Mendel University in Brno
- Titulinis
- Mendel University in Brno
Based in Brno, South Moravia, Czech Republic:
– 9 200 students
– 1 campus
– 50 nationalities (full-time and exchange students)
– 1 600 staff
– 5 faculties and Institute of Lifelong Learning
– 160+ study programmes
Mendel University in Brno (MENDELU) is a public institution with a long tradition of excellence in teaching and research that has driven new ways of thinking since 1919 and proudly bears the name of Gregor Johann Mendel, the founder of modern genetics.
MENDELU offers over 100 graduate programmes in Czech and English. MENDELU comprises one university institute and five faculties. The university campus is located in Brno, the second-largest city in the Czech Republic.
MENDELU offers many highly specialized fields of study, some of which are unique in the Czech Republic, for example, viticulture or furniture design and production. In addition to the campus and dormitories, the school also includes places where students can do internships, expand their knowledge, and conduct research, these include extensive university forests, fields, gardens, an arboretum, and vineyards.
The campus is home to all MENDELU’s faculties – except for the Faculty of Horticulture in Lednice – a library, canteens, and an extensive garden. A dormitory is also nearby. MENDELU students thus have all facilities in one place.
The campus includes a large botanical garden and an arboretum, which are great places to relax, run, and study. It is also used for practical exercises for students.
No other university on the continent has such extensive, continuous, and species-diverse forests in close proximity to the school. In the forests, a third of which are located in a protected landscape area, students can try out managing forest resources in an era of climate change.
The university farm in Žabčice is a place for hands-on learning. In addition to experimental fields, we also keep livestock at the farm, with about 1,200 head of cattle. Vineyards can also be found here, a third of which produce grapes and the rest of which serve as a unique gene bank of grape varieties