Mission & History
Building a Sustainable Future
Stony Brook Southampton is a new kind of school – a small, intimate campus associated with a major research university. Student life and learning are interconnected and characterized by common purpose.
The curriculum is organized not into departments but around issues related to environmental sustainability, public policy, and natural resource management. Classes are shaped around an interdisciplinary core, and you will have many opportunities to explore how political, economic, and social issues relate to the environment. You will also learn valuable skills — team building, communications, negotiation, project management, and ethics — that you can use as you continue your work after graduation.
Energy, agriculture, and the elements are fully integrated into college life. Our Long Island campus on the Atlantic Ocean — just 80 miles east of New York City — already has a wind turbine. Students help plan new "green" buildings, and take part in landscaping the campus and growing organic fruits and vegetables.
Your classes will be small, and you will get to know your teachers and other students well. Our admissions process is highly selective: Think of us as an honors program with access to the resources of a major university.
Shaping our Response to Global Challenges
Our location — on top of the world's richest aquifer and in proximity to the Atlantic Ocean and Long Island Sound — is the perfect place for you to put theory to practice. Our integrated learning approach makes this possible.
Our students in the School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences (SoMAS) are exploring the ways land use practices affect the surrounding bays. Learning opportunities off campus include marine science short courses in
Jamaica over winter break and travel to Madagascar to study tropical rainforest ecology.
On campus we are finding ways to limit our ecological footprint by reducing energy and water consumption, planting gardens, and buying supplies locally. Internships and community service opportunities with local and national environmental groups and government agencies are not only encouraged, but expected.
Approximately 300 students are taking courses at Stony Brook Southampton this Fall, in diverse undergraduate programs related to the environment. About 2,000 students are expected to enroll within five years.
Southampton also offers an MFA creative writing program, headed by Robert Reeves. The Writers Conference, a 30-year institution on the East End, attracting leading authors and artists from across the country, is held here annually.


