About Us
Read an overview about our history and accomplishments.
Our Mission
The ASUC Student Union, in partnership with student leaders, offers community-focused services and programs; providing opportunities for students to learn, grow, and live a balanced life. This includes facilitating events for students and the community, operating businesses that are responsible, sustainable, and engaging, and offering programs to build skills and explore creativity.
Our Legacy
Learn about our legacy and rich history!
The Cal Student Store opens. Providing students a place to purchase their textbooks, stationery, and other materials, including coal! The Cal Student Store was originally located where Bancroft Library now stands and was known as “The Co-op” since it was student owned and run.
ASUC student government is founded. The Associated Students of the College of Letters and Sciences (later shortened to just ASUC) was officially founded by students on March 2, 1887 as a student government independent of the University.
The ASUC Student Union opens. The ASUC was heavily involved in developing the first real “Student Union” on campus in Stephens Hall, and the adjacent “Student Publications Building” (now Moses Hall) south of the Campanile.
A new student union opens. By the mid-1950’s it had become clear that the Stephens Hall complex was too small and antiquated for the student body. The Alumni Association had undertaken a study which proposed a new Student Union complex at Bancroft and Telegraph and, in the late 1950’s construction begun. By 1961 the ASUC Student Union buildings were designed and built by Vernon DeMars.>
17 years after Martin Luther King Jr.’s anti-Vietnam War speech on Sproul Plaza, our main building is renamed the “Martin Luther King Jr. Student Union.” The renaming was proposed by undergraduate Ronald Stevenson. The namesake building stands both as a reminder of Dr. King’s courageous advocacy and as an inspiration for leadership within our community.
Graduate and undergraduate student leaders negotiate a groundbreaking agreement to rebuild the Student Union complex. It is agreed that revenue made in the MLK Jr. Building and in Eshleman Hall is shared to support student programs directly. The pact, along with a ballot measure to increase student fees, make the renovation possible.
The newly renovated MLK Jr. Building and Eshleman Hall open. The new buildings become the true heart of campus and provide a campus living room for students. Both integrate sustainable features including: natural cooling through automatic window movement, window coating to lessen glare and heat build up, a gray-water system for irrigation and restroom facilities, solar energy provided by photovoltaics, a white roof to reduce heat island effect, and a rain garden to capture storm runoff. Both buildings obtain LEED Gold certification. The new Student Union complex is completely ADA compliant.
The ASUC Student Union recognizes that UC Berkeley sits on the territory of xučyun (Huichin), the ancestral and unceded land of the Chochenyo speaking Ohlone people, the successors of the sovereign Verona Band of Alameda County. This land was and continues to be of great importance to the Muwekma Ohlone Tribe and other familial descendants of the Verona Band.
We recognize that every member of the Berkeley community has, and continues to benefit from, the use and occupation of this land, since the institution’s founding in 1868. Consistent with our values of community, inclusion and diversity, we have a responsibility to acknowledge and make visible the university’s relationship to Native peoples. As members of the Berkeley community, it is vitally important that we not only recognize the history of the land on which we stand, but also, we recognize that the Muwekma Ohlone people are alive and flourishing members of the Berkeley and broader Bay Area communities today.
This acknowledgement was co-created with the Muwekma Ohlone Tribe and Native American Student Development and is a living document.