Most of the campus is in the
Town of Oswego, including the
census-designated place. Portions of the campus are in
Oswego City. Founded in the city of Oswego, the university was created to train teachers to meet pressing educational needs. SUNY Oswego moved to its current location on the shore of Lake Ontario in 1913 after
Sheldon Hall was constructed. The current campus is located on along Lake Ontario. Development of the campus was planned by the
architectural firm of
Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, who designed the major buildings. The campus today consists of 46 buildings with classrooms, laboratories, residential and athletic facilities. Recent years have witnessed the launch of a $700 million campus-wide renovation and renewal program, with the new Campus Center acting as the social hub of campus. The university's social hub, known as the Marano Campus Center Complex, opened in the fall of 2007, and includes new construction and renovation of the existing Swetman/Poucher complex. The $25.5 million Marano Campus Center portion, the new construction, includes the
Deborah. F. Stanley Arena and Convocation Hall and several academic departments.
Tyler Art Gallery The Tyler Art Gallery is located within Tyler Hall. The gallery showcases local and traveling exhibitions, exhibitions of faculty work and student exhibitions. Students curate and have sole responsibility for the annual exhibition of student work. The gallery's permanent collection comprises European, African, and American drawings, prints, paintings, ceramics and sculpture that date from the 18th century to the present, including several works by artist
Sacha Kolin. One subsection of the permanent collection, the Grant Arnold Collection of Fine Prints, contains over 500 prints by American printmakers from the first half of the twentieth century. Tyler Hall is in the process of significant renovations, with the first phase completed for a fall 2016 reopening.
Other buildings Physically separate from the main campus, on the other side of
New York State Route 104, is the south campus, consisting of Laker Hall (indoor sports, coaching classrooms, and athletic training rooms), Romney Fieldhouse (a
Quonset hut that hosted the Laker hockey program until fall 2006) and several athletic fields. In addition, more than of Rice Creek Field Station (for biological research and public programs) are on the South Campus. West Campus, along with Laker Hall, Hewitt Hall (which hosted most of the student organizations until the Campus Center's opening in 2006), Tyler Hall, Culkin Hall (the administrative building), Penfield Library, Lanigan Hall (consisting of large lecture halls) and Mahar Hall are all built in the
Brutalist style and date to the early 1970s. File:New York - Sheldon Hall - 20240227141145.jpg|Sheldon Hall was constructed in 1913 file:Oswego State Downtown - fmr First National Bank of Oswego, Marine Midland Bank West Side Branch - Oswego, New York - 20210221.jpg|Building at Bridge Street File:SUNYOswegoFromGlimmerglass.jpg|Campus as viewed from Glimmerglass Lagoon File:Shineman.jpg|Shineman Center File:Lake Ontario Sunset .jpg|Approaching sunset over Lake Ontario File:Oswego Fall 2016.jpg|The SUNY Oswego campus ==Accreditations==