Introduction to the Campus

Campus Map
Liberty University’s Campus Map can be viewed online.
Academic Facilities
Liberty University’s academic facilities are continually changing from year to year. Academic facilities include our nationally recognized library and state-of-the-art buildings.
Arthur S. DeMoss Hall is the primary academic building on campus. Originally erected in 1985, DeMoss Hall was renovated in 2001 and now spans 500,000 square feet over four floors. Finished in 2003, the Grand Lobby of the building is an elegant centerpiece of the second floor. This impressive structure spans houses the Montview Student Union, computer labs, classrooms and student resource centers, and a rooftop terrace. It is home to the College of Applied Studies and Academic Success (CASAS), College of Arts and Sciences, School of Behavioral Sciences, School of Education, School of Engineering, and the School of Nursing.
Home to the one of the largest music school in the country, the Center for Music and the Worship Arts is a 4-story, 140,000-square-foot facility that includes two wings – an academic wing consisting of faculty offices, classrooms, lecture halls, music labs, recital halls, and a recording studio, as well as a performance wing consisting of a 1,600-seat concert hall.
The Center for Natural Sciences, added to the campus in 2017, is a four-story, 121,000-square-foot facility that is home to the School of Health Sciences and includes dedicated labs for general biology, chemistry, cell biology, genetics, forensic science, human biology, organic chemistry, and zoology. The center also offers a creation studies display, and faculty engage in research on topics ranging from algae biofuels and Alzheimer's disease to DNA analysis. Also housed in the building is a cadaver lab open to select undergraduate biomedical science students.
The Freedom Tower, completed in spring 2018, is a 17-story structure and a focal point in the center of campus. It is the home to the John H. Rawlings School of Divinity and the Liberty University Theological Seminary. At 275 feet, Freedom Tower is the tallest structure in the city of Lynchburg. The tower’s base includes a 150-seat interactive classroom as well as a classroom with multiple projectors that provide an immersive view. The tower also includes an observation floor, a 25-bell carillon, and features the Rawlings Scriptorium, which houses a collection of some of the earliest and most rare Bibles, as well as a life-size replica of the Gutenberg Press.
Jerry Falwell Library, named after Liberty’s founder, was completed in 2014 and boasts over 170,000 square feet, including a technology commons, 30 group-study rooms, an automated storage retrieval system, four-story book tower, multiple terraces and balconies, and a café.
The Center for Medical and Health Sciences is home to the College of Osteopathic Medicine (LUCOM) and select programs of the expanded School of Health Sciences. This 144,000-square-foot facility houses a medical library and provides hands-on training through lab simulation and standardized patient education.
Marie F. Green Hall houses the university’s administrative offices, the Student Service Center, which houses Student Accounts, Financial Aid, and the Office of the Provost, Registrar’s Office, Post Office, Student Affairs offices, the Office of Spiritual Development offices, LaHaye Recreation Center, Tilley Food Court, the Cinematic Arts–Zaki Gordon Center, Liberty University Art Museum, School of Communication and the Arts, Helms School of Government, the School of Law, and The Graduate School. The Tower Theater is a 640-seat state of the art theater where the Department of Theatre Arts produces six to eight shows a year including productions such as Beauty and the Beast, Steel Magnolias, Peter Pan, Mary Poppins, Little Mermaid, and Phantom of the Opera.
The School of Business, completed in 2019, is a 3-story, 78,000-square-foot facility, and houses the 2,000-square-foot Center for Entrepreneurship. The building includes a 500-seat auditorium, advanced information technology labs, data centers, and a stock trading simulator with New York Stock Exchange display boards and a real-time ticker, as well as dedicated Center for Cyber Excellence and Center for Financial Literacy.
Virtual tours of Liberty’s academic facilities are available online.
Athletic Facilities
Liberty University’s campus has practice and performance facilities for its 20 NCAA Division I athletic teams, 40-plus Club Sports teams, and 20-plus intramural sports. These facilities provide opportunities for students studying medicine, athletic training, sport management, and other health professions to work with athletes in real-world environments.
Williams Stadium opened in October 1989 and has undergone multiple renovations, the most recent expansion in August 2018 increased seating capacity to 25,000. The stadium houses the Liberty Football Center, which opened in 2006, was renovated and the Liberty Football program moved into its new home in April 2020. Located at the north end zone at Williams Stadium, the three-story 65,455-square-foot facility houses 18 luxury suites, a full media center, and expanded concessions and restrooms for the West side of the stadium. The facility includes a locker room, equipment room, player’s lounge including a nutrition center, cardio workout room, a press room, a new training room, and state-of-the-art weight room. The sports medicine area includes treatment beds, an onsite x-ray room, plus hydrotherapy pools.
The 169,000-square-foot Indoor Track Complex opened in January 2017. The track itself is the facility’s most dynamic feature and one of only a handful of indoor tracks in the U.S. to offer a six-lane, 200-meter, hydraulically banked oval. The 1,500-seat indoor track includes a six-lane, 200-meter track, training and weight rooms, locker rooms, concessions, and coaches’ offices.
The Liberty Natatorium opened in December 2017, with a seating capacity of 1,414. The state-of-the-art 75,000-square-foot facility is connected to the Indoor Track Complex has elevated Liberty’s NCAA Division I women’s swimming and diving team and men’s club swimming and water polo programs, while also attracting students and community members of all ages. The entire natatorium and indoor track complex share a 6,554-square-foot weight room and 2,400-square-foot training room.
The Vines Center opened in November 1990 and was renovated and expanded in 2014-15. It served as the home of Liberty basketball and volleyball teams for 30 years. The facility is also used for Convocation, concerts, church services, and conferences. In 2021, it reopened after receiving an exterior facelift with updates to the iconic silver geodesic dome roof, replacing it with a flatter, standing seam metal roof, and the addition of overhangs at the entrance.
The 4,000-seat Liberty Arena opened in December 2020 and is the new home of the Liberty men’s basketball, women’s basketball and volleyball programs. Liberty Arena is adjacent to the Flames’ and Lady Flames’ previous home, the Vines Center, with a tunnel connecting the two venues.
The Liberty Tennis Complex opened in November 2010 and features 12 outdoor and six indoor NCAA regulation courts, including 12 lighted courts for use anytime. The outdoor courts have elevated chairback seating that are centered with three courts on each side. The complex includes the Cook Tennis Center that contains men’s and women’s locker rooms, a training room, a stringing room, as well as offices for coaches and a team room. The center is used for NCAA competitions, intramural sports, and open play.
Opened in June 2013, the Worthington Field at Liberty Baseball Stadium has chairback seating for 2,500, and features the latest turf playing surface, as well as full-length, major league-style dugouts, a fully equipped media area, four suites, a club room, offices for the baseball program, and a spectator picnic area.
Kamphuis Field at Liberty Softball Stadium opened in January 2015. It features AstroTurf with a natural clay infield. The stadium includes 1,000 chairback seats, home, visitor, and umpires’ locker rooms, and a video scoreboard.
The Liberty Multipurpose Center, opened in summer 2022, is a 75,000-square-foot multi-use indoor facility that benefits NCAA, club, and intramural sports programs. The space includes batting cages, divided curtains to split the facility into small workout spaces, and room for Liberty's strength and conditioning teams to work with student-athletes. A walking bridge over Regents Parkway connects the Multipurpose Center to parking.
Information about additional athletic facilities housing soccer, outdoor track and field, field hockey and lacrosse, and men’s golf is available online.
Virtual tours of Liberty’s athletic facilities are available.
Dining Locations
The Reber-Thomas Dining Center, opened in August 2023, is a two-story, 120,000-square-feet facility with a seating capacity of more than 3,000 (indoor and outdoor seating) and 27 different stations with a variety of food options.
Recreation Facilities
Campus Recreation serves the Liberty University community with a wide variety of facilities. With recreation professionals in various fields, staff passionately lend their expertise to help students maintain a healthy lifestyle and they come alongside students to help round out their college life with experiences outside of the classroom.
Residence Halls
Liberty University Residence Life and housing options as well as a virtual tour of campus housing can be found online. For more information on what to expect while living on-campus, including guidelines and resources, read our On Campus Living Guide.