Facilities
Bridging Classrooms, Corporations, and Convenience: Kelley Facilities








On the outside, the Kelley School’s most distinctive feature is the two-story bridge that spans Fee Lane and connects our graduate and undergraduate buildings. Inside, it’s the similarities between our facilities and those of the corporations where our graduates work.
With the latest technology, worldwide conferencing capabilities, state-of-the-art research labs, and widespread data connections and wireless access, Kelley facilities reflect the increasingly global, technology-centered ways in which companies do business. So, when our students start their internships and jobs, they quickly acclimate to their surroundings and start contributing.
Godfrey Graduate and Executive Education Center
Completed in 2002, the $33 million Godfrey Center has nearly 200,000 square feet of usable space. It houses our MBA, Kelley Direct, Graduate Accounting, and Executive Education programs. The Godfrey Center includes:
- The Forum, a light-filled central gathering space with soaring ceilings for great acoustics
- A trading room powered by four databases offering extraordinary research capability and real-time stock transactions
- Uniquely flexible space for various classroom configurations, 29 breakout rooms for small meetings, and conference rooms of varying sizes
- The latest classroom instructional tools, both a wireless and wired infrastructure, two computer labs, and 2,600 data ports for laptops
- Audio and video conferencing, connecting people and ideas around the world with the Kelley School
- Well-appointed student lounges with changing rooms and lockers for every student, along with offices and meeting spaces for student organizations
- An RPS Campus Café serving coffee and espresso, deli sandwiches, panini, wraps, breakfast items, cold drinks, and snacks
- Ample parking in our connected parking garage
Hodge Hall Undergraduate Center
Across Fee Lane from the Godfrey Center, Kelley’s Hodge Hall Undergraduate Center houses our Undergraduate Program, Doctoral Program, and many faculty and departmental offices. Currently undergoing a $60 million renovation and expansion, the former Undergraduate Building was renamed Hodge Hall on March 30, 2012. The original building includes:
- 34 classrooms—30 of which are fully equipped with the latest instructional technology, including data ports for laptops, sound systems, and computer projectors
- Four 24-hour computer labs
- Wired and wireless access throughout the building
- The Bstore, a student-run kiosk offering a variety of Kelley-branded apparel and other items
- The Hall of Honor—a common gathering area
- The Ernst & Young Center for Technology and Knowledge Management, with 58 computer workstations
- The Center for Education and Research in Retailing, with 32 computer workstations, database marketing software packages, geo-demographic systems, and 3-D virtual reality shopping environments
In the Heart of IU and Bloomington
With Kelley’s central location on the IU campus in Bloomington, you’ll be close to:
- All residence halls—including McNutt, which houses the Kelley Living Learning Center, a community of incoming freshmen interested in business
- Two main recreational sports centers—Student Recreational Sports Center and the Wildermuth Intramural Center (at HPER)—to stay fit between studying
- University food courts and RPS Campus Cafes
- The many restaurants of Kirkwood Avenue, Fourth Street, and downtown Bloomington
- The Herman B Wells Library—the university’s main library which also houses an Information Commons with 350 workstations, open 24/7 every day of the year
- And, Kelley is connected to the Business/SPEA Information Commons, a library with group study rooms and business-specific databases, and handy snacks, sandwiches, and coffee at the RPS Campus Café at SPEA