Campus Overview

RPI is a top-tier engineering and science university where roughly 5,900 undergraduates tackle rigorous STEM curricula on a hilltop campus overlooking the Hudson River in Troy, New York. What sets it apart from peer tech schools is the sheer intensity of the engineering focus — this isn't a liberal arts college with good science programs, it's a place where most students are building things, coding things, or solving equations, and the culture reflects that singular focus. If you want a school where your teammates in the dining hall are debating thermodynamics problems and where "fun" might mean a hackathon or a robotics competition as much as a party, RPI is your kind of place. It competes in the Liberty League as a D3 school, which means athletics are genuinely student-driven — you're here to be an engineer who plays a sport, not the other way around.


Location & Setting

Troy sits on the east bank of the Hudson River, about 10 minutes north of Albany and roughly three hours from both New York City and Boston. It's an old industrial city that's been in various stages of reinvention for decades. The area immediately around campus is hilly and residential, and downtown Troy — accessible by walking downhill — has a small but genuine food and bar scene along River Street, plus a well-known Saturday farmers' market. It's not a charming New England college town, and it won't win any beauty contests in February, but Troy has a scrappy authenticity that grows on people. Albany provides the big-box retail, airport access, and anything Troy itself lacks. The Adirondacks are about 90 minutes north, and the Berkshires are an hour east, so outdoor opportunities exist if you're willing to drive.

Where Students Live & How They Get Around

RPI is a residential campus — freshmen are required to live on campus, and a strong majority of students live in university housing or in nearby off-campus rentals within walking distance. Greek houses line the streets near campus and absorb a chunk of upperclassmen. The campus itself is built on a steep hill, and walking between classes means genuine elevation changes — "the Approach," the long staircase connecting lower and upper campus, is a daily reality that keeps everyone's legs in shape. A car is helpful for grocery runs and escaping Troy on weekends but not essential day-to-day. Winters are serious — Troy gets cold, gray, and snowy from November through March, and that shapes campus life significantly. Students hunker down indoors, and the long winter creates a kind of shared resilience that bonds people together.

Campus Culture & Community

Greek life is a significant social force at RPI, with roughly 25-30% of students participating. Fraternities and sororities drive a lot of the weekend social scene, and for students not interested in Greek life, it takes more intentional effort to build a social circle. The student union and over 200 clubs provide alternatives — there's a strong gaming culture, active engineering competition teams (concrete canoe, Formula SAE, design-build-fly), and a surprisingly good student-run theater and improv scene. The gender ratio historically skews male (roughly 65/35, though the gap has narrowed), and that imbalance is something students notice and talk about honestly. School spirit centers heavily on hockey — RPI's men's hockey program plays Division I (separate from the rest of the D3 athletics program), and games at the Houston Field House are legitimately loud and well-attended. The Big Red Freakout and the rivalry with Union College ("The Dutchmen") are probably the most emotionally charged campus traditions. Beyond hockey, school spirit is more muted. The culture overall is collaborative within study groups — students bond over shared academic suffering — but the workload can make the campus feel stressed and insular during crunch periods.

Mission & Values

RPI was founded in 1824 as one of the first technological universities in the English-speaking world, and that legacy of applied science and innovation still defines the place. The institutional emphasis is squarely on producing engineers, scientists, and technologists who build things that work in the real world. There's less focus on developing the "whole person" in the liberal arts sense — humanities and social science requirements exist but aren't the heart of the experience. Students generally feel supported academically through tutoring centers and faculty office hours, though the culture is more "sink or swim" than hand-holding. The school invests heavily in research infrastructure, and undergraduates who seek out research opportunities can find them, but you have to be proactive. Community service exists but isn't a defining institutional ethos the way it would be at a Jesuit school.

Student Body

RPI draws nationally and internationally, with particularly strong representation from the Northeast, especially New York, New Jersey, and New England. International students make up a meaningful percentage of the population. The typical RPI student is smart, somewhat introverted, deeply interested in how things work, and more likely to identify as a gamer or tinkerer than as outdoorsy or preppy. The political culture tends toward moderate-to-libertarian, though most students are more focused on problem sets than politics. Diversity has improved but the campus still skews white and Asian, and male. Students tend to be pragmatic and career-oriented — conversations about internships, co-ops, and job placement start early.

Academics

Engineering is the flagship — mechanical, electrical, computer science, and biomedical engineering are all strong, and the computer science program in particular has gained significant traction as tech hiring has boomed. The architecture program is well-regarded and brings a different creative energy to campus. Sciences (physics, math, chemistry) are rigorous. Business (the Lally School) exists but isn't the draw. Humanities, arts, and social sciences are available and some individual professors are excellent, but these departments are smaller and less resourced — if you want a rich humanities experience alongside engineering, RPI will feel thin compared to a place like MIT or even Union. Class sizes in introductory courses can be large (100+ in lecture halls for freshman physics or calc), but upper-division courses shrink to 20-30 students, and the 13:1 student-faculty ratio means access to professors improves as you advance. The academic culture is demanding — students regularly cite the workload as intense, and the grading curve in gateway courses can be unforgiving. Co-op and internship pipelines to major tech and engineering firms are strong, and career outcomes are a genuine selling point.

Athletics & Campus Sports Culture

Outside of D1 men's and women's hockey, RPI competes in Division III in the Liberty League across 23 varsity sports. D3 athletics here means genuine student-athletes — no athletic scholarships, and players manage the same brutal engineering courseload as everyone else. That earns respect, but athletic events beyond hockey don't draw big crowds. The fitness culture is decent — the Mueller Center provides solid gym facilities — but RPI is not a "sports school" in the rah-rah sense. For a field hockey player, the Liberty League offers competitive D3 play against schools like William Smith, Skidmore, St. Lawrence, and Vassar, and the academic rigor means your degree carries serious weight after graduation. Being an athlete here gives you a built-in social community, which is especially valuable at a school where finding your people can take effort.

What Else Should You Know

RPI's administration has been a source of tension for years. Under longtime president Shirley Ann Jackson (who stepped down in 2022 after 23 years), the university invested heavily in facilities and research but also accumulated significant debt, and student-administration relations were often strained. The new leadership is still establishing its direction. Financially, RPI's sticker price is high (~$60,000+ tuition), but merit aid can be substantial for strong students — don't dismiss it on cost before seeing your aid package. Alumni loyalty is strong, particularly in engineering and tech industries, and the career network is a real asset. One honest note: RPI can feel isolating if you're not proactive about building community. The combination of a demanding workload, long winters, and a campus that empties on some weekends means you need to invest in finding your people. For a student-athlete, the team itself solves much of that problem — and that's worth more than most prospective students realize.

Field Hockey

  • Head Coach Bre Lowe-Driscoll: 60-16 record since 2020, built Liberty League contender in five years.
  • 80% of roster from out-of-state; program rising in rankings with NFHCA All-America selections.
  • Recruits at Disney Showcase and CCG D3; ACR rating 95.2 reflects competitive Liberty League conference.

About the School

  • Engineering dominates: 44% of students major in engineering; culture is STEM-focused, not just academically strong.
  • Hudson River hilltop campus three hours equidistant from NYC and Boston; downtown Troy walkable for dining and farmers' market.

Field Hockey (2025)

Level
D3 Mid
FHC Rank
#58 of 163 (D3)
Massey Score
35.8 *
Conference
Liberty League
Coach
Bre Lowe-Driscoll
Trajectory
↑ Rising
Season Results
'25: L 2-3 vs Oneonta
'24: W 3-0 vs Oneonta
'23: L 2-3 vs Oneonta

Programs

Popular Majors

Engineering (44%) (D3 avg: 19%)
Mechanical Engineering (28%)
Chemical Engineering (13%)
Biomedical/Medical Engineering (12%)
• Aerospace, Aeronautical and Astronautical Engineering (12%)
• Electrical, Electronics and Communications Engineering (11%)
• Civil Engineering (8%)
• Industrial Engineering (6%)
• Nuclear Engineering (4%)
• Materials Engineering (3%)
• Environmental/Environmental Health Engineering (2%)
• Engineering Science (0%)
Computer Science (21%) (D3 avg: 11%)
Mathematics (5%)
Physical Sciences (5%)
Business (5%) (D3 avg: 18%)
Business Administration, Management and Operations (96%)
• Management Sciences and Quantitative Methods (4%)

My Programs

Environmental Science (0.4%)
Psychology (0.9%)
Biology (4.2%)
Sports Med / Kinesiology (1.1%)
French
Popular (top 25%) Available Not found

School Profile

Type
Private
Classification
Doctoral: Very High Research

Student Body

Total
6,979
Undergrad
85%
Demographics
31% women
Student:Faculty
14:1

Academics

Admission Rate
58%
SAT Median
1,415
SAT Range
1,330-1,500
ACT Median
32
Retention
89%
Graduation
83%

Events & Clinics

Recruiting Events:
Disney Showcase 2026
CCG DIII Showcase March 2026Mar '26

Costs

Total Cost
$79,934
Tuition
$61,884
Room & Board
$17,530

Avg Net Price
$33,139
Net Price ($110k+)
$39,583

Financial Aid

Freshmen Getting Aid
98%

Merit Aid

Avg Merit Grant
$36,385
Freshmen Merit Only
38%

Need-Based Aid

Freshmen w/ Need
60%
Avg % Need Met
63%
% Need Fully Met
32%
Avg Aid Package
$49,424
Grants / Loans
$9,303 / $3,400

Debt at Graduation

Avg Debt
$39,539
Grads w/ Loans
55%
Source: CDS 2025

Location & Weather

Setting
City (City: Small)
Nearest City
Albany, NY (7 mi)
Major Metro
New York, NY (140 mi)

HighLow
January34°17°
April60°38°
July86°64°
October64°43°

Admissions


Early Application
Not offered
Source: CDS 2025

Season History

Season Record GF/G GA/G GD SO OT Last Game
2025 8-9 3.1 2.1 +18 1 2 L 2-3 vs Oneonta
2024 8-9 2.2 2.2 0 3 3 W 3-0 vs Oneonta
2023 4-13 1.4 2.6 -21 2 0 L 2-3 vs Oneonta
2022 8-9 2.1 1.9 +2 3 5 W 3-2 (OT) vs Oneonta
2021 9-8 2.4 1.4 +18 6 2 W 3-1 vs Oneonta
2019 0-17 1.2 4.0 -48 0 2 L 1-3 vs Oneonta
2018 6-12 1.4 2.7 -23 2 3 L 0-4 vs Vassar (Liberty League Semifinals)
2017 5-12 1.8 2.9 -19 2 1 W 1-0 vs Oneonta
2016 10-7 2.2 1.6 +11 4 2 W 2-1 vs Oneonta
2015 11-6 2.6 1.8 +15 4 1 W 1-0 (OT) vs Oneonta
Click any season to view full schedule

Coaching Staff

Name Position Contact Bio
Bre Lowe Driscoll Head Coach loweb2@rpi.edu View Bio
Darryl Michael 82G 88Ph D Assistant Coach View Bio
Jessie House Assistant Coach View Bio
Katie Tiess '26 Manager
Maura Kiernan Manager
Brian McElroy Assistant Athletic Trainer

Roster Breakdown

25 players

Geographic Recruiting

In-State: 20% (5 players)
US Out-of-State: 80% (20 players)
New York: 20% (5 players)
Pennsylvania: 16% (4 players)

Position Breakdown

Midfielder: 5 (20.0%)
Defender: 10 (40.0%)
Goalkeeper: 2 (8.0%)

Roster Composition

Graduating '27: 4 players (16%)
Midfielder: 1
Defender: 2
Class of 2026: 6 (24%)
Class of 2028: 8 (32%)
Class of 2029: 7 (28%)

Full Roster (25 players)

# Name Position Year Height Hometown High School
1 Kennedy Campbell M So. - Clifton Park, NY Shenendehowa
2 Katie Galgay A Jr. 5-1 Cumberland, RI Cumberland
3 Jaidyn Pufky D So. 5-3 Endicott, NY Maine-Endwell
4 Kendell Erlwein M Fr. - Accord, NY Rondout Valley
5 Ria Patel M Jr. 5-4 Cumming, GA Chattahoochee
6 Natalie Yu D Jr. 5-8 Montville, NJ Montclair Kimberley Academy
8 Lauren Savino D Fr. - Darien, CT Darien
9 Isabella Bolinger M So. 5-5 Brentwood, TN Ravenwood
10 Ella Pasquarelli A Fr. - West Caldwell, NJ James Caldwell
11 Khushi Saini A So. 5-7 Mars, PA Pine-Richland
12 Sophie Clancy D Sr. 5-1 Cazenovia, NY Cazenovia
13 Ella Downing D So. 5-3 Gorham, ME Gorham
14 Kylie Secker A So. 5-3 San Diego, CA Torrey Pines
15 Marin Kupfer A Sr. 5-2 Fitchburg, MA Fitchburg
16 Lindsay Dunbar A Fr. - Denver, CO Denver East
17 Emily Dubord D Jr. 5-1 North Attleboro, MA La Salle Academy
18 Grace Johnson M Sr. 5-1 Evanston, IL Evanston Township
19 Molly Atkinson D Gr. 5-7 Amherst, NH Souhegan
20 Julie Thomas D Sr. 5-9 Redwood City, CA Davis Senior
22 Val Palmiotti A Fr. - Oley, PA Oley Valley
24 Sophia Brown A So. 5-8 Pearl River, NY Pearl River
25 Ryan Spagnolo D Fr. - Wilmington, DE Tower Hill
28 Emily Frey D Fr. - Royersford, PA Spring-Ford
66 Tess Garchinsky G Sr. 5-4 Allentown, PA Parkland
99 Olivia Brovak G So. 5-4 Bordentown, NJ Bordentown Regional