The Durham lifestyle will be a big part of your experience. We’re known for combining the best of city, suburban, and rural living. There are as many reasons to love living here as there are Duke students. Within minutes, you can explore downtown’s nightlife and foodie reputation. Need a break? Hit the links at the Duke University Golf Club, hike a trail in Duke Forest, or visit the Durham Museum of Life and Science. You’ll enjoy discovering an area that’s been named the “hippest” city by Vogue as well as being ranked one of the nation's most livable and exciting places for business by Money, Fortune, and Forbes. Despite its small-town feel, Raleigh-Durham is home to more than 1.3 million people.
Economy
North Carolina has an economy driven by knowledge-based enterprises like software, IT, financial services, and film and TV production. Durham is home to the Research Triangle Park (RTP), which houses more than 200 companies, from Fortune 100 multinational corporations to innovative start-ups. Having employers like BCG, Cisco, Dupont, ABB, and Pfizer close by enables us to bring influential local speakers to campus, connect student clubs with business representatives, and tap more than 3,000 local Fuqua alumni as mentors for students.
Culture
With a world-renowned culinary scene as well as noteworthy arts and entertainment venues, there’s much to explore. Durham eateries run the gamut: laid-back Carolina BBQ joints, artisanal donut shops, food truck rodeos, decadent ice cream parlors, nationally reviewed pizza places, sushi, tapas, and other restaurants. With a huge focus on farm to table, even in our trendy microbreweries, Durham was voted “America’s foodiest small town” by Bon Appetit. You’ll also enjoy shopping, sports venues, arts festivals, houses of worship, and the great North Carolina outdoors. Living in Durham, you’ll be a short flight from New York and a direct flight from London. The area is dense with parks and forests, and in just three hours, you can reach either the mountains to the west or the beaches to the east.
The Duke campus offers plenty to do—including many time-tested Duke traditions. You’ll want to make time to experience all the cultural activities, sports events, and popular sites that Duke University has to offer.
Duke Chapel
An iconic symbol of the university, the chapel was built in 1932 and stands at the center of the Gothic West Campus. It features three pipe organs, a 210-foot tower, a 50-bell carillon, and 77 stained-glass windows, and can seat 1,600 people.
Sarah P. Duke Gardens
The 55 acres of landscaped and woodland gardens in the heart of Duke's West Campus are open to the public daily from 8 a.m. to dusk. Each year more than 300,000 visitors enjoy the garden's five miles of walkways and more than 8,000 species and varieties of plants.
Duke Forest
Covering more than 7,000 acres in the north-central Piedmont, Duke Forest serves as a natural outdoor laboratory for Duke and neighboring universities, and its trails are popular with local walkers and runners.
Cameron Indoor Stadium
This stadium is considered the crown jewel of college basketball. Originally conceived on the back of a matchbook cover in 1935, Cameron has become the celebrated home of the Duke Blue Devils.
Page Auditorium
Duke's largest theater, with the capacity to seat 1,200, has been the site of thousands of performances and lectures since its 1930 opening, including speeches by Sen. John F. Kennedy in 1959 and the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. in 1964.
The Duke Lemur Center
The only university-based facility in the world devoted to the study of prosimian primates, the Lemur Center is home to the world's largest colony of endangered primates.
Your MBCS classes will be held on the campus of Fuqua School of Business on Wednesdays, and on the campus of Nicholas School of the Environment on Fridays. Additional co-curricular activities and events will take place throughout the week on campus and throughout Durham.
Fuqua’s main building is 500,000 square feet of classrooms with horseshoe-shaped stadium seating, team rooms equipped with technology, outdoor gathering areas, auditoriums, offices, and meeting spaces for any need.
Fuqua’s campus also reflects our commitment to sustainability. We’ve installed energy-efficient lighting and HVAC units, as well as water-saving devices, and implemented an energy-saving temperature control policy. Students, faculty, and staff contribute to lowering our carbon footprint through the use of efficient transportation options, single-stream recycling, composting, and reusable and compostable utensils and food containers.
Fox Center
The Fox Student Center is the center of the Fuqua complex and the hub of student life. It has a student lounge, dining facilities with an impressive variety of cuisine, a spacious indoor winter garden area, outdoor terraces, changing rooms with lockers and showers, a student communications center, and office space.
Ford Library
Ford Library provides a serene, comfortable environment for quiet, focused study in a relaxed atmosphere. The library is designed for reader comfort with abundant natural light, comfortable seating, and generous display space. All students are encouraged to tour the library to learn about the resources available to you. Librarians will offer tours during your orientation and can provide database instruction throughout your program.
The 70,000-square-foot home of the Nicholas School houses five classrooms, a 105-seat auditorium, 45 private offices, 72 open office spaces, a 32-seat computer lab, an outdoor courtyard, the Wegner Art Gallery, conference rooms, shared workrooms, wellness rooms, and common areas.
Grainger Hall, which opened in 2014, is LEED Platinum certified by the U.S. Green Building Council, signifying that it meets or exceeds the highest standards for sustainability and green design.
Levine Science Research Center
The Nicholas School facilities are located in the A wing of the Levine Science Research Center (LSRC) and include laboratory space, faculty offices, teaching facilities and classrooms. The LSRC is also where you will find Hug Commons, Love Auditorium (B wing), and a wellness room.
It’s easy to make your home here. The Durham area is touted as one of the best places to live in the country in part due to the affordable standard of living. While housing options are plentiful in Durham, there is limited graduate student housing on Duke’s campus—so students typically find off-campus housing.
Our Off-Campus Housing site is a searchable database of houses, apartments, and rooms for rent. It’s just one of the resources available to help you find accommodations and roommates.
Start Date: July 2026
Duration: 10 months
Program location: Durham, NC
Campus location: Fuqua School of Business and Nicholas School of the Environment
Style: Cohort-based