tld221 |
03-13-2011 02:02 AM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by AnotherKD
(Post 2037366)
I agree that the list (I won't call it an article, because nothing was really written) wasn't that great. One comment was "It's NYC, so you take what you can get, but our bedroom was too small. No room to walk or open the closet door..." Really? Pretty much every freshman dorm is small, especially in a big city. At Pitt, the freshman dorms were in round, cylindrical towers, and so all of the rooms were pie-shaped and super small. Pretty awkward.
Just saw! Tower A is ranked as #14 worst dorm in the country.
Even better, I just saw the "best dorm" list. A quote from one: "WEST CAMPUS IS WHERE ITS AT. SOUTH IS COOL TOO. MAIN IS ALSO THE SHIZ." Ha.
|
Ha! They ranked Goddard... of the 5 freshman (i think 6 now) residence halls (I still can't say "dorms" without my RD saying "dorms are places you sleep, our students live here") NYU has, I can think of dorms WAY WORSE. Weinstein for one (though it makes up for it by having 2 dining halls), Cliff St (an upperclass hall, but apparently doesnt exist anymore and UBER small for the price, even for NYU/NYC), even Brittany was pretty gross. Plus, Goddard was grographically prime ResHall real estate - across from the park, kitty corner from the library and student center, on top of a Starbucks, and really, every important building was within a block or two.
Easily wouldve lived in Goddard but i'm Team Hayden ALL DAY. /NYUdormrant
Quote:
Originally Posted by Munchkin03
(Post 2037436)
It's funny--I always thought community bathrooms were part of the college experience. My freshman dorm, however, had it set up where every two rooms shared a bathroom. That was nice--and the custodians let us keep our stuff in the bathrooms. It was a nice surprise, but since we couldn't pick our freshman dorms it wasn't a big deal.
We were also required to live in the dorms for the first 3 out of our 4 years. About half the senior class lived off-campus. I stayed in the dorms, as did most of my friends and virtually all of my sorority sisters. The way I saw it was that I had the rest of my life to live "off-campus." I could walk to my classes and all the restaurants/bars, someone was cleaning my bathroom, and it was as high-security.
When I think of the "worst" dorms, I think of vermin, mold, elevators that don't work, ancient fire alarms that trip easily, out of date wiring (my freshman dorm didn't have that many plugs--maybe fine for the 1950s when it was built, but not so much for the late 90s), and the actual quality of life stuff. College kids today--ridiclously pampered!
|
Srsly. I LOVED living in campus housing. One flat rate for everything (heat/hot water, cable, electricity, laundry room, doorman/security, front desk, dining hall, study lounge, game room) makes way more sense to me.
Quote:
Originally Posted by knight_shadow
(Post 2038090)
My alma mater wasn't small by any means, but we only had one main cafeteria. When I started, it was sub-par. The raised the bar after I graduated, though.
Our meal plans were "x amount of meals per week, plus y Mav Bucks." The number of meals per week and number of Mav Bucks varied based on the type of plan you got. Meals could only be redeemed at the cafeteria, but the Bucks could be used at any of the food vendors on campus and at various locations throughout the city (including McDonald's, Wendy's, etc).
The meal plans weren't required, though, so I never got one. I preferred to cook at my apartment and go to campus when they had midnight breakfasts for finals.
|
1. Our meal plan was very similar, and I was surprised what it covered. The money shot was when Weinstein got Quiznos and Chik-Fil-A on meal plan...it was so on like Donkey Kong.
2. you, cooking, and midnight breakfast - wouldve totally wifed you before graduation. believe that.
|