Skip to main content

ASU Open Door shakes up Downtown Phoenix campus

Nursing, law, journalism, health solutions schools and more open their doors to the community


child using virtual reality set
February 02, 2018

The Downtown Phoenix campus continued this year's Open Door series on Friday, welcoming visitors — who mingled with the Phoenix First Friday art and music crowd — for a peek inside Arizona State University's learning spaces.

From exercise activities to squid dissections, the event gave hundreds of attendees a look at the colleges, schools, programs and student groups that help make ASU the most innovative university in the country.

READ MORE: The Polytechnic campus starts Open Door in style

Video by Krisanna Mowen/ASU

If you missed the fun, don't worry: There are two more free Open Door events in February:

  • West campus: 1–6 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 10
  • Tempe campus: 1–6 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 24

Read more about what's in store at each campus here, including information on the free app that can help visitors map out the activities they want to visit. Get free tickets in advance online. 

Check ASU Now after each event for photo galleries and video, and follow along as our crew shows all the fun on Snapchat (search for username: ASUNow).

Top photo: 9-year-old J.P. Corens, of Phoenix, turns on the faucet through virtual reality at the ASU Preparatory Academy's display at the Downtown Phoenix campus' ASU Open Door, on Friday, Feb. 2. 

More Law, journalism and politics

 

Adelaida Severson and Adriana Gonzalez-Chavez smiling for a photo.

When giving goes global: ASU family invests in students studying media abroad

The dream of studying abroad and making connections globally while in college is often hindered by the substantial cost of traveling and living in a different country. But thanks to the generosity…

Person seated at a desk wearing headphones.

ASU, UMD Howard Centers partner with AP global investigations team on yearslong investigation into police use of force

The Associated Press global investigations team, the Howard Centers for Investigative Journalism at Arizona State University and the University of Maryland (UMD), and "Frontline" (PBS) on Thursday…

Portrait of Lydia Dawson.

ASU senior's thesis explores gender, politics and perception

For all its benefits, social media is an environment that remains rife with judgement, especially if you're a public figure, and — according to an Arizona State University student's recent research…