Pontifical Catholic University of Chile

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Katana VentraIP

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The Pontifical Catholic University of Chile (UC Chile; Spanish: Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile) is a traditional private university based in Santiago, Chile. It is one of the thirteen Catholic universities existing in Chilean university system and one of the two pontifical universities in the country, along with the Pontifical Catholic University of Valparaíso. Founded in 1888, it is one of Chile's oldest universities.

History[edit]

UC Chile was founded on June 21, 1888, by the Archbishop of Santiago, to offer training in traditional professions (law) and in technological and practical fields such as business, accounting, chemistry, and electricity. Its first chancellor was Monsignor Joaquín Larraín Gandarillas, and at the very beginning, the university only taught two subjects, law and mathematics. Since it is a Pontifical University, it has always had a strong and very close relationship with the Vatican. On February 11, 1930, Pope Pius XI declared it a pontifical university, and in 1931 it was granted full academic autonomy by the Chilean government.


UC Chile is a private, urban, multi-campus university. It is one of the eleven Chilean Catholic universities, and one of the twenty-five institutions within the Rectors' Council (Consejo de Rectores), the Chilean state-sponsored university system. It is part of the Universities of the Rectors' Council of Chilean Universities, and although it is not state-owned, a substantial part of its budget is given by state transfers under different programs.


UC Chile's 18 faculties are distributed through four campuses in Santiago and one regional campus located in southern Chile. The technical training centers affiliated with the university are: Duoc UC, the Rural Life Foundations, the Baviera Foundation, the Catechetical Home and the San Fidel Seminary. These centers carry out technical-academic extension activities in rural and agricultural areas. Other UC activities are a Sports Club, and a Clinical Hospital dependent on the Faculty of Medicine.


UC Chile's Graduates of the School of Architecture (one of the most prominent in Latin America) have also made important contributions to the country with such work as the Central Building ("Casa Central") of UC, and the National Library.


Two of its most important alumni are the Jesuit Saint Alberto Hurtado and Eduardo Frei Montalva, a Chilean president. Both of them studied in the School of Laws. Sebastián Piñera, former Chilean president, graduated from the university's School of Economics.


In 2017 the university faced what has been called a "wave of suicide" among its students. During 2017 a total of four students have taken their lives up to October, the previous year two students committed suicide.[4] Critics, including alumni, have written about the university's "lack of concern" for the suicide of students, an attitude they contrast to the university's staunch opposition to abortion.[5] The student union of the university issued a communique expressing feelings of guilt over the issue and the need to take charge.[5]

Pontifical Catholic University of Chile has a strong and long-standing rivalry with Universidad de Chile, as they are both widely recognized as the most traditional and prestigious in the country, and one is Catholic and the other, secular. This rivalry also translates to sports, especially football.[3]

Collaborations[edit]

The Department of Industry and System Engineering is engaging Stanford Technology Venture Program of Stanford University on a collaboration on innovation and technology ventures.


In December 2011, the schools of engineering of PUC and the University of Notre Dame signed an agreement to establish a dual graduate degree in civil engineering and the geological sciences,[6] which now extends to other departments in both schools.


In April 2013, UC Chile and the University of Notre Dame also signed a memorandum of understanding to strengthen scholarly engagement and expand their long-standing relationships.[7] The agreement establishes an exchange program in which faculty, doctoral students and university representatives from each institution will visit, work, study and collaborate with the other institution.

UC Chile has four campuses in Santiago and one campus in Villarrica. The campuses in Santiago are:


These four campuses have a total of 223,326.06 m2 constructed in a 614,569.92 m2 area. The Villarrica campus has 1,664 m2 constructed in a 2,362.5 m2 area.

Casa Central (in downtown )

Santiago

San Joaquín (in Commune of Greater Santiago)

Macul

Oriente (in Commune of Greater Santiago)

Ñuñoa

Lo Contador ( in Commune of Greater Santiago)

Providencia

Center of Studies of Social Undertakings

Instituto Milenio para la Investigación en Depresión y Personalidad – MIDAP

[22]

Núcleo Milenio Research Center in Entrepreneurial Strategy Under Uncertainty

[23]

(2016 Pritzker Architecture Prize winner)

Alejandro Aravena

Smiljan Radic

Emilio Duhart

Fernando Castillo Velasco

Landscape architect

Juan Grimm

DICTUC SA (a group of 40+ consultancies leading in engineering, management and innovation)

[1]

Salud Clinica UC

[2]

Hospital of the Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile

Mega UC Health Centres (maternity)

(in English)

Official web prospectus

(in Spanish)

Official website

University rankings

501-600 (2022)

390 (2023)

555 (2023)

103 (2024)

401–500 (2023)

=314 (2022-23)

1 (2023)

1 (2020)

3 (2022-23)

Motto

In Christi lumine pro mundi vita

June 21, 1888

Ignacio Sánchez Díaz

1,652 (full-time)[1]

2,210 (full-time)[2]

33,769

Avenida Libertador General Bernardo O'Higgins #340
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Chile