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GCU MAGAZ I NE • 1 3

PART 5:

Hanging out here

“I hardly ever leave. There’s

food, there’s stuff to do, you

can hang out with friends,

go bowling, do just about

everything. It’s like your own

little home away from home.”

Brenda Ochoa

, junior Business Administration major

It doesn’t have a catchy name, like GCBC. But the cozy new outdoor

furniture under the trees in front of Kaibab Hall, on the north side of

GCU Stadium, quickly has become a preferred place to study and relax.

“I call it the ‘couches outside,’” freshman Jannah Gaudia said.

“Sometimes I take a nap here. It’s actually very comfortable.”

Faith Brandt, a senior dance education major, was lounging on a sofa

with her laptop, the branches of the tree providing shade. She was the

picture of late afternoon contentment.

“I like that it’s outside but still has comfy seating. It’s usually pretty

quiet unless there’s a soccer game,” she said.

Daniel Hull, a sophomore majoring in Marketing, calls the outdoor

lounge “the patio by the taco stand,” referring to its proximity to the

Taco Trueno cart.

He said such new hangout spots are one of GCU’s many homey

improvements. “I don’t have to get off campus a lot,” Hull said. “I think

they’ve done a good job with it.”

Another new hangout area that has caught on is an even more shaded

spot between Thunder Alley and the Lopes Performance Center.

“It’s cooler and shadier,” Desiree Rey said while studying math with

another freshman, Vernon Williams.

One of the most social spots on campus, Rey said, is The Grove at

night. Students fill the lawn, playing sports, watching sports and other

shows on laptops, picnicking and just hanging out.

But there also are plenty of other places to get away from it all.

Basketball player Joshua Braun, the most high profile athlete on campus,

appreciates that.

“Sitting on my balcony in my North Rim Apartment is nice,” he said,

“just to read and relax and quiet down, get in the space, spend some time

with the Lord.”

****

It doesn’t take long for visitors to get caught up in the GCU culture.

When more than 2,600 high school students from across Arizona

came to campus in early November for Health Sciences, Engineering

and Technology (HSET) Day, Ashley Rios of Tempe High School

realized that her dream of entering a scientific profession is within her

grasp — and GCU would be a great place to pursue that goal.

“I feel like these are my people, like it’s a place I could fit in,” she said.

“I am seriously considering applying.”

Ariana Iturbe gazed at the purple-clad crowd on a near perfect day

and said, “I see a happy environment. It’s clean, beautiful.”

A whole different world.

Jeannette Cruz, Karen Fernau, Mark Heller, Laurie Merrill and Rick Vacek

contributed to this story

The new seating area between

the Lopes Performance

Center and Thunder Alley is a

wonderfully shady spot to relax.