Hatfield The university's main campus and central administration offices are situated in the suburb of
Hatfield,
Pretoria and houses six of the nine faculties. The campus, bordered by the suburb of
Brooklyn to the south and Hatfield to the north, was built over and has more than 60 buildings of historical value. Adjacent to the Hatfield campus is the Hillcrest campus, which contains the High Performance Centre and LC de Villiers Sports Grounds, which were developed on . Adjacent to the sport grounds is the university's experimental farm, which is used to conduct field experiments for the Faculty of Natural and Agricultural Sciences. The campus is served by the
Hatfield Gautrain station connecting Pretoria and
Johannesburg. A university bus shuttle service operates between the Hatfield campus and the Groenkloof and Prinshof campuses, whilst a park-and-ride shuttle service operates between the Hatfield and Hillcrest campus.
Museums The university's art collection consists primarily of paintings, sculptures and graphic works by South African artists including the likes of
Jacobus Hendrik Pierneef, Gregoire Boonzaier,
William Kentridge and Sam Nhlengethwa. The collection also incorporates artworks by renowned international artists such as
Max Pechstein,
Käthe Kollwitz,
Max Liebermann,
George Grosz,
Otto Mueller,
Thomas Benton and
Marc Chagall. The university's sculpture collection, the largest such collection in South Africa, contains sculptures by Sidney Kumalo, Maureen Quinn, Michael Teffo, Anton Smit, Anton van Wouw, Edoardo Villa and others. The Old Arts Building was proclaimed a
provincial heritage site in 1968 and houses the Van Tilburg Collection, Van Gybland-Oosterhoff Collection and
Mapungubwe Collection. The university is the custodian of the collection of artefacts found at the
Mapungubwe National Park and
World Heritage Site and such display these artefacts in the Javett Art Centre. Gold ornaments, ivory, bone, ceramic-ware, clay figurines, trade beads, iron and copper artefacts are on permanent public display. The
Van Gybland-Oosterhoff Collection is a ceramic collection, donated by Dr Horace Hugo Alexander van Gybland Oosterhoff and accepted by the university on 14 March 1939, is the largest collection of objects, publications, memorabilia and photographs of historical interest, relating to Dutch culture outside the Netherlands. The Old Merensky Library houses the
Edoardo Villa Museum, the home of the largest collection of sculptures by the Italian artist
Edoardo Villa and one South Africa's most renowned sculptors, as well as sculptures by Anton van Wouw and the largest work by the artist Alexis Preller (3m x 13m) titled
The Discovery. Other art collections include the
Christo Coetzee collection which was bequeathed to the university by the artist in 2001 and consists of more than 3000 objects, NKP Ceramics Collection,
Hilgard Muller Collection, Mike Edwards Collection,
Kruger Collection, Frans Esterhuizen Cartoon Collection, Baldinelli Trust Collection and
Mimi Coertse Collection.
Mirage F1CZ donated to the university and assembled with the help of the
South African Air Force Museum from
AFB Swartkop, the Air Force Servicing Unit at the
Waterkloof Air Force Base, Mirage specialists from
Aerosud, Lona Construction and Intermine Agencies. The Mirage F1 was assembled in order to promote science and technology at the University of Pretoria. The university's Science, Engineering and Technology (SET) Discovery Centre, Sci-Enza, was officially launched in 1977. The Discovery Centre is an umbrella complex where young children, students and adults can explore the world of science, engineering and technology in a "play-as-you-learn" way. biological science exhibit; botanical garden and indigenous technology exhibit. File:Willem Lodewyk, Etching by Jacobus Houbraken 570004.jpg| File:University of pretoria equine sculpture.jpg| File:Mapungubwe, Limpopo, South Africa (20356187550).jpg|
Key places The main hall and site of ceremonies, the Aula, was designed by Karel Jooste and completed in 1958. The Aula was the first opera house to be built in the capital and remained the major venue in the city until the State Theatre's completion in the early 1980s. The 1012-seat auditorium has played host to foreign dignitaries, presidents and local and international artists. The main music complex, comprising the 500-seat Musaion and 3000-seat Amphitheatre, was built between 1960 and 1964. The University Chapel, formally the Church of
Saint Alfons Maria de Liguori, and the accompanying monastery, was built in 1925 and was bought from the Catholic Church in 1980. Saint Alfons, who was canonised in 1839, was the founder of the order of Ligournians (or
Redemptorists), an order founded in 1732 in Naples, Italy and dedicated to helping underprivileged communities. ==Other campuses==