The Peter MacKinnon Building
The College Building at the University of Saskatchewan is a National Historic Site of Canada. This historical College Building is an excellent example of university buildings in the classic Elizabethan shape in Collegiate Gothic style. The College Building is also the home to the Museum of Antiquities (which is filled with Egyptian, Greek, Roman, and Medieval artifacts), and one of the many campus art galleries.

Campus Art Galleries
The University of Saskatchewan campus houses four art galleries, featuring items from the university collection, travelling exhibits and student works. Admission is free. Stop by and experience imaginative and innovative works from artists in Saskatoon, across Canada and around the world.
Kenderdine Gallery (2nd floor of Agriculture Building)
Gordon Snelgrove Gallery (Art & Art History Wing, Murray Building)
College Art Galleries (Peter McKinnon Building)
St. Thomas More Gallery (2nd floor of St. Thomas More College)

Museum of Natural Sciences
Located in the Geology building, the Museum of Natural Sciences is designed to outline evolution throughout geological time, providing an integrated learning environment, with displays of living plants, animals, fossils, rocks and minerals.

U of S Observatory
The campus observatory was constructed in 1928, and houses a 3 metre long refracting telescope with 6 inch diameter lens.

Little Stone School House
The "Little Stone School House" or Victoria School House was originally built in 1888. It is pleasantly situated in a quiet spot on the University of Saskatchewan grounds, just off College Drive.

Agriculture Building
The Agriculture Building was built in 1991 and upgraded in 2000. It is the first major building on campus clad with glass rather than brick or stone. It is also home to several displays outlining the agricultural history of the priaries starting from pre-European agriculture to the end of the 20th Century. It is also home to another of the campuses many Art Galleries.




