[2] In spring 2020, The Voice was recognized as one of the few community college student newspapers to continue to publish regularly during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Allegheny Campus features a blend of modern and historic architecture set on 10 acres (40,000 m2) in a neighborhood once known as Pittsburgh's Millionaires' Row and extending to the once posh "Monument Hill" area (that rises above and behind modern day Acrisure Stadium) so named for a Civil War monument dedicated on May 30, 1871, by General George G. Meade and Governor John W. Geary.
Adjacent to Boyce Park, the single-building campus features a park-like setting and commanding countryside views.
With all its programs under one roof, the multi-purpose building houses a gymnasium, cafeteria, theater, library, medical instruction facilities, and a child development center.
North Campus offers more than 55 different certificate and associate degrees, including Accounting and Business Management, Child Development, Computer & Information Science, Criminal Justice & Criminology, Land Administration, Tourism Management, Social Work, Nursing, and American Sign Language & Interpreting programs of study.
In suburban West Mifflin, CCAC's South Campus serves Allegheny County's southern communities and the Mon Valley region.
Indoor walkways and house lecture halls, classrooms, a learning assistance center, a community library, a theater, a radio station, dining areas, and office space connect its five buildings.
A solar-heated greenhouse adjacent to the campus complex provides botanical accents for picturesque outdoor walkways and trails.
The center offers degree and certificate programs, community education, and customized workforce job training for corporations and businesses.
Situated on North Homewood Avenue, the Homewood-Brushton Center is positioned to serve the city's east-end neighborhoods and outlying suburbs.
The center offers a range of credit, non-credit, and special programming year-round and hosts four active clubs, an after-school homework clinic, and a math, science, and computer institute conducted during the summer for kindergarten and grade-school-age children.
Located in a 150,000-square-foot (14,000 m2) facility in North Fayette Township, the center features spacious, well-lit classrooms, and comprehensive student life services.