Denison is a strictly residential campus that features a mixture of historic and contemporary buildings.
The Homestead at Denison University is a soon-to-be-closed non-traditional housing option.
Student organizations and involvement Denison University is home to over 160 campus organizations with more than 600 students in leadership positions. The Denison Campus Governance Association (DCGA) is the Denison student governing body, in which all students are members. The DCGA Student Senate is the primary representative body of students on Denison's campus, and it has been involved in various student initiatives: from postponing quiet hours in the fall of 2007 to drafting the Code of Academic Integrity adopted in the fall of 2009 to encouraging the University President to sign onto the Presidents' Climate Commitment. Denison Community Association (DCA) is student-led and operated umbrella organization for student service committees. In 2015, 86% of students participated in community service. Founded in 1857,
The Denisonian is the student-run newspaper and oldest student organization on campus and prints ten issues per semester as well as online at denisonian.com.
The Bullsheet is a student-run publication for news, humor and community dialog that is printed daily and delivered to campus buildings. It was founded in 1979 to combat student apathy, and it remains central to campus culture by providing an open forum for free speech.
The Homestead is a student-run intentional community with a focus on ecological sustainability, founded in 1977. In 2025, the administration announced its plans to close the Homestead, after assuring students that it would not be closing the Homestead.
Fraternity and sorority life There are 19 nationally recognized fraternal organization on campus, governed by four councils. As of 2023, 35% of students join a fraternity or sorority.
Traditions and folklore D-Day, the successor to the college's old Scrap Day, is a celebration of the entire college, put on once a year by the University Programming Council (UPC).
Kirtley Mather, Class of 1909, named the tallest peak in Alaska's Aleutian Peninsula "Mt. Denison." In 1978 and 1998, groups of students, professors, and alumni scaled the mountain. == Arts ==