![]() |
At Whitman (I think) they have a dorm that has some unaffiliated undergraduate women and all the sororities, each in their own section.
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
more description...
Our university is looking at something similar to this:
http://www.vapa.bc.ca/housing/ It is very similar to housing in a dormitory but is only for greek women. Our Greek life would like to go and see how they are set up to see if they would be an idea for our new greek row, as we have a small area for greek row and half of our chapters are quite new. Thanks for all the input! |
Quote:
The UNT lodges are great! I attended the ribbon-cutting for ZTA's and the inside was amazing. ZTA actually owned land to build a house but gave it up in order to be a part of Greek Row at UNT. |
birmingham southern college(alabama) sororities have a townhouse-like building that houses each chapter. each chapter has their own townhouse unit which consists of a formal foyer,living room, a dining room and kitchen on the ground floor, chapter room/laundry/storage and tv room in the basement and 4 double bedrooms with ensuite baths to house 8 girls on the second floor. they are very spacious and are large enough to handle the membership.all are decorated beautifully. the exterior facade is different for each chapter so that each "house" is very distinguishable from its neighbors, yet each facade blends in. i am not sure if the bsc website has a photo of the house, but maybe some of the individual chapter websites will.
|
As I and others have posted, at Univ of West Georgia, the sororities have been in 1 dorm since 1972. A new Greek Village has been announced for perhaps Fall 2009. Sororities and fraternities are weighing their options.
|
Washington & Lee had a Panhellenic house prior to fall 2000 when the sorority houses opened up. It was a former fraternity house that had gotten kicked off campus (specifically Delta Tau Delta) in the early 90s. My impression was that it was another housing option for sophomore women (2 year living requirement at W&L and Greek housing is on-campus, so most Greek housing is filled with predominantly sophomores) and maybe some of the Panhellenic officers. Once they opened the sorority houses it became something called the "Delt Center" (uhhhhhhh) which was a house for independent men who didn't drink and would host non-alcoholic social events. I don't think I'd be out of line to say that that tanked miserably at W&L. Then, the house became the International House (a big step up for them, and they throw a lot of parties there now b/c it has facilities to do so just like the fraternities do) and the former international house became the Spanish language/culture house.
You can see a lot of pictures at the house here: http://ihouse.wlu.edu/ One of the things I wonder if the IHouse will start doing is getting a cook like the fraternities do... I am not sure, but part of me wants to say that Panhellenic may have served meals there when they had the building. I can't really say much else about it than that it existed and was basically a holdover for before they had houses. There was also an authorized "Panhellenic Suite" in one of the dormitories at that point too (and all the sororities had suites to store their records/materials as well). I'm not sure how the suite and Panhellenic house differed. |
Quote:
Yep, thats true. It works really well for our campus because only sophomores live in so freshmen can still live in their freshmen halls and get to meet a lot of people from their classes then they move in for sophomore year and when they're upperclassmen they move off campus with a group of friends to a house. We have the capacity for 7 NPC sororities in the building but currently have only three (TriDelt chapter pulled in '05) so unaffiliated women live in the other sections. |
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 12:58 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.