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curious
Just curious- are the fraternities housed in university housing too- I just assumed all SEC schools had sororities with southern mansions-
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Fraternities at Auburn have houses. The new sorority housing will be located adjacent to the "Old Row" Fraternities.
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Also, my understanding is that the sorority and fraternity houses at Vanderbilt house a small number of members. Under ten and usually just officers. |
Another drawback is that it is so far from central campus. The Hill is just about a 5-10 minute walk from Haley Center. But thev Village is at least twice the distance away. I know Auburn is going to a pedestrian campus, but I only see a very limited amount of parking near these buildings. One of the drawbacks of the Hill is that there is not enough parking for major sorority events (mainly recruitment and chapter).
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Actually, I don't know the reason, but I felt the need to be a smartass. |
Can't speak to UT but at Auburn, the only reason that there aren't houses is that no group has stepped up to be the first to build. Plain and simple.
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Wouldn't everyone pretty much have to step up at the same time, Panhellenic advisories/rules being what they are?
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I'm not sure how it would have to pan out at AU, but at MS State, one sorority finally said to heck with the university's rule about no sorority houses, we're building one. You'd better believe that the others rushed to buy land and keep up. One sorority that was floundering said no way and left at that point. So much for Panhellenic spirit, lol.
But I remarked earlier about how little privacy they had in those 2 dorms with 9 chapter rooms crammed in the basements. I don't blame the sororities for wanting to get out of there. |
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Houses Are in the Future for Sororities Quote:
The UT Panhellenic community chose to build a Panhellenic Building to meet the needs of their members in the 1960s. It still provides our chapters a wonderful place to host events, and meetings, as well as a place to meet friends between classes. In addition, many chapters have designated floors in residence halls where many women live together from the same sorority. What we have is the best of both worlds. |
The downside to houses is that they cost more money and that dues have to go up a lot, and I think that you also end up needing more alumnae support in terms of house associations and upkeep etc.
If you really could have the best of both worlds: housing people wanted to live in with some autonomy and the security of on-campus support for upkeep and financing of the structure, wouldn't that be great? And houses the groups own also can destroy any sense of a level playing field among groups. With dorm floors and chapter rooms, a small group can afford to exist and be solvent with a small chapter; with true group supported houses, forget it. It's not going to work out to just have a tiny house when everyone else has mansions. |
not what I was thinking?
When I read the initial posts (before opening up the link), I thought the "same building" meant like it is at UNT.
At UNT, the sorority homes are pretty much connected together (same building pretty much) - but they are seperated (sort of like really big townhomes!) and they look like traditional greek homes on the outside (pillars, etc) I personally don't dig the layout of the Auburn place. I like that they have individual bedroom suites (at the old ADPi house we had roomies and while I loved my sisters, it was hard cramming 2 ppl's things in one room and still trying to keep it orderly.) but that's about it. |
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There is more information at this website put together for AOII's capital campaign. |
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