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NTNU Trondheim
The Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU)
in Trondheim represents academic eminence in technology and the natural sciences as well as in other academic disciplines ranging from the social sciences, the arts, medicine, architecture to fine art. Cross-disciplinary cooperation results in innovative breakthroughs and creative solutions with far-reaching social and economic impact.
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NTNU consists of seven faculties and a total of 53 departments. The university has approximately 20,000 students and some 4,300 man-labour years of which 2,500 are within education and research. NTNU has more than 100 laboratories and is at any time running some 2,000 research projects.
NTNU is located in several campuses in Trondheim, the two main being Gløshaugen, for engineering and sciences, and Dragvoll, for humanities and social sciences. NTNU cooperates closely with SINTEF, one of the largest independent research institutions in Europe, and with St. Olavs University Hospital.
for more information about NTNU, visit www.ntnu.no.
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NTNU was formed in 1996 by the merger of the Norwegian Institute of Technology (NTH) (1910), the College of Arts and Sciences (AVH), the Museum of Natural History and Archaeology (VM), the Faculty of Medicine (DMF), and the Trondheim Conservatory of Music (MiT).
Click here to see the map of NTNU.
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