Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Residence hall John A. Sellers, Department Head of Chemistry from 1958 to 1964 [16] [69] The Village (formerly Oakwood Village Apartments) Post Modern Residential 2001 Apartment-style residence hall [71] Walton Hall R.S. Gerganoff: 1968 2011 Residence hall Genevieve Walton, University Librarian from 1892 to 1932 [16] [72] Westview Apartments
An American college dormitory room in 2002. A dormitory (originated from the Latin word dormitorium, [1] often abbreviated to dorm), also known as a hall of residence or a residence hall (often abbreviated to halls), is a building primarily providing sleeping and residential quarters for large numbers of people such as boarding school, college or university students.
Michigan State University Housing is a large and complex network of housing for students and faculty of Michigan State University.Most of the housing is in the form of residence halls on the school's campus, but there are also university apartments, fraternity and sorority housing, and free-standing housing for grad students, faculty and staff.
It is used as a residence hall to house undergraduates at the university, and mandates 24-hour quiet hours. [13] It was once a women-only dorm, but is now unisex. Hansee Hall has its own residence hall council called the Kingdom of Hansee. The hall council hosts an annual semi-formal ball open to all residence hall students at the university. [14]
Spencer residence hall, built in 1924, is located at the corner of Raleigh St. and Franklin St. Spencer is co-ed and hosts about 150 residents on four floors. Spencer residence hall is named for Cornelia Phillips Spencer (1825–1908), who moved to UNC-Chapel Hill with her family. Her father, James Phillips, was a mathematics professor.
Bowles Hall was built in 1928 as a residential college, the first in the United States. It later became a standard Berkeley residence hall. After remodeling and reorganization by a group of Bowles Hall alumni, it reopened as a coed residential college housing students from all four undergraduate years.
Miller Hall, named for Mr. and Mrs. Horace G. Miller who provided funds to build the hall, is a colonial style building of brick with white limestone trim and was the first residence hall built for the Women's College. [125] Morriss Hall Robert C. Dean of Perry, Shaw, Hepburn and Dean 1960 206 Meeting St. [121] New Pembroke #1 Donlyn Lyndon: 1974
Shepard began as a women's residence hall, but became a multi-thematic, coeducational residential college in 1972. In 2015, the Residential College permanently moved from its old home at 626 University Place to its new one in what used to be the South Mid-Quads building at 655 University Place. [17]