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Description A bunch of cool little problems and traverses. This is buildering. It is like being at your own personal gym, but outside and free!
Getting There From any direction follow the signs to the CU Boulder campus.
The ClassicsMountain Project's determination of some of the classic, most popular, highest rated routes for CU Campus:
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Featured Route For CU Campus
High Exposure V0 CO : Boulder : ... : Engineering Center
A fun, and a little bit exposing, high-ball problem. Climb the corner, and reach into a positive crack underneath the roof. Stretch out and up to the window sill. Most people wuss out at this point. Check your nads, and reach out to the face. Follow up, and then move right over the airy traverse. Hint: For the transfer up to the sill, look for a nice little notch for your foot on the face.... [more] Browse More Classics in CO
By Brian Sorden Aug 23, 2001
| Everybody knows about the slated buildering that exists on the first level of the Engineering Center. I've seen some of the more obscure man-made problems sent by Tom Gage (i.e. under the stairs and in the corners.) This is a great place to build forearm strength but a much better venue for meeting young college women. Keep a secret? Check out the underground sandstone block party behind Macky Auditorium. M'kay. BTW: Has anyone ever possessed the cajones to scale the Math building? |
By Anonymous Coward Oct 3, 2001
| This is sweet! Free climbing while I'm at school. There are plenty of challenges on the engineering building, including lots of cool traverses, man made cracks and stairs to climb, and a door traverse thats V3! It rocks so try it out! |
By Anonymous Coward Aug 3, 2002
| CU is fun and you can get in a fast work our between classes. It is also shaded and usually has a nice breeze. If bouldering is a big waste of time you must either be wicked strong, don't need any help with endurance or your weak! I say the last one is your best bet. |
By Anonymous Coward Feb 12, 2003
| hey buildering and bouldering both rock, who cares how the problem got there? it just exists for the conquering. Door traverses are fun, so are super highball math building climbs. :) If you live in Boulder be sure to convince a crowd of chicks to gather cause i"ll be there next year conquering the math building ropeless. |
By Anonymous Coward Feb 16, 2003
| looks like the math building was done in front range freaks and the guy got down by running down the roof. haven't seen the movie, but there is a quick blip of it in the trailer. and to the previous AC...no shit it'd be "ropeless" |
By Anonymous Coward Feb 19, 2003
| There is a clip in Front Range Freaks of someone climbing the math building. But the true challenge isn't that section. Its the tower to the east of the section done in FRF. |
By Anonymous Coward May 30, 2003
| AC, in Front Range Freaks Timmy O'Neill scales the math building, then walks down the roof which is slanted at about a 45 degree angle. The holds are huge and unless you fuck up it should be good to go. |
By Joel Shanight Feb 24, 2004
| Try Fort Lewis College if you need a CU break,,,The Union building is a solid 5.10...Cooper Hall area of the dorms have good portruding holds...Major portrusion!!! |
By Anonymous Coward Aug 26, 2004
| Just got hasseled by some middle aged professor type, his exact words were "I wouldn't be doing that here, there's an all points [bulletin] for anyone skating, rollerblading, riding bikes, and climbing walls on campus." I'm a freshman here, but already I've seen at least 15 different people climbing here as well as climbed here 4 or 5 times myself. What's the word, are they cracking down? |
By Brian Sorden Oct 3, 2004
| Because I guess I started this banter, I want the last word here. Buildering is not something we do because we're too weak to climb real rock. We don't do it because we're too poor to go to The Spot. We do it because it's there and we're there. I would never imagine someone traveling to CU to check this stuff out. I did it between math and physics classes, while everyone else out there was smoking or talking on cell phones. I did it to unwind, out of boredom, not to replace free climbing. Because we're climbers, something inside relentlessly prompts us to climb anything and everything, from the jungle gym in elementary school to the dorms at Williams Village ala Timmy O'Neill in FRF (That guy is missing a few bolts, I want to party with him!) I loved it when he did the Daily Camera building because I've made renegade ascents on dozens of downtown buildings and never thought of that one. Climbing is an impulse. It's about freedom. So don't let CU professors or anyone else scold you for buildering, don't let other climbers tell you what climbing is or isn't. Monkeys in cages would probably prefer trees, and yet they continue to swing around their environment.
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By Kevin Meyers Oct 21, 2012
| My friends and I all climbed here in in our teens in the early eighties. We developed our forearm and crimp strength to give us the confidence to send the Eldo testpieces. We got hassled infrequently by the campus police. but now the Boulder po po seems to be in on the crackdown. They claim that it is against written campus law. Does anyone have any information pertaining to the legality of campus bouldering? Or any suggestions as to finding out the legal position on this subject? Our badass forefathers, founders of the sport, used to boulder here and it guiles me to think that this is yet another freedom lost to the Fascist Bastards. Does anyone have any experiences to share? P.S. Tom Gage is an old friend of mine, a solid dude of you're lucky enough to make his acquaintance. |
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