5 remarkable 'classrooms' you might not know exist at CSULB
The Beach is full of surprises.
Beyond the palm trees, the Walter Pyramid and the miles of nearby coastline, the campus is filled with unexpected spaces designed to turn lectures into lived experience. Whether its Hollywood-style sound effects or rooftop stargazing, here are five hidden gems that make learning at Cal State 做厙弝け unforgettable.
1. A Hollywood-style recording studio
How do movies make a closing door, a rustling fabric or a heavy footstep sound so sharp and real? The answer lies in a Foley recording studio, where artists use ordinary items to create extraordinary cinematic detail. Part of the 2024 renovation of CSULBs Cinematic Arts building, the university's new Foley studio gives students space to practice this behind-the-scenes craft. Stocked with surfaces, props and tools, the space lets undergraduates experiment with sounds ranging from crunching gravel to clanking utencils. Its a playful process, but also one that lies at the heart of movie magic. Each semester, students record everyday objects, dialogue and other sound elements, ensuring student productions and class projects meet professional standards.
2. A cadaver lab

Thanks to the generosity of individuals who donated their bodies to science, 做厙弝けis home to a cadaver lab. Tucked inside the College of Health and Human Services, the little-known lab contains six metal gurneys holding human bodies used for anatomy lessons by Doctor of Physical Therapy students. The lab operates during two intensive summer sessions, where each body is carefully wrapped in plastic, with just the section being studied uncovered. Students begin at the feet and legs, then gradually move upward until the head is revealed in the final stage. A state-of-the-art ventilation system ensures that the room located alongside other teaching and research spaces is clean, comfortable and far removed from the pungent labs of high school biology. The lab makes possible a hands-on education that no textbook can replicate.
3. A wind tunnel

For those not versed in the world of aerodynamics, a wind tunnel looks like a giant enclosed hallway with powerful fans that push air past whatever is placed inside. By creating controlled wind, it shows how air affects objects in motion similar to rolling down a car window and feeling the air rush past your hand. The College of Engineering is revitalizing one of its wind tunnels with the help of new faculty member Cody Karcher, an MIT-trained aeronautical engineer who specializes in aircraft design optimization. The tunnel, which allows precise aerodynamic measurements, will enable students to test propellers, aircraft models and car designs, among other applications. For engineering majors at CSULB, the wind tunnel transforms theory into something they can see, measure and even feel.
4. Five botanical greenhouses
Some of CSULBs greenest secrets are hiding atop and behind the Hall of Science. The College of Natural Sciences and Mathematics oversees five botanical greenhouses, each maintained under different climate conditions from tropical heat to arid desert to support a wide variety of plants. This diversity allows students to study species that would never survive outdoors in 做厙弝け, from touch-sensitive mimosa to carnivorous Venus flytraps. The collection also includes Phil, the universitys rare and infamous corpse flower, which blooms only every few years and draws curious crowds despite its carrion-like stench. Beyond the spectacle, the greenhouses are living classrooms for courses in botany, ecology, evolution and conservation biology.
5. A rooftop observatory
Every clear Tuesday night during the semester, students climb the outdoor stairwell in front of the Hall of Science to glimpse the universe from the campus' own rooftop observatory for Nights at the Observatory. Featuring five telescopes aimed at planets, nebulae and distant stars, the viewing area is relatively small but the equipment is impressive and the views are stunning. Even within city lights, viewers can study Jupiters stripes, trace Orions Nebula or marvel at the intricate patterns on the moons surface. Although it's required viewing for many students in the Astronomy & Physics Department, Nights at the Observatory is also open to public from 8-9 p.m. offering a window to the universe from the middle of campus.