Vancouver
Described by the Vancouver Sun as the "intellectual heart of the city", SFU's Vancouver campus is home to a diverse set of spaces for creative engagement. Through deeply integrated and sustained involvement with urban communities and audiences, SFU fosters arts and culture education and programming that generates change.
Goldcorp Centre for the Arts
- Audain Gallery
- Djavad Mowafaghian Cinema
- Studio T + D
- Djavad Mowafaghian World Art Centre
- Fei and Milton Wong Experimental Theatre
- Belzberg Atrium
Additional Spaces
Burnaby
Established in 1965, SFU's original campus sits atop Burnaby Mountain overlooking the Burrard Inlet to the north and Metro Vancouver to the west. Home to three key arts and culture properties, the campus remains a vital setting for the exploration, investigation and presentation of the arts.
Burnaby
Established in 1965, SFU's original campus sits atop Burnaby Mountain overlooking the Burrard Inlet to the north and Metro Vancouver to the west. Home to three key arts and culture properties, the campus remains a vital setting for the exploration, investigation and presentation of the arts.
Surrey
SFU Surrey is a catalyst for civic revitalization and sustainable building. It houses the Schools of Interactive Arts and the new Sustainable Energy Engineering (SEE) "living lab" for sustainability. Bing Thom's award-winning design integrates the academic campus with an office building, civic centre and shopping mall, blurring the boundaries between the university and the wider community.
Indigenous Art at SFU
The Bill Reid Centre for Northwest Coast Studies at SFU created the ímesh mobile app (available in the Apple Store) to guide visitors along three walking tours of Indigenous art on the SFU Burnaby campus. The ímesh (meaning "to walk" in Swú7mesh snichim or Squamish Language) app promotes awareness of the traditional and ancestral territories on which SFU is situated, and the distinct worldviews represented in the art.
Indigenous Art at SFU
The Bill Reid Centre for Northwest Coast Studies at SFU created the ímesh mobile app (available in the Apple Store) to guide visitors along three walking tours of Indigenous art on the SFU Burnaby campus. The ímesh (meaning "to walk" in Swú7mesh snichim or Squamish Language) app promotes awareness of the traditional and ancestral territories on which SFU is situated, and the distinct worldviews represented in the art.