Off Campus Housing in Twin Cities at University Of Minnesota System
Need to find off campus housing in Twin Cities? We have hundreds of apartment rentals available in Twin Cities. To search out Twin Cities off campus housing for University Of Minnesota System, click on the search button below.
If you find an apartment through our listings, submit your lease information, and we'll send you a $100 reward for using our service.
Looking for off campus housing (Apartments, Townhomes and Lofts) in the Twin Cities, Minnesota and suburbs area? You've come to the right place! We have hundred's of apartments for rent. To start your apartment search click here: Begin Apartment Search.
Our off campus apartment rental listings are FREE to use. Search through our off campus housing rentals at anytime. When you find an apartment through our service and report your lease, you'll receive $100.
Our rentals include studios, one bedroom, two bedroom and three bedroom apartments in some of Twin Cities's most desirable neighborhoods.
Use our online apartment locator to search available apartment listings, view apartment details, photos, and floor plans, and request a time to view apartments in person.
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Information About University Of Minnesota System
Founded in 1851, the University of Minnesota has four campuses—Twin Cities, Duluth, Morris, and Crookston—a collaborative center in Rochester, extension offices, and research and outreach centers throughout the state. The Office of Institutional Research and Reporting (IRR) at the University of Minnesota designs research studies and collects and analyzes data to provide information for institutional planning, policy formation, and decision-making. Among IRR’s primary responsibilities is ensuring the integrity of the data it provides to University decision-makers, governmental agencies, and other internal and external constituencies. The University of Minnesota was founded as a preparatory school in 1851, seven years before the territory of Minnesota became a state. Financial problems forced the school to close during the Civil War, but with the help of Minneapolis entrepreneur John Sargent Pillsbury, it reopened in1867. Known as the father of the University, Pillsbury, who was a University regent, state senator, and governor, used his influence to establish the school as the official recipient of public support from the Morrill Land-Grant Act, designating it as Minnesota's land-grant university.
William Watts Folwell was inaugurated as the first president of the University on December 22, 1869. In 1873, two students received the first bachelor of arts degrees. In 1888, the first doctor of philosophy degree was awarded. The Duluth campus joined the University in 1947; the Morris campus opened in 1960, and the Crookston campus in 1966. The University of Minnesota, founded in the belief that all people are enriched by understanding, is dedicated to the advancement of learning and the search for truth; to the sharing of this knowledge through education for a diverse community; and to the application of this knowledge to benefit the people of the state, the nation, and the world. The University's mission, carried out on multiple campuses and throughout the state, is threefold:
Research and Discovery
Generate and preserve knowledge, understanding, and creativity by conducting high-quality research, scholarship, and artistic activity that benefit students, scholars, and communities across the state, the nation, and the world.
Teaching and Learning
Share that knowledge, understanding, and creativity by providing a broad range of educational programs in a strong and diverse community of learners and teachers, and prepare graduate, professional, and undergraduate students, as well as non-degree-seeking students interested in continuing education and lifelong learning, for active roles in a multiracial and multicultural world.
Outreach and Public Service
Extend, apply, and exchange knowledge between the University and society by applying scholarly expertise to community problems, by helping organizations and individuals respond to their changing environments, and by making the knowledge and resources created and preserved at the University accessible to the citizens of the state, the nation, and the world.