Milwaukee School of Engineering - MSOE

Table of Contents

Tours

  1. Admissions Virtual Tour

    Get to know the spots on campus that you'll become familiar with during your time as a Raider.

    Stops

    1. Admissions Office

      MSOE's Admissions Department - located on the third floor of the Campus Center - is the starting point for your MSOE journey. Whether you're a high school student applying for freshman year, a prospective transfer student, an international student interested in a bachelor’s degree, or looking to add a graduate degree to your resume, your path to MSOE starts here.
    2. Grohmann Museum

      The Grohmann Museum is home to the world’s most comprehensive art collection dedicated to the evolution of human work. The Man at Work collection comprises more than 1,000 European and American paintings and sculptures from 1580 to the present.

      The museum is also home to the Humanities, Social Science and Communication Department and has a number of classrooms.
    3. Krueger Hall

      Krueger Hall is home to the Rapid Prototyping Center and MSOE’s award-winning radio station WMSE 91.7 FM, well-known as the alternative frontier for Milwaukee music with an eclectic mix. There are also classrooms and a student project room in Krueger Hall.
    4. Fred Loock Engineering Center

      The Fred Loock Engineering Center is home to classrooms and more than 40 state-of-the-art laboratories. Much of the education and research conducted by faculty, staff and students happens in this building; it's home to many labs, classrooms, faculty and department offices and other resources.

      In this building you'll find:
    5. Allen-Bradley Hall of Science

      The Allen-Bradley Hall of Science (also known as the Science Building) is home to classrooms and more than 40 state-of-the-art laboratories. Acquired in 1958, the Allen-Bradley Hall of Science was renovated to reflect contemporary design, with an aluminum and glass exterior. It was dedicated in 1960.

      In this building you'll find:

    6. Walter Schroeder Library

      The Walter Schroeder Library is a resource for MSOE students, faculty, alumni and businesses, including print and non-print reference materials and computers. Classrooms and faculty offices are located on the third floor. The library also is home to the world’s largest light bulb!
    7. Dwight and Dian Diercks Computational Science Hall

      Dwight and Dian Diercks Computational Science Hall opened its doors in September 2019. The 64,000 square-foot building is home to the university's Bachelor of Computer Science program and an NVIDIA GPU-powered supercomputer, placing MSOE at the forefront of artificial intelligence education. (AI video approved for use by NVIDIA.)


      In this building you'll find:
    8. Roy W. Johnson Residence Hall / Viets Tower

      Roy W. Johnson Residence Hall (RWJ) houses several hundred students and also contains the Residence Life Office, dining hall for all three MSOE residence halls, a game room, Roscoe’s restaurant and the Food Services Office. RWJ is comprised of 12 floors of double and single rooms.

      Beginning June 2020, MSOE will begin renovations to transform RWJ into the new Hermann Viets Tower Living-Learning Community whch is anticipated to reopen in September 2021. 

    9. Regents Residence Hall

      Regents Hall (RH) is arranged apartment style with each suite containing bedrooms, a bathroom and a kitchenette as well as the features found in Johnson Hall. This addition to Johnson Hall was built in 1990. RH is comprised of four floors of suite style housing for upperclassmen and freshman females.
    10. Margaret Loock Residence Hall

      Margaret Loock Residence Hall (MLH) was constructed in 1967, and is named after the wife of a former president of Allen-Bradley Co., Fred Loock, who was chairman of the MSOE Board of Regents. Several hundred students call MLH home. MSOE's Public Safety Department also is located here. MLH is comprised of 11 floors of double and single rooms.
    11. Rosenberg Hall

      Rosenberg Hall is home to MSOE’s Rader School of Business, the Gene Carter Apple Technologies Learning Suite, classrooms and laboratories, offices and a study lounge. MSOE has offered business programs since the mid-1950s.
    12. Viets Field

      Pamela and Hermann Viets Field is an NCAA Division III competition field for soccer, lacrosse and club sport rugby. The field was built on top of a 780-car parking complex and is the first all-LED lit competition field in the United States.
    13. Kern Center

      The Kern Center is a 210,000-square-foot recreation, athletic, health and wellness facility that was dedicated in fall 2004. It is home to the Athletics Department, Counseling Services, Health Services, Recreational Services, Hotchkin Arena, ice arena, fitness center, field house, recreational running track and wrestling area. 

      Additionally, the Kern Center is home to MSOE's competitive E-Sports program, which launched in 2019. 
    14. Grohmann Tower

      The Grohmann Tower apartment building is MSOE’s housing option for upperclassmen featuring studio, 1- and 2-bedroom apartments. Currently open to all juniors, seniors and international students on a first-come, first-served basis.

      Grohmann Tower apartments come fully furnished and include all utilities (heat, air conditioning, electricity and water) as well as a full kitchen, bathroom and breathtaking views of Milwaukee!
    15. Campus Center

      The Campus Center is the center of social life at MSOE. Students meet up in the Campus Center to chat, play games, shoot pool or eat at the Skylight Marketplace. The “CC Building” also contains many student support services, classrooms, academic department and administrative offices, the Todd Wehr Conference Center and the Michael J. Cudahy Student Center.

      The CC is also home to: