Marine Lab are restricted to prospective students, but faculty and staff are free to visit the campus , see the facility and browse the island to enjoy waterfront views.

“Looking south you’ll see the open ocean and the Beaufort Inlet and east is picturesque downtown Beaufort and Carrot Island, complete with wild ponies,” said Katie Wood, senior program coordinator for undergraduate & Marine Lab programs. “We have the best sunsets.”

Gaze at Stars and Planets

duke university basketball tours

Explore the night sky by peering at asteroids, the moon’s craters and star clusters through Meade LX200GPS Schmidt-Cassegrain telescopes.

The Duke Teaching Observatory, located in Duke Forest along Cornwallis Road, holds free stargazing events every semester that are open to the Duke community and the public. The next meetup is Nov. 4, but check the website and Facebook page for the complete schedule and for cancellations due to cloud cover or inclement weather.

Link to this page

Copy and paste the URL below to share this page.

duke university basketball tours

Updates to the GroupMe Ticket Exchange

Hey Cameron Crazies!

In an effort to minimize the number of scams and fake accounts that reach the graduate student ticket exchange forum in GroupMe, we’re transitioning groups to use GroupMe’s Campus Connect feature. This transition will take place immediately with the old GroupMe exchange officially closing on Sunday, November 12th. 

With Campus Connect, only users with a verified @duke.edu email address will be able to discover the group. First, to validate your GroupMe account with Duke, follow the instructions here . 

Once your GroupMe account is validated and you have access to the Duke community, choose View all groups and then manually search for the new ticket exchange titled Grad Ticket Exchange ‘23-’24 (MBB) . 

Image

As a reminder of general ticket exchange rules: 

Tickets may be transferred for no more than $15. If there is evidence that you have sold tickets for more than $15, you will be banned from future Duke Athletics events. 

Tickets may only be used by active Duke graduate and professional students.

Guest tickets are non-transferrable. 

Even with the security of this new group, we strongly encourage buyer payment *after* receiving the seller’s ticket.

2023 Dribble for Victory Over Cancer

duke university basketball tours

Join us in Krzyzewskiville on Saturday, October 7th (Campout Saturday) for the 2023 Dribble for Victory over Cancer! Registration is open to attending campers, non-attending campers, guests, families, and the entire Durham community, and all proceeds from registration will go towards pediatric cancer research. Festivities will begin at 8:30am with the walk leaving from Card Lot at 9:45am. The event includes a free breakfast, T-shirt, and an opportunity to hang with the Duke Men’s Basketball team.

Visit the DFV site  for more information and to register by selecting   “Join a Team” and then “Team Campout.” For campers, event registration will grant *two hours* of exemption from tent checks to encourage full participation!

Announcing Fall Campout!

duke university basketball tours

Welcome to Duke Basketball!

Welcome to the Grad Zone!

The Chronicle

‘Dodge those questions’: Student tour guides reveal what you won’t hear on a Duke tour

duke university basketball tours

Editor’s Note: The Chronicle elected to grant anonymity to the tour guides interviewed in this piece, who requested anonymity out of fear of retaliation and losing their jobs. The assigned names in this article are not the individuals’ actual names, nor do they necessarily conform to their gender identities. 

With the 2024 fall semester drawing near, prospective students come to campus to hear about Duke’s academics, extracurricular activities and social culture from the University’s tour guides. 

With the Duke Chapel as a dramatic Gothic backdrop to Duke’s top-tier academics, cutting-edge research and national basketball championships, tour guides have a lot to boast about. They undergo rigorous training to learn helpful information and statistics about the University, though they are also instructed to leave certain details out.

The Chronicle spoke to five tour guides about what they are encouraged — and discouraged — from talking about on tours. Here’s what they had to say:

Greek life, SLGs and QuadEx

Multiple guides said their training discouraged them from discussing the prevalence of Greek life on campus.

Nine fraternities disaffiliated from the University in February 2021 after Duke announced that it would prevent first-years from rushing Greek and non-Greek selective living groups. In November 2021, all eight of Duke’s Panhellenic Council organizations announced that they would disaffiliate from Duke. 

Duke’s Student Affairs website lists one co-ed chapter in its Interfraternity Council , five chapters in the Multicultural Greek Council and seven in the National Panhellenic Council.

Despite the organizations’ disaffiliation, around 60% of surveyed students from the Class of 2026 expressed at least somewhat of an interest in taking part in Greek life, while just over half of those surveyed from the Class of 2025 had a similar opinion. 

“They always tell us to under-emphasize the dominance of frats and sororities on campus,” said Pamela, a tour guide. “We have always had a figure that Greek life is only like 30% of the student body. But despite being 30%, it still dominates more than that.” 

Daniel, another tour guide, mentioned that the figures that admissions have on Greek life might need to be updated, but that such data is not available because of disaffiliation. The Chronicle estimated in January 2023 that around 23.2% of Duke undergraduates are affiliated with a Greek organization . 

Pamela believes that Greek life is “the most outward-facing social aspect of campus” and “dominates a lot of other clubs” since those in Greek life often help others in their sororities or fraternities gain admission into other organizations. 

“I don’t want to tell prospective students that there's no Greek parties or that there's not a problem with exclusivity because that's just a false representation,” explained Mercy, another tour guide. 

In another effort to de-emphasize their influence on campus, guides who are affiliated with a Greek life organization or SLG are not allowed to discuss their affiliation or wear clothing related to these groups on their tours, Daniel added.

“Our tour guides do not focus on Greek life or SLGs during tours because QuadEx is Duke’s residential model,” undergraduate admissions officer Chloe Dodds, Pratt ‘22, wrote in an email to The Chronicle. “Tour guides do answer questions about the social life and the role of SLGs and Greek life in general when asked.”

“I think [our training] was geared a little bit more to be pro-QuadEx,” Daniel confirmed. 

Daniel mentioned that guides were discouraged from “trash[ing] the school” when QuadEx rolled out , despite many students reacting negatively to the change. 

According to Mercy, the tour guides are encouraged to emphasize how the QuadEx model is similar to other peer universities.

“They don't say to say Harvard or Yale or whatever, but I think they think it looks prestigious,” she said.

However, Turner, another tour guide, said that he believes the bias against Greek life has lessened over time, as tour guide training transitioned to new leadership. 

‘Second-class citizens’: DKU students at Duke express frustration with housing, social scene integration

Sportswrap: 3 blue devils selected in nfl draft, track and field excels at penn relays, duke softball cleans up nc state en route to series sweep in raleigh.

“When I was a freshman [in 2021], it was anti-Greek life, so you couldn't mention anything relating to Greek life or SLGs. You just had to dodge those questions, the way the other guides explained,” Turner said. “But now, if someone asks a question like ‘What does Greek life look like on campus?’ you’re allowed to give them an honest opinion.” 

Personal admissions stories 

Although tour guides are often asked how they got into Duke, they are trained to direct these questions to Undergraduate Admissions rather than answer them from personal experience. 

“You can’t mention where else you applied, how you did on tests, what APs you took, pretty much no admissions tips or statistics about yourself,” Alex said. 

Turner explained that during training, guides are even encouraged to give students false information about themselves to avoid answering questions that make them uncomfortable. 

“They taught us you could tell them any story, and they would believe it,” Turner said. “So, for example, let’s say you were on the RD waitlist, and then you got off the waitlist. You could say ‘Oh, I was an ED student’ because that would just stop the questions.”

According to Dodds, this rule exists to prevent prospective students from “[using] anecdotes from someone else’s process — especially that of a current student — to estimate their own chance of admission.”

This rule also bars guides from discussing how affirmative action has affected Duke’s admissions policies. The current admissions cycle is the first since the US Supreme Court’s decision to end race-based affirmative action . The consequences of the ruling on the demographics of Duke’s student body and admissions policies have yet to be aggregated.

Mentioning other universities

Tour guides cannot mention other schools like the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill or North Carolina State University to keep the focus on Duke and avoid inadvertently criticizing other universities. 

Pamela explained that tour guides do not compare Duke to other universities and that they expect that other universities will do the same. 

“UNC is not gonna be like, ‘We're better at Duke on this front.’ They can't say that. It's a respect thing,” she said. 

Mercy added that guides cannot say anything about other schools, even if it’s just a light-hearted “Go to Hell, Carolina!” 

However, Turner said that some guides find ways to “beat around the bush” by comparing aspects of other colleges to Duke, such as likening the Bryan Center to other universities’ student centers.

‘Difficult questions’  

Tour guide training also teaches guides to dodge questions related to drinking and partying. 

“If people [ask], ‘Do people drink on campus?’ You can be like, ‘Duke has a vibrant social community,’” Alex joked. 

“You can say there's things to do off campus, but that's about it, like [going to] different restaurants,” Pamela said. “I guess you wouldn't be in trouble for saying, ‘Oh, there's bars if you're 21 and up,’ but you shouldn't mention Devine’s or Shooters specifically.” 

Daniel noted that guides are trained to avoid the phrase “work hard, play hard” to describe Duke's social scene. 

Another example of a “difficult question” that tour guides mentioned was sexual assault. According to 2018 data from a Duke Student Experiences Survey, 47.8% of undergraduate women and 13.5% of undergraduate men experienced sexual assault since enrolling at Duke.

Although tour guides are technically allowed to discuss sexual assault at Duke, multiple guides believe that offering statistics about this problem would be discouraged by their higher-ups. 

According to Pamela, admissions expects student tour guides to say that “sexual assault is an issue common across every college campus — that includes Duke — and there's many initiatives on campus to solve it.”

Daniel believes sexual assault is one of the “biggest problems” with Duke’s institutions, but it would be discouraged to speak about the issue on a tour. 

However, since tour guide training only covers some instances of what questions to dodge, some tour guides opt to address these issues during their tours if prospective students ask for information.

Dodds confirmed that guides are not required to mention sexual assault, but can provide information about safety resources on campus such as the Duke University Police and the blue light system.  

Still, Turner believes that not mentioning sexual assault rates during tours unless prompted may be a harmful omission and tour guide training should consider making it mandatory to discuss the Women’s Center in addition to general wellness resources. 

Perspectives on Durham

Daniel believes that tour guides are encouraged to discuss Durham in a positive light rather than “[illustrating] it as this dangerous, scary place,” a perspective that he believes is unfair but common among prospective and current Duke students. 

Alex says that training leaders emphasize not calling Durham “specifically the word ‘sketchy.’”

However, Turner shares his honest opinion on tours because he thinks people already tend to believe that some areas of Durham are dangerous, so what he says would not necessarily taint their opinion of the city. 

“I'll tell them that the public transportation isn't that great, and I’ll tell them that there are some areas of the city that you probably don't want to go to alone at night,” he said. 

Turner admitted that the way tour guides are trained to portray Durham may not paint an accurate picture. 

“You are skewing things because you're omitting stuff,” he said. 

Get The Chronicle straight to your inbox

Signup for our weekly newsletter. Cancel at any time.

Zoe Spicer profile

Zoe Spicer is a Trinity junior and a features managing editor of The Chronicle's 119th volume.

Share and discuss “‘Dodge those questions’: Student tour guides reveal what you won’t hear on a Duke tour” on social media.

 facebook  twitter

Duke defensive tackle DeWayne Carter selected 95th overall by Buffalo Bills in NFL draft

Duke football center jacob monk drafted 163rd overall by green bay packers, is it time to be concerned about the transfer portal's impact on duke men's basketball, no. 2 duke men's lacrosse falls in regular-season finale to unranked north carolina, duke in the mlb: jarvis falters, loperfido and stroman impress as season continues, duke track and field breaks records across the board at penn relays, charlotte invitational.

Wanderful World of Travel

Visiting Duke University: A Perfect Day Trip

By: Author Kim

Posted on March 10, 2023

A day trip to visit Duke University’s campus in Durham, NC is a budget-friendly way to enjoy stunning architecture and historical sites that are iconic in North Carolina.

When we were planning a visit to Duke University’s gardens, we had so many questions about visiting the campus as a guest. Could you visit Duke without being a student? Was there any place to eat on campus as a visitor? Was everything on campus within walking distance or would we need to keep changing our parking spaces?

Here are all the answers to planning a campus visit to Duke University, whether as a prospective student or a curious visitor.

duke university basketball tours

Table of Contents

Helpful Tips for Planning a Visit

Keep these helpful tips in mind when planning your itinerary:

  • Most of the things to do on this list are free admission, except for the lemur encounter and dining.
  • Parking is not free on the campus. You will need to pay metered parking.
  • Always check the Duke University website for information about game days or special events, such as graduation, that could impact operating hours of any of these things to do.

Can I Walk Around Duke University Campus?

Yes, you can walk around Duke University as a visitor. The public is allowed to visit Duke at any time of the year.

How Long Does It Take to Walk Around Campus?

There is a lot to do at Duke University as a visitor, but you can probably do it all within 3-4 hours.

If you take a guided tour or enjoy the lemur experience (yes, lemurs!), then you will need to allow more time.

Visiting Duke University is the perfect half-day trip from Raleigh, Durham, Chapel Hill or Greensboro.

duke university basketball tours

How to Get Around on Campus

While Duke University has a sprawling campus, with two separate areas known as West Campus and East Campus, it does not take long to walk among the points of interest for guests.

Everything that you would want to see as a visitor to Duke’s campus is within a very walkable area.

If you have no mobility issues, we suggest parking in one spot and walking to each destination.

For those unable to walk distances, there is parking located near all of the points of interest.

The Duke University public transportation is also available to visitors, as well. These are buses that transport students across campus, and are available for the public, too.

duke university basketball tours

Visitor Center

You can start your day at Duke University at the Karsh Alumni and Visitor Center . The relatively new welcome center was opened in 2019.

The stunning building has architectural details that mimic the rest of the distinctive architecture you will find on campus.

duke university basketball tours

This is where you will meet for guided tours.

Anyone can join a Duke University tour. While the emphasis on the tour will be about academics and lean more towards prospective students, everyone is welcome to sign up. The tours are 1 hour and 15 minutes long.

Duke University tours book up well in advance! If you are planning a visit, be sure to sign up for your tour and reserve a spot beforehand. You can always ask at the Visitor Center if there are any openings for the day if you are a last minute visitor, though.

If you would like a map, a sticker saying that you visited Duke or to ask questions about the campus, this is where to go.

Inside are some tables and chairs, a charging station, a very small snack area for purchasing snacks, and an 8-foot touchscreen wall display where you can learn more about Duke’s notable alumni, history and athletics.

Quite honestly, I found that visiting the Visitor Center was a waste of time and parking fees. While the structure is nice, so are a lot of other buildings on campus. We were hoping for something more, maybe a small museum of artifacts or memorabilia, historical photos….something. What we walked away saying was that the building looks like it was built more for a function space and happens to have some maps and an interactive wall.

Duke Chapel

Can you go inside the Duke Chapel? Yes, you can, and you are encouraged to do so!

duke university basketball tours

Visiting the Duke Chapel was the highlight of our campus tour. If possible, you really must spend some time exploring the interior of this iconic building at the University.

The exterior of the Neo-Gothic-inspired chapel reminds us of historic chapels we have visited throughout Europe. (And we’ve been to a LOT of chapels in Europe!)

duke university basketball tours

Inside, you will be dwarfed by the soaring ceilings and two levels of 77 vibrant stained glass windows telling the stories of the Bible.

duke university basketball tours

There are two organs inside the chapel. A special treat is to visit the chapel while there is an organ rehearsal or recital. You can find an event schedule online, or ask the docent sitting at the desk to the right when you walk in when there is expected to be organ music.

duke university basketball tours

When we went, we happened to start talking to a docent that gave us an impromptu tour that was fascinating. While looking at the chapel from the inside is stunning, the history and unusual facts that you learn during a guided tour make your visit even more memorable.

Such as the fact that the builder of the stained glass windows, who didn’t like doing stained glass for churches, signed his name in the Noah stained glass and was subsequently fired.

Be sure to pick up a map at the front of the chapel for a detailed guide on the windows and interesting facts.

duke university basketball tours

The closest public parking is the Bryan Center Parking Garage.

Be sure to look at the events listing page online before visiting to make sure that the Duke Chapel is open for visitors.

In general, the Duke Chapel is open from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. University Worship is at 11 a.m. on Sundays, with Choral Evensong at 4 p.m. on Sundays.

The 50-bell Carillon plays at 5 p.m. on weekdays and before and after Sunday service.

Sarah P. Duke Gardens

The Sarah P. Duke Gardens is considered one of the best public gardens on the East coast. There are four distinct garden areas within the 55-acre gardens:

  • Doris Duke Center and Gardens
  • Historic Gardens
  • H.L. Blomquist Garden of Native Plants
  • W.L. Culberson Asiatic Arboretum

duke university basketball tours

The gardens are open from 8 a.m. to dusk every day. Dog walking is only allowed before 10 a.m. and after 5 p.m.

Enjoy free admission to the gardens.

duke university basketball tours

The paths are wheelchair and stroller friendly.

Restrooms are available in three areas of the gardens. The bathrooms at the W.L. Culberson Asiatic Arboretum are my favorite for their design style.

A cafe is available from Spring to November and serves lunch and ice cream.

Nasher Museum of Art

This contemporary art museum has a focus on works by artists of African descent. The artwork is bold and conversation-starting.

Enjoy free admission to the Nasher Museum of Art .

duke university basketball tours

It is a very short walk from the Sarah P. Duke Gardens. Just go out the main entrance of the gardens, turn right and walk down the sidewalk to the traffic light. At the traffic light, cross the streets and the art museum is located to your right.

A cafe and small bookstore are inside the very modern and spacious building.

University Store

The main University Store is located at Bryan University Center, close to the Duke Chapel.

duke university basketball tours

This two-story gift shop and bookstore has everything you might ever need with the Duke logo on it!

There is so much stuff to buy in this store. Be sure to look downstairs where you will find a Clearance section.

duke university basketball tours

Duke Basketball Museum and Sports Hall of Fame

Located adjacent to the famed Cameron Indoor Stadium where the famed Duke men’s basketball program has games, the Duke Basketball Museum is a fun destination even if you don’t know much about the University’s sports.

duke university basketball tours

We walked around and around this building before we finally found the door! Ha ha! So don’t look for a very celebrated entrance. In fact, we entered the building and wondered if we were supposed to be there.

duke university basketball tours

Once inside, you will be mesmerized by the wealth of sports memorabilia and game videos playing.

You will enjoy display cases showcasing the highlights of the Duke University athletic system, with a big emphasis on the men’s basketball program and Coach Krzyzewski.

duke university basketball tours

The Museum is open from Monday to Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m .with free admission.

On football game days, the hours are different, so be sure to check the website.

Duke Lemur Center

Surprisingly, the largest collection of lemurs outside of Madagascar is found at Duke University! Strange, but true.

The non-invasive research center conducts research and conservation initiatives.

Visitors can explore the Duke Lemur Center, but only with an advance reservation. Visits can only be conducted in warm weather, which means tours are generally available from late Spring to October.

Where to Eat

There are a variety of places to eat on the Duke University campus. There are also a lot of great places just a 10 minute ride off of campus, too.

Below are some of our favorite choices for where to eat at Duke University.

Terrace Cafe

Enjoy a lovely meal while strolling the Sarah P. Duke Gardens when you have lunch at the Terrace Cafe .

This cafe features menu items from The Picnic Basket catering, including sandwiches, salads and gluten-free items.

Terrace Cafe is closed from mid-November to sometime in early Spring. During our visit in early March, the weather was beautiful but the cafe hadn’t opened yet. Be sure to check Duke University dining website for details on hours if you are visiting in the off-season.

Nasher Museum of Art Cafe

Fresh and local-ingredients salads, sandwiches and shareables can be found on the menu here. Items such as Lemon Linguine, Cobb salad and Braise Short Rib are among the popular dishes. You can enjoy beer, wine or cocktails, as well.

Enjoy a lovely meal on the outside patio at the art museum. There are 125-seats both indoors and outdoors which overlooks the garden and the Claes Oldenburg and Coos van Brugge “Corridor Pin” sculpture.

duke university basketball tours

We suggest dining outside if the weather is nice because the indoor dining can get quite noisy.

The cafe is open very limited hours for lunch and brunch, so be sure to check their website . Dinner is only served on Thursday nights. The cafe is closed on Mondays.

You can make a reservation through OpenTable for the cafe.

Bryan University Center

You can find quick-service food at the Bryan University Center where the University Bookstore is.

Fairview Dining Room or Bull Durham Bar

Located at the Washington Duke Inn and Golf Club on campus, the popular Fairview Dining Room is a four diamond, four-star restaurant. Afternoon Tea is served at the Inn, or you could enjoy a lighter bite and cocktails in the Bull Durham Bar.

You will need to pay to park wherever you go. Parking is $2 per hour.

There is convenient parking at the Sarah Duke Gardens in two different sections. There is an overflow parking lot just a short walk from the main entrance, as well.

Nasher Art Museum has their own parking lot.

The Visitor Center has parking in front of the building. Apparently the dirt parking lot across from the building offers free parking to guests (according to the student representative that we spoke to at the Visitor Center), however we saw that the parking lot had a Green Zone Permit sign. So I’m not sure about that.

duke university basketball tours

If you park at the Bryan Center Parking Garage, it is right near the bookstore, which is just behind the chapel.

Where to Stay When Visiting Duke University

If you are staying overnight while doing a campus tour, there are plenty of places to stay close to the University campus.

For big spenders and those that want a luxurious overnight stay, there are two hotels on campus located in the same area across from each other.

  • JB Duke Hotel is located on campus and offers complimentary transportation to Duke University Medical Center. You will find a restaurant and bar at the contemporary hotel, with free parking in the Science Drive Garage.
  • Washington Duke Inn and Golf Club is definitely more luxurious and elegant. It is also a mile from the Duke University Medical Center, with complimentary transportation included. This is where you will find the famed Fairview Dining Room, the Bull Durham Bar and can enjoy afternoon high tea. As well as the 18-hole Duke University Golf Club.

Need something a little less pricey?

There are plenty of hotel brands located 10 minutes or less from the campus. Including many different Hilton and Marriott properties.

A Best Western located near campus was the least expensive lodging we found.

We stayed at the Homewood Suites by Hilton Durham/Chapel Hill just a 12 minute drive from the Sarah P. Duke Gardens. This location was in between a Comfort Inn and a Staybridge Suites, with a Springhill Suites and a Home2 Suites by Hilton very close by.

There was a free breakfast and a manager’s reception at night with enough food to make a light dinner. This was included in the price.

The location is surrounded by plenty of restaurants and shopping. You can easily walk to the restaurants.

A day trip to Duke University is a wonderful way to spend the day and learn more about one of the most famous educational institutions in North Carolina. Even if you root for the Tar Heels, you have got to admit that visiting Duke University’s campus offers a fun array of destinations to enjoy and explore.

  • NBA Blue Devils
  • FanNation FanNation FanNation
  • SI.COM SI.COM SI.COM
  • SI Swimsuit SI Swimsuit SI Swimsuit
  • SI Sportsbook SI Sportsbook SI Sportsbook
  • SI Tickets SI Tickets SI Tickets
  • SI Showcase SI Showcase SI Showcase
  • SI Resorts SI Resorts SI Resorts
  • NEWSLETTER NEWSLETTER NEWSLETTER

Duke basketball recruiting target Meleek Thomas

© Dan Rainville / USA TODAY NETWORK

Duke Basketball Target Makes No Mention of Plans to Visit Blue Devils

Meleek Thomas has held a Duke basketball recruiting offer since last April.

  • Author: Matt Giles

In this story:

After Lincoln Park (Pa.) guard Meleek Thomas landed on the 2025 Duke basketball wishlist around this time last year, the 6-foot-4, 175-pound five-star noted in interviews that he grew up a fan of the Blue Devils. He included the program among his top 12 last summer. And on a couple of occasions, he has expressed a desire to visit Durham.

RELATED: Premier 2026 Point Guard Hopes to Hear From Blue Devil Staff

However, in Thomas' chat with Rivals' Rob Cassidy on Saturday, the 17-year-old backcourt phenom, at one time seen as a candidate to reclassify to 2024, didn't include Duke when reeling off the list of schools he plans to tour in the coming months.

"I want to go take more official visits," said Thomas, who has already checked out Pitt, Auburn, Kentucky, Penn State, and others, according to Cassidy. "I'm going to take officials to UConn, Arkansas, and Indiana."

Considering that Meleek Thomas, No. 6 overall on the 247Sports 2025 Composite, doesn't sound like he's in any hurry to wrap up his recruitment, perhaps it's too early to completely rule out the Blue Devils.

FIVE STAR Meleek Thomas dropped him 🤮 @ThomasMeleek pic.twitter.com/8SilbfQDDX — Overtime (@overtime) April 13, 2024

None of the eight Duke basketball targets in the class have committed anywhere or publicly eliminated Jon Scheyer and his staff from contention.

The other seven, all five-star prospects, are Columbus High School (Fla.) guard Cayden Boozer, Eleanor Roosevelt High School (Calif.) guard Brayden Burries, La Lumiere School (Ind.) guard Jalen Haralson, Highland School (Va.) wing Nate Ament, Columbus forward Cameron Boozer, Perry High School (Ariz.) forward Koa Peat, and Holy Innocents Episcopal School (Ga.) forward Caleb Wilson.

RELATED: Five-Star Duke Target Brayden Burries Addresses Reclass Question

Stay tuned to Blue Devil Country on SI for more Duke basketball recruiting news.

Latest Blue Devils News

Former Duke basketball guard Grayson Allen

Duke Product Grayson Allen Goes Off Against 76ers

DaRon Holmes

2024 NCAA Tournament: Predicting 5 March Madness Stock Risers

Kentucky Wildcats head coach John Calipari yells to the team during their game against the Arkansas Razorbacks on Saturday, March 2, 2024 at Rupp Arena.

Vegas gives Duke better odds to win the South Region than Kentucky

Duke basketball recruiting pledge Khaman Maluach

Future Duke Center May Face Several Blue Devils in Olympics

Former Duke basketball guard JJ Redick

Duke Legend Undertakes Fun Project Alongside LeBron James

  • CBSSports.com
  • Fanatics Sportsbook
  • CBS Sports Home
  • Kentucky Derby 
  • Champions League
  • Motor Sports
  • High School

mens-brackets-180x100.jpg

Men's Brackets

womens-brackets-180x100.jpg

Women's Brackets

Fantasy Baseball

Fantasy football, football pick'em, college pick'em, fantasy basketball, fantasy hockey, franchise games, 24/7 sports news network.

cbs-sports-hq-watch-dropdown.jpg

  • CBS Sports Golazo Network
  • PGA Tour on CBS
  • UEFA Champions League
  • UEFA Europa League
  • Italian Serie A
  • Watch CBS Sports Network
  • TV Shows & Listings

The Early Edge

201120-early-edge-logo-square.jpg

A Daily SportsLine Betting Podcast

With the First Pick

wtfp-logo-01.png

NFL Draft is coming up!

  • Podcasts Home
  • The First Cut Golf
  • Beyond the Arc
  • Eye On College Basketball
  • NFL Pick Six
  • Cover 3 College Football
  • Fantasy Football Today
  • My Teams Organize / See All Teams Help Account Settings Log Out

Arizona State basketball recruiting: Five-star C Jayden Quaintance is top-rated recruit in Sun Devils history

Quaintance originally signed with kentucky, but committed to arizona state on monday.

HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL: APR 02 McDonald's All American Boys Game

Five-star center Jayden Quaintance, the top uncommitted prospect in the 2024 recruiting cycle by 247Sports, committed to Arizona State on Monday. The former Kentucky signee requested a release from his National Letter of Intent shortly after John Calipari departed for the vacant job at Arkansas . 

Quaintance is Arizona State's highest rated recruit since 247Sports began its rankings in 2000 and is just the second five-star recruit Sun Devils coach Bobby Hurley has landed, joining Josh Christopher, who committed to ASU in the 2020 recruiting cycle. The Sun Devils 2024 recruiting class now ranks No. 14 in the 247Sports team rankings .

Quaintance ranks as the No. 8 overall player in his recruiting class and the second-ranked center behind Duke signee Khaman Maluach. Quaintance won't turn 17 until July, which makes him ineligible for the 2025 NBA Draft . NBA rules state that a player must be at least 19 years old during the calendar year of the draft, which opens the door for Quaintance to play two seasons in college.

Quaintance committed to Kentucky out of high school over Florida , Missouri , and Ohio State . He took an official visit to ASU last weekend and also visited Memphis . His commitment gives Hurley and his staff a building block as they transition from the Pac-12 to the Big 12 for the 2024-25 campaign. 

Here is Quaintance's scouting report from 247Sports Director of Scouting Adam Finkelstein. 

He's 6-foot-9 with massively long arms (7-foot-3-plus wingspan), vertical athleticism, a strong frame, good hands, soft touch, shooting potential, natural face-up skill, and signs of a passing instinct. He also runs the floor well and is a solid rebounder when he commits himself. Offensively, he has all the natural tools to be a huge mismatch threat. He's already a major lob and tip-dunk threat who dunks balls while still on his way up, and is equally dangerous out of the dunker spot. He's intent on developing his shooting range and has the natural touch to do so, which will allow him to maximize floor-spacing in both directions. Consequently, he should be a very tough cover in ball-screen action, because he's equally capable of rolling or popping. He can put the ball on the floor and attack opposing bigs off the dribble. He's also a threat to out-run them from rim-to-rim and capable of both making tough catches in traffic and then absorbing contact. Long-term, he should even be someone who is difficult to double-team because of his natural passing ability.

The Sun Devils' incoming recruiting class includes four-star forward Amier Ali, four-star forward Sammie Yeanay, three-star guard Bo Alridge, three-star center Jaden Smith, and Quaintance.

Our Latest College Basketball Stories

NCAA Basketball: NCAA Tournament Second Round-Texas vs Tennessee

Calipari lands Tennessee transfer Aidoo at Arkansas

Matt norlander • 1 min read.

gettyimages-2097719356-1-1.jpg

Ex-Oregon State star Raegan Beers transfers to Oklahoma

Isabel gonzalez • 1 min read.

NCAA Basketball: Utah at St. Mary's

Saint Mary's G Aidan Mahaney transferring to UConn

Cameron salerno • 1 min read.

jordanpope.jpg

Ranking college basketball's top 80 transfers of 2024

David cobb • 27 min read.

Oklahoma v Iowa State

Kentucky roster: Breaking down 2024-25 Wildcats

Cameron salerno • 10 min read.

usatsi-22051707-1.jpg

UNC roster breakdown: Heels land Belmont's Tyson

Cameron salerno • 5 min read, share video.

duke university basketball tours

Five-star C Jayden Quaintance commits to Arizona State

duke university basketball tours

UNC gets bump after landing Belmont's Tyson

duke university basketball tours

Calipari lands Vols transfer Aidoo

duke university basketball tours

Transfer portal: Ranking top 80 players

duke university basketball tours

Saint Mary's G Mahaney transferring to UConn

duke university basketball tours

Ex-FAU star Goldin following May to Michigan

duke university basketball tours

Wake Forest's Carr to transfer to Kentucky

duke university basketball tours

Calipari lands UK signee Richmond to play for Hogs

duke university basketball tours

North Carolina lands Belmont star Cade Tyson

duke university basketball tours

University of Missouri Athletics

Mark Mitchell

Men's Basketball 4/29/2024 3:00:00 PM

Men’s Basketball Signs Top-10 Transfer Mark Mitchell

The University of Missouri men's basketball team added to its roster on Monday, signing a two-year starter from Duke in Mark Mitchell .

Ranked as high as the No. 7 transfer nationally by CBS Sports, Mitchell started 67-of-68 games in his two seasons at Duke. The 6-foot-9 forward tallied 700 points with the Blue Devils, averaging 10.3 points and 5.2 rebounds per game. Mitchell also keyed Duke to 54 wins in his two campaigns with 29 ACC victories, one ACC Tournament championship and two NCAA Tournament bids, including a spot in the 2024 Elite Eight.

"Mark is a proven winner with a top skill set on both the offensive and defensive ends of the court," said Whitten Family Men's Basketball Head Coach Dennis Gates . "He will really thrive in our system, which will allow him to showcase just how versatile of a player he is. Mark is a matchup nightmare who is a physical player with a knack for getting to the free-throw line. He has elite experience in the ACC and his production in two years only speaks for itself. We're looking forward to Mark joining our Mizzou family as we strive to win championships."  

A native of Kansas City, Kansas, Mitchell tallied 11.6 points per game as a sophomore in 2023-24, while ranking second on Duke with 6.0 rebounds, 24 blocks and 159 free-throw attempts. Named to the Julius Erving Award Watch List, which recognizes the nation's top small forward, Mitchell scored in double figures in 21 of his 33 games with five 20-point performances and three double-doubles. Overall, he led the team in scoring seven times in 2023-24 and in boards on six occasions.

Prior to his time with Duke, Mitchell was named a McDonald's All-American in 2022, scoring a game-high 19 points in the annual all-star game. Ranked as high as the nation's No. 13 recruit, Mitchell averaged 17.6 points and 6.3 rebounds as a senior at Sunrise Christian Academy.

Mitchell is the Tigers' fourth signee during the spring transfer window, joining Jacob Crews , Tony Perkins and Marques Warrick . Together, the four players rank as the No. 6 transfer class in the nation and are set to connect with the nation's No. 4 freshman class that signed in November as the newest members of the Mizzou program.

Site logo

Thanks for visiting !

The use of software that blocks ads hinders our ability to serve you the content you came here to enjoy.

We ask that you consider turning off your ad blocker so we can deliver you the best experience possible while you are here.

Thank you for your support!

duke university basketball tours

was not found

  • Grand Rapids/Muskegon
  • Saginaw/Bay City
  • All Michigan

Pair of Purdue basketball players finalize transfer destinations

  • Updated: Apr. 29, 2024, 2:11 p.m. |
  • Published: Apr. 29, 2024, 1:50 p.m.

purdue

Texas Southern forward Kenny Hunter (1) defends Purdue guard Ethan Morton (25) during the second half of an NCAA college basketball game in West Lafayette, Ind., Tuesday, Nov. 28, 2023. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy) AP

Both of the players who transferred off of Purdue’s national runner-up roster have now found new homes in college basketball -- in different directions from West Lafayette.

Purdue transfer guard Ethan Morton announced his commitment to Colorado State on Monday, picking the Mountain West school for his final season of college eligibility.

His commitment comes a week after former teammate Mason Gillis also made his transfer commitment to Duke.

Both players have one remaining season of eligibility.

Gillis spent five seasons in West Lafayette; he redshirted as a true freshman in 2019-20. He was Purdue’s best 3-point shooter last season at 46.8 percent as he averaged 6.5 points per game off of the bench. He now will join a remade Duke roster that has seen seven players depart via the transfer portal this offseason.

Morton increased his role over his first three seasons in West Lafayette, from 8.7 minutes per game as a freshman to a starter at 25 minutes per game as a junior in 2022-23. But after Purdue brought in transfer guard Lance Jones, Morton saw his role decrease to 10 minutes per game last season; he scored only 24 total points and played only seven minutes in the NCAA Tournament. He joins a Colorado State program that made the second round of the NCAA Tournament this year.

Purdue has now lost four players off of its Big Ten championship roster: seniors Zach Edey and Jones also departed.

If you purchase a product or register for an account through a link on our site, we may receive compensation. By using this site, you consent to our User Agreement and agree that your clicks, interactions, and personal information may be collected, recorded, and/or stored by us and social media and other third-party partners in accordance with our Privacy Policy.

duke university basketball tours

University of Texas Athletics

Men’s Basketball signs Jordan Pope

Men’s Basketball signs Jordan Pope

Pope has scored 965 points in 64 career games (63 starts) during the last two seasons at Oregon State.

AUSTIN, Texas — Jordan Pope has signed an Athletic Scholarship Agreement (ASA) to play basketball next season at The University of Texas, head coach Rodney Terry announced Thursday. Pope, who spent last two years at Oregon State University, will join the Longhorns for the upcoming 2024-25 season and have two years of eligibility remaining.

Pope (6-2, 165), a guard from Oakley, Calif., has played in 64 career games (63 starts) and registered 965 points (15.1 ppg), 183 assists (2.9 apg) and 165 rebounds (2.6 rpg) in 2,214 minutes (34.6 mpg) over the last two seasons at Oregon State. He has converted 43.9-percent (342-779) from the floor, including a 37.4-percent mark (126-337) from three-point range, and 86.1-percent (155-180) from the free throw line during his first two collegiate seasons.

During his sophomore season in 2023-24 at Oregon State, Pope started all 32 games and led the team in scoring (17.6 ppg), assists (109, 3.4 apg) and minutes (35.7 mpg). An All-Pac-12 Honorable Mention selection, he converted 45.1-percent (201-446) from the floor, including a 37.1-percent mark (66-178) from three-point range, and 87.9-percent (94-107) from the free throw line during the year. Pope finished the season as the fourth-highest scoring sophomore in program with 562 total points.

Pope reached double figures in scoring in 31 of 32 contests, including twelve 20-point performances and a pair of 30-point efforts last season. He was named the ESPN and Naismith National Player of the Week and Pac-12 Player of the Week (Jan. 29) for his efforts during the wins over Arizona (Jan. 25) and Arizona State (Jan. 27), as he averaged 25.0 ppg and 5.5 apg while hitting 60.7-percent from the floor in the two contests. Pope had 31 points and knocked down the game-winning three-pointer as time expired in the 83-80 victory over No. 9 Arizona. He also recorded 30 points at Stanford (Feb. 24).

As a freshman in 2022-23 at Oregon State, played in all 32 games (31 starts) and led the team in scoring (12.6 ppg), assists (74, 2.3 apg) and minutes (33.6 mpg). A Pac-12 All-Freshman Team selection, he converted 42.3-percent (141-333) from the floor, including a 37.7-percent (60-159) mark from three-point range, and 83.6-percent (61-73) from the free throw line during the year. Pope set the school freshman record for three-point field goals made (60) and tied the Oregon State freshman scoring record (403 points). He also posted the third-highest total of minutes played (1,074) by a freshman in school history.

Pope led all Pac-12 freshmen in total points and ranked second in total assists. A three-time Pac-12 Freshman of the Week choice, he reached double figures in scoring in 23 of his 32 games. Pope tallied a season-high 23 points (6-10 FG, 10-10 FT) in 37 minutes against Portland State (Nov. 27). He also recorded 19 points against Colorado (Jan. 28), 19 at California (Jan. 22), 15 at Texas A&M (Dec. 11) and 14 against Duke (Nov. 24).

Pope was a three-year letterman at Prolific Prep (Napa, Calif.) and became the third all-time leading scorer in program history in just three seasons. During his senior season, he averaged 17.8 points per game and was selected to the All-Grind Session First Team and named the Under the Radar Player of the Year. Pope was the team's sixth man as a junior and averaged 12.9 points per contest. In his sophomore season, he averaged 15.3 points per game and helped lead Prolific Prep to a Grind Session championship. Pope attended Freedom High School (Oakley, Calif.) as a freshman in 2018-19 and became the first freshman in program history to earn first-team all-league honors after averaging 20.7 points per contest.

Site logo

Thanks for visiting !

The use of software that blocks ads hinders our ability to serve you the content you came here to enjoy.

We ask that you consider turning off your ad blocker so we can deliver you the best experience possible while you are here.

Thank you for your support!

duke university basketball tours

19th Edition of Global Conference on Catalysis, Chemical Engineering & Technology

Victor Mukhin

  • Scientific Program

Victor Mukhin, Speaker at Chemical Engineering Conferences

Title : Active carbons as nanoporous materials for solving of environmental problems

However, up to now, the main carriers of catalytic additives have been mineral sorbents: silica gels, alumogels. This is obviously due to the fact that they consist of pure homogeneous components SiO2 and Al2O3, respectively. It is generally known that impurities, especially the ash elements, are catalytic poisons that reduce the effectiveness of the catalyst. Therefore, carbon sorbents with 5-15% by weight of ash elements in their composition are not used in the above mentioned technologies. However, in such an important field as a gas-mask technique, carbon sorbents (active carbons) are carriers of catalytic additives, providing effective protection of a person against any types of potent poisonous substances (PPS). In ESPE “JSC "Neorganika" there has been developed the technology of unique ashless spherical carbon carrier-catalysts by the method of liquid forming of furfural copolymers with subsequent gas-vapor activation, brand PAC. Active carbons PAC have 100% qualitative characteristics of the three main properties of carbon sorbents: strength - 100%, the proportion of sorbing pores in the pore space – 100%, purity - 100% (ash content is close to zero). A particularly outstanding feature of active PAC carbons is their uniquely high mechanical compressive strength of 740 ± 40 MPa, which is 3-7 times larger than that of  such materials as granite, quartzite, electric coal, and is comparable to the value for cast iron - 400-1000 MPa. This allows the PAC to operate under severe conditions in moving and fluidized beds.  Obviously, it is time to actively develop catalysts based on PAC sorbents for oil refining, petrochemicals, gas processing and various technologies of organic synthesis.

Victor M. Mukhin was born in 1946 in the town of Orsk, Russia. In 1970 he graduated the Technological Institute in Leningrad. Victor M. Mukhin was directed to work to the scientific-industrial organization "Neorganika" (Elektrostal, Moscow region) where he is working during 47 years, at present as the head of the laboratory of carbon sorbents.     Victor M. Mukhin defended a Ph. D. thesis and a doctoral thesis at the Mendeleev University of Chemical Technology of Russia (in 1979 and 1997 accordingly). Professor of Mendeleev University of Chemical Technology of Russia. Scientific interests: production, investigation and application of active carbons, technological and ecological carbon-adsorptive processes, environmental protection, production of ecologically clean food.   

Quick Links

  • Conference Brochure
  • Tentative Program

Watsapp

duke university basketball tours

Duke University Blue Devils

Khaman Maluach - Duke Men's Basketball 2024

Men's Basketball 4/24/2024 10:55:00 AM

Five-Star Center Maluach Joins Duke's Top-Ranked Recruiting Class

7-foot-2 center from nba academy africa is no. 3 overall prospect according to 247sports.

Site logo

Thanks for visiting !

The use of software that blocks ads hinders our ability to serve you the content you came here to enjoy.

We ask that you consider turning off your ad blocker so we can deliver you the best experience possible while you are here.

Thank you for your support!

duke university basketball tours

COMMENTS

  1. Cameron Indoor Stadium

    Located off the concourse of the iconic arena, the Hall of Honor provides 5,061 square feet of function space. Wrapped with Duke basketball history and steps from a view of the court, what a great ...

  2. Duke Basketball Museum & Sports Hall of Fame

    Decades of Duke University's athletic achievements are showcased with visual and audio exhibits, theater and trophies of national championships. ... Duke Basketball Museum & Sports Hall of Fame. ... Amenities. Tours: Self guided; Location. Schwartz-Butters Athletic Center 306 Towerview Dr. Durham, NC 27708. Contact (919) 613-7500 www.goduke ...

  3. Visit

    All official Duke University campus tours are conducted free of charge. Furthermore, the services provided by the Admissions Ambassadors, such as the campus tours and Blue Devil Student Chats are provided free of charge. ... Discover the Duke Basketball Museum & Duke Athletics Hall of Fame, located adjacent to Cameron in the Schwartz-Butters ...

  4. Information

    Currently, the official seating capacity is at 9,314. On January 22, 1972, the stadium had a name change and was named Cameron Indoor Stadium. Its name change was to honor Eddie Cameron, who served at Duke as men's basketball coach from 1928 to 1942, football coach from 1942 to 1945, and athletic director from 1951 to 1972.

  5. Cameron Indoor Stadium

    Contact. phone_iphone 919-613-5752. desktop_mac Facility Website. Duke's Cameron Indoor Stadium, the crown jewel of college basketball's classic venues, has hosted a variety of sporting events for more than seven decades. The intimacy of the arena coupled with a unique seating arrangement puts the wildest fans right down on the floor with ...

  6. Duke Basketball Museum

    The Duke Basketball Museum, Athletics Hall of Fame and Rubenstein are open to the public with hours from Monday to Saturday from 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. Hours are subject to change due to event use ...

  7. Duke Blue Devils men's basketball

    The Duke Blue Devils men's basketball team represents Duke University in NCAA Division I college basketball and competes in the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC). The team is fifth all-time in wins of any NCAA men's basketball program, and is currently coached by Jon Scheyer. Duke has won 5 National Championships (tied with Indiana for fourth all-time behind UCLA, Kentucky, North Carolina, UConn ...

  8. Duke Blue Devils Men's Basketball Tickets

    The Duke Blue Devils men's basketball team is one of the most victorious programs in the NCAA. Duke's history is highlighted by five NCAA Championships, a record 22 Atlantic Coast Conference championships and 17 Final Four appearances. The Duke basketball program began in 1905, and joined the Southern Conference ahead of the 1928-29 season.

  9. Duke Basketball Museum & Sports Hall of Fame

    Duke Basketball Museum & Sports Hall of Fame. 306 Towerview Dr, Schwartz-Butters Athletic Center | Durham, NC 27708. (919) 613-7500. map.

  10. Playing Tour Guide? Visit These Duke Stops

    Duke University Chapel. ... And I'm a big Duke basketball fan, so any opportunity I have to feel the vibe in that building, I will take." ... As a tour guide coordinator for the Office of Undergraduate Admissions, which provides tours for around 50,000 visitors annually, Ilana Weisman knows plenty about what spots on campus leave guests ...

  11. 12 Must-Have Experiences at Duke

    Whether attending a game or not, all sports fans should take time to see the history of campus sports at the Duke Basketball Museum and Athletics Hall of Fame. The Hall of Fame is open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday to Friday and 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday. The museum and Hall of Fame honors individuals and teams, including five special displays ...

  12. Duke Basketball

    The event includes a free breakfast, T-shirt, and an opportunity to hang with the Duke Men's Basketball team. Visit the DFV site for more information and to register by selecting "Join a Team" and then "Team Campout." For campers, event registration will grant *two hours* of exemption from tent checks to encourage full participation! ...

  13. Student tour guides reveal what you won't hear on a Duke tour

    With the Duke Chapel as a dramatic Gothic backdrop to Duke's top-tier academics, cutting-edge research and national basketball championships, tour guides have a lot to boast about.

  14. Visiting Duke University: A Perfect Day Trip

    There is a lot to do at Duke University as a visitor, but you can probably do it all within 3-4 hours. If you take a guided tour or enjoy the lemur experience (yes, lemurs!), then you will need to allow more time. Visiting Duke University is the perfect half-day trip from Raleigh, Durham, Chapel Hill or Greensboro.

  15. Duke Basketball: Premier Point Guard Hopes to Hear From Blue Devils

    Duke basketball head coach Jon Scheyer has yet to enter the fray for any 2026 preps. Again, though, that's likely to change this summer after he and his crew scout players at various AAU events ...

  16. Blue Devils Dance Into NCAA Second Round

    Mar. 24 (Sun) / 5:15 p.m. vs. James Madison. Recap. Roster. BROOKLYN, N.Y. - The fourth-seeded Duke men's basketball team advanced to the second round of the NCAA Tournament on Friday night ...

  17. Duke Basketball Target Makes No Mention of Plans to Visit Blue Devils

    After Lincoln Park (Pa.) guard Meleek Thomas landed on the 2025 Duke basketball wishlist around this time last year, the 6-foot-4, 175-pound five-star noted in interviews that he grew up a fan of ...

  18. Duke 2024-25 roster: Purdue's Mason Gillis commits to Blue Devils out

    Duke's starting backcourt during the 2024-25 season is shaping up to be a pair of returners in Tyrese Proctor and Caleb Foster.Proctor bypassed the 2023 NBA Draft to return to school for his ...

  19. Arizona State basketball recruiting: Five-star C Jayden Quaintance is

    Quaintance ranks as the No. 8 overall player in his recruiting class and the second-ranked center behind Duke signee Khaman Maluach. Quaintance won't turn 17 until July, which makes him ineligible ...

  20. Men's Basketball

    The official Men's Basketball page for the Duke University

  21. Men's Basketball Signs Top-10 Transfer Mark Mitchell

    The University of Missouri men's basketball team added to its roster on Monday, signing a two-year starter from Duke in Mark Mitchell. Ranked as high as the No. 7 transfer nationally by CBS Sports, Mitchell started 67-of-68 games in his two seasons at Duke.

  22. 2022-23 Men's Basketball Schedule

    The official 2022-23 Men's Basketball schedule for the Duke University ... Duke University Blue Devils. Main. Baseball Baseball: Facebook Baseball: Twitter Baseball: ...

  23. Pair of Purdue basketball players finalize transfer destinations

    Texas Southern forward Kenny Hunter (1) defends Purdue guard Ethan Morton (25) during the second half of an NCAA college basketball game in West Lafayette, Ind., Tuesday, Nov. 28, 2023.

  24. Men's Basketball signs Jordan Pope

    AUSTIN, Texas — Jordan Pope has signed an Athletic Scholarship Agreement (ASA) to play basketball next season at The University of Texas, head coach Rodney Terry announced Thursday. Pope, who spent last two years at Oregon State University, will join the Longhorns for the upcoming 2024-25 season and have two years of eligibility remaining.

  25. Moscow Metro Tour and Bunker 42 with Private Guide

    While Moscow is beautiful above-ground, it's fascinating underground. On this tour you will visit two of Moscow's most interesting underground attractions: the beautifully decorated Metro system, and the Bunker 42 anti-nuclear facility. Your private guide will tell you all about the history of these places, and answer any questions you might have. You'll see a different side of Moscow on ...

  26. Moscow Metro Daily Tour: Small Group

    Moscow has some of the most well-decorated metro stations in the world but visitors don't always know which are the best to see. This guided tour takes you to the city's most opulent stations, decorated in styles ranging from neoclassicism to art deco and featuring chandeliers and frescoes, and also provides a history of (and guidance on how to use) the Moscow metro system.

  27. 2021-22 Men's Basketball Schedule

    The official 2021-22 Men's Basketball schedule for the Duke University ... Duke University Blue Devils. Main. Baseball Baseball: Facebook Baseball: Twitter Baseball: ...

  28. Private Moscow Metro Tour: explore the underground palaces

    Moscow is home to some extravagant metro stations and this 1.5-hour private tour explores the best of them. Sometimes considered to be underground "palaces" these grandiose stations feature marble columns, beautiful designs, and fancy chandeliers. Visit a handful of stations including the UNESCO-listed Mayakovskaya designed in the Stalinist architecture. Learn about the history of the ...

  29. Active carbons as nanoporous materials for solving of environmental

    Catalysis Conference is a networking event covering all topics in catalysis, chemistry, chemical engineering and technology during October 19-21, 2017 in Las Vegas, USA. Well noted as well attended meeting among all other annual catalysis conferences 2018, chemical engineering conferences 2018 and chemistry webinars.

  30. Five-Star Center Maluach Joins Duke's Top-Ranked ...

    Men's Basketball 4/24/2024 10:55:00 AM. Five-Star Center Maluach Joins Duke's Top-Ranked Recruiting Class 7-foot-2 center from NBA Academy Africa is No. 3 overall prospect according to 247Sports