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Dormitory

A dormitory (originated from the Latin word dormitorium,[1] often abbreviated to dorm), also known as a hall of residence or a residence hall, is a building primarily providing sleeping and residential quarters for large numbers of people such as boarding school, high school, college or university students. In some countries, it can also refer to a room containing several beds accommodating people.

An American college dormitory room in 2002

Terminology edit

 
Broward Hall, at the University of Florida

Dormitory is sometimes abbreviated to "dorm".[2] In the UK, the word dormitory means a room (rather than a building) containing several beds accommodating unrelated people.[3] This arrangement exists typically for pupils at boarding schools, travellers and military personnel, but is almost entirely unknown for university students. Student housing is normally referred to as "halls"[4] or "halls of residence",[5] or "colleges" in universities with residential colleges. A building providing sleeping and residential quarters for large numbers of people may also be called a house (members of a religious community or pupils at a boarding school[6]), hostel (students, workers or travellers) or barracks (military personnel).

In English-speaking Canada, the common term is "residence" or "res" for short.[citation needed] At colleges and universities in the US, the term "residence hall" is often used instead of "dormitory".[citation needed] In Australia the terms "halls of residence" and "halls" are common, but "college" (or, more formally, "residential college") is also used in the cases of halls of residence that are named as such (e.g., Robert Menzies College, Trinity College and Mannix College).[citation needed]

College and university residences edit

United States edit

 
Aerial view of Bancroft Hall at the US Naval academy, said to be the largest dormitory building in the US
 
Residential suites at Cal Poly Pomona

In the early colonial colleges, residence was often provided for students within the main college building, such as the Wren Building at the William & Mary (1705) and Nassau Hall at Princeton (1756); these went on to inspire other "Old Main" buildings, combining academic functions with accommodation. The first primarily residential building was the Harvard Indian College (1650), which also contained a printing press, while the first exclusively residential building was Stoughton Hall (1698), also at Harvard.[7]

Most colleges and universities provide single or multiple occupancy rooms for their students, usually at a cost. These buildings consist of many such rooms, like an apartment building. The largest dormitory building in the US is said to be Bancroft Hall at the United States Naval Academy,[8] housing 4,400 midshipmen in 1,700 multiple occupancy rooms.[9]

Many colleges and universities no longer use the word "dormitory" and staff are now using the term residence hall (analogous to the United Kingdom "hall of residence") or simply "hall" instead. Outside academia however, the word "dorm" or "dormitory" is commonly used without negative connotations. Indeed, the words are used regularly in the marketplace as well as routinely in advertising.

Typically, a United States residence hall room holds two students with no toilet. This is usually referred to as a "double". Often, residence halls have communal bathroom facilities. In the United States, residence halls are sometimes segregated by sex, with men living in one group of rooms, and women in another. Some dormitory complexes are single-sex with varying limits on visits by persons of each sex. For example, the University of Notre Dame in Indiana has a long history of parietals, or mixed visiting hours. Most colleges and universities offer coeducational dorms, where either men or women reside on separate floors but in the same building or where both sexes share a floor but with individual rooms being single-sex. In the early 2000s, dorms that allowed people of opposite sexes to share a room became available in some public universities.[10] Some colleges and university coeducational dormitories also feature coeducational bathrooms.[11] Many newer residence halls offer single rooms as well as private bathrooms, or suite-style rooms.

Most residence halls are much closer to campus than comparable private housing such as apartment buildings. This convenience is a major factor in the choice of where to live since living physically closer to classrooms is often preferred, particularly for first-year students who may not be permitted to park vehicles on campus. Universities may therefore provide priority to first-year students when allocating this accommodation.

United Kingdom edit

 
Aberdare Hall at Cardiff University, built in 1895, one of the few remaining single-sex halls of residence in the UK
 
Chapter Spitalfields, a private hall of residence in London, England, was the tallest student accommodation building in the world when completed in 2010

Until the mid 19th century, students at residential universities in England lived in colleges, where they rented a set of unfurnished rooms, paid their own servants, and bought their own meals. The first change from this came with the foundation of Bishop Hatfield's Hall (now Hatfield College) by David Melville at Durham University in 1846. This introduced three key concepts: rooms would be let furnished, all meals would be taken communally, and all expenses would be reasonable and fixed in advance, which combined to make the cost of accommodation in the hall much lower than in colleges. Melville also introduced single room study-bedrooms and, in 1849, opened the first purpose-built hall of residence in the country at Hatfield.[12][13][14] The Oxford University Commission of 1852 found that "The success that has attended Mr. Melville's labours in Hatfield Hall at Durham is regarded as a conclusive argument for imitating that institution in Oxford";[15] this report led to a requirement in the Oxford University Act 1854 that Oxford allow the establishment of private halls, although these halls were never very successful.[16]

The 19th century London colleges were originally non-residential. King's College London established a hall for theological students in a house adjacent to the college in 1847, although this only lasted until 1858.[17] University Hall was opened in 1849 by a group of mainly Unitarian Dissenters for students at University College London. This also struggled until taken over by Manchester New College in 1881, after which it flourished for a period but was subsequently closed when that college moved to Oxford in 1890.[18] Bedford College, London, at the time the only women's college in Britain, opened a residence in 1860.[19] College Hall, London was established in 1882 for women students at University College London (which had become mixed a few years earlier) and the London School of Medicine for Women. Like the other London halls (with the exception of the Bedford College residence) this was initially private, but was taken over by the University of London in 1910.[20]

The provincial university colleges that became the redbrick universities were established as non-residential institutions in the 19th century, but later became the universities most closely associated with the development of halls of residence (as distinct from the residential colleges of the older universities). William Whyte identifies four main drivers for the building of halls of residence in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. These were: firstly, for philanthropic reasons (often linked to religion), such as the Anglican St Anselm Hall (1872/1907) and the Quaker Dalton Hall (1881), both at Owens College (now the University of Manchester); secondly, to provide safe accommodation for female undergraduates, who it was felt at that time could not live in lodgings; thirdly, to attract students from more distant parts of the country, particularly for university colleges in smaller urban areas such as Reading, Exeter and Leicester; and fourthly, because residential provision was becoming seen as an essential element of university life, allowing for the development of community.[21]

Most UK universities provide accommodation in halls for first year students who make a firm acceptance of their offer, although this may not extend to students who enter via clearing. Halls accommodation most commonly consists of shared flats, but rooms may also be arranged 'dorm-style' along corridors. Rooms may be en suite or there may be a shared bathroom for the flat or corridor. Halls may be catered, part-catered or self-catered. Most universities offer single-sex flats within halls and there are a few halls (such as Aberdare Hall at Cardiff University) that are entirely single-six, but others (such as University College London) offer only mixed accommodation.[22][23][24][25] Most university or college-managed halls of residence are covered by Universities UK and Guild HE's accommodation code of practice.[26]

Private halls of residence, also known as purpose-built student accommodation (PBSA), are available in many university towns and cities. Many are covered by the Accreditation Network UK Code of Standards for Larger Developments,[a] and housing services at some universities (such as the University of London) will only list accredited PBSAs.[27][28] Many halls are delivered in partnership between educational establishments and private developers, and both codes include the same methodology for defining whether a hall counts as "managed and controlled by an educational establishment", making it a university hall, or is a private hall.[29] Private halls may include facilities such as common rooms, gyms and study spaces.[30][31] Private halls are often the most expensive accommodation option available in university towns.[32] Some of the companies which have developed such accommodation are based offshore, which has led to concerns about tax avoidance and evasion of sanctions on Russian owners.[33][34]

In the 2021/22 academic year, 347,680 (16 per cent) of the UK's 2,185,665 students were living in accommodation maintained by their higher education provider (including 55,380 at universities with residential colleges rather than halls[b]) and 200,895 (nine per cent) were in private-sector halls.[35]

Germany edit

 
Dormitory in Karlsruhe, Baden-Württemberg, Germany

In Germany there are dormitories called Studentenwohnheim (plural: Studentenwohnheime). Most Studentenwohnheime are run by the Studentenwerk (an organisation providing social, financial and cultural support services to students in Germany, comparable to student unions in the UK). Some Studentenwohnheime are run by a Catholic or Protestant church. Church-run facilities are sometimes single-sex. Studentenwohnheime may be situated on or off campus. They are usually low cost and serve students with limited budget. Flats may be shared with other students or may be studio-type, with en-suite bathroom and kitchen facilities. The rooms themselves are mostly single occupancy.

India edit

In India the dormitories are called "PG housing" or "student hostels". Even though most of the colleges/universities have hostels on-campus, however in most of the cases it is not enough for the total students enrolled.[36] Majority of the students prefer to stay off-campus in PGs and private hostels as they usually have better amenities and services.[37] For example, in 2015 estimated 1.8 lakh (180,000) students enrolled with Delhi University, there are only about 9,000 seats available in its hostels for both undergraduate and postgraduate students. The university admits an average of 54,000 students every year.[38] Which leaves a majority of students to find accommodation off-campus.[39] This has led to a lot of student hostel or student PG chains to be established near Delhi University.[40]

France edit

In France dormitories are called chambres universitaires managed by regional public services called CROUS. They are usually located nearby or inside university campuses but many exceptions occur as universities may be settled within cities. Rooms are usually individual, costing around 300US$ per month with a collective kitchen and often collective bathrooms. Some "university cities" are famous such as the Cité Internationale Universitaire de Paris.

Hong Kong edit

Universities in Hong Kong are modeled on the British education system, with halls consequently being similar to those in the United Kingdom.

China edit

In China, dormitories are called "宿舍" (pinyin: sùshè). Dorms for mainland Chinese students usually have four to six students of the same sex living together in one room, with buildings usually being entirely gender-segregated and sometimes intentionally placed at some distance from each other to make inappropriate fraternization between male and female students more difficult. Sleeping hours may be enforced by cutting electricity at a given time, for instance at midnight.

Chinese students from Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan live separately in their own dorms, as do foreigners. Mainlanders who are fluent in English or any foreign language may live in the foreigner- Hong Kong/Macau/Taiwan dorms, assuming they will be a roommate and participate in the foreign student activities, in order to help people get accustomed to mainland Chinese life. The quality of these dorms is usually better than that of mainland student dorms, with rooms either shared between only two people or completely private for a single student. Sexual decency attitudes are laxer than in mainlander dorms, with males and females sharing the same buildings and sometimes corridors (though not rooms). Students are allowed to bring visitors – including mainlanders – of the opposite sex to their rooms. Guests may or may not be allowed to stay overnight, depending on the rules of the dorm. Electricity is usually available at all hours of the day.

Most dormitories for foreigners are run by the Foreign Students' Education Office (a department providing support services to students in China). They may be on campus or off campus. They are usually low cost and serve students.

Notable halls and complexes edit

 
Watterson Towers, Illinois State University
 
Ikituuri Tower, a 43-meter dormitory building of the Turku Student Village in Nummi, Turku, Finland[41]
 
Sandburg Halls, University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee
 
The Sky Plaza in Leeds, England, one of the world's tallest student accommodation blocks

Rutgers University in New Brunswick, New Jersey has the largest residence hall system in the United States. 16,429 students live within a myriad of housing options, including apartments, suites and graduate housing. Freshmen are guaranteed on-campus housing to live on the 39,950+ student campus for at least their first year.[42][failed verification]

The Valkendorfs Kollegium at the University of Copenhagen was founded in 1589. Though not as old as some of the colleges of Oxford and Cambridge, it is among the oldest dormitories in the world.[citation needed]

The Stone Frigate at Royal Military College of Canada in Kingston, Ontario was constructed in 1820 to store part of the dismantled fleet from the War of 1812. The former warehouse was converted into a residence and classrooms when the college was established in 1874.[citation needed]

The Turku Student Village in Nummi, Turku has more than 4,700 dormitories, of which 138 are youth hostels.[43] Notable landmarks in the area also include the more than 40-meter-high dormitory tower called Ikituuri, which maintains nearly 100 dormitories.[41] The residents of the entire student village consist mainly of students from the University of Turku, Turku University of Applied Sciences and Åbo Akademi University.

Skyscraper dormitories, termed dormitowers, have included the 93-metre (305 ft) Fenwick Tower at Dalhousie University in Halifax, Canada, built in 1971, the 103-metre (338 ft) Sky Plaza in Leeds, UK, built in 2009, and the 112-metre (367 ft) Chapter Spitalfields in London, built in 2010, all of which held the title of the world's tallest purely student accommodation building when built. Some taller buildings include student accommodation among other uses, including the 132-metre (433 ft) Het Strijkijzer in The Hague, Netherlands, the 143-metre (469 ft) Roosevelt Tower at Roosevelt University in Chicago, and the 144-metre (472 ft) Capri at Marymount Manhattan College in New York.[44] The 33 Beekman Street tower at Pace University in New York, completed in 2015, is also claimed to be the worlds tallest college residence, at 104 metres (340 ft).[45] Altus House in Leeds, UK, built in 2021, is described as the tallest student accommodation building in northern Europe at 116 metres (381 ft).[46]

The Sandburg Halls at University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee consists of four high-rise towers, with the tallest being the northernmost tower reaching 74 metres (243 ft) tall (building), and 146.8 metres (482 ft) (radio antenna).[47] The halls combined have a total housing capacity of 2,700 students.[48] Dobie Center, an off-campus, 27-story private dormitory next to the University of Texas at Austin, stands at 112 metres (367 ft). In addition to being a private residence for students, Dobie also contains a small 2-story mall, restaurants, and specialty stores.[citation needed] Watterson Towers at Illinois State University were among the tallest residence halls in the world when completed. The 28-story complex, which was built in 1967 holds over 2,200 students and its buildings are 91 metres (299 ft) tall.[citation needed]

Hall councils and staffing edit

Hall councils edit

At some institutes, each residence hall has its own hall council. Where they exist, such individual councils are usually part of a larger organization called, variously, residence hall association, resident students' association, or junior common room committee which typically provides funds and oversees the individual building council. In the US, these student-led organizations are typically connected at a national level by the National Association of College and University Residence Halls. Collectively, these hall councils plan social and educational events, and voice student needs to their respective administration.

Staffing edit

In the United States, university residence halls are normally staffed by a combination of both students and professional residence life staff. Student staff members, Resident Assistants, or community advisers act as liaisons, counselors, mediators and policy enforcers. The student staff is supervised by a graduate student or a full-time residence life professional, sometimes known as the hall director. Staff members frequently arrange programming activities to help residents learn about social and academic life during their college life.

 
Connaught Hall, London, a University of London hall of residence

In the United Kingdom, halls often run a similar setup to that in the U.S, although the resident academic responsible for the hall is known by the term of "warden" and may be supported by a team of vice-wardens, sub-wardens or senior-members; forming the SCR (Senior Common Room). These are often students or academic staff at the relevant university/college. Many UK halls also have a JCR (Junior Common Room) committee, usually made up of second year students who stayed in that hall during their first year.

The facilities in the hall are often managed by an individual termed the Bursar. Residence Halls may have housekeeping staff to maintain the cleanliness of common rooms including lobbies, corridors, lounges, and bathrooms. Students are normally required to maintain the cleanliness of their own rooms and private or semi-private bathrooms, where offered.

Other dormitories edit

 
A seminary dormitory in Vagharshapat, Armavir Province, Armenia

Military dormitories edit

At most U.S. military installations, dormitories have replaced barracks. Much new construction includes private bathrooms, but most unaccompanied housing as of 2007 still features bathrooms between pairs of rooms. Traditional communal shower facilities, typically one per floor, are now considered substandard and are being phased out.

U.S. military dormitory accommodations are generally intended for two junior enlisted single personnel per room, although in most cases this is slowly being phased out in favor of single occupancy in accordance with newer Department of Defense standards.

All branches of the U.S. military except the Air Force still refer to these dormitory-style accommodations as "barracks".[citation needed] The Air Force, in contrast, refers to all unaccompanied housing as "dormitories", including open-bay barracks used for basic training that house dozens per room, as well as unaccompanied housing for senior ranking personnel, which resemble apartments and are only found in a select number of overseas locations.

Sleeping dormitories edit

In the US, China, UK, Ireland and Canada, a dormitory may be a room containing more than one bed. Examples are found in British boarding schools and many rooming houses such as hostels. CADs, or cold-air dormitories, are found in multi-level rooming houses such as fraternities, sororities, and cooperative houses. In CADs and in hostels, the room typically has very few furnishings except for beds. Such rooms can contain anywhere from three to 50 beds (though such very large dormitories are rare except perhaps as military barracks). Such rooms provide little or no privacy for the residents, and very limited storage for personal items in or near the beds. Cold-air dorms get their names from the common practice of keeping the windows open year-round, even in winter. The practice emerged based on the theory that circulation and cold air minimizes the spread of disease. Some communal bedrooms keep the name cold-air dorms or cold dorms despite having modern heating or cooling.[49][50]

Company dormitories edit

 
Dormitory of Nanjing Shanghai Meishan Company in China

While the practice of housing employees in company-owned dormitories has dwindled, several companies continue this practice in the U.S. and other countries.

Cast members in the Disney College Program at the Walt Disney World Resort have the opportunity to meet and live with other cast members within their housing complexes in Lake Buena Vista, FL.[51] In the Netherlands, the law forbids companies to offer housing to their employees, because the government wants to prevent people who have just lost their job adding to their stressful situation by having to search for new housing. In Japan, many of the larger companies as well as some of the ministries still offer to their newly graduated freshmen a room in a dormitory. A room in such a dormitory often comes with a communal cook (for the men) or rooms with furnished kitchen blocks (for the women). Usually the employees pay a very small amount of money to enable the men (especially) to save money to buy a house when they get married.

Prison dormitories edit

Housing units in prisons that house more than the one or two inmates normally held in cells are referred to as "dormitories" as well. Housing arrangements can vary widely. In some cases, dormitories in low-security prisons may almost resemble their academic counterparts, with the obvious differences of being locked at night, being administered by jailers, and subject to stricter institutional rules and fewer amenities. In other institutions, dormitories may be large rooms, often converted from other purposes such as gymnasiums in response to overcrowding, in which hundreds of prisoners have bunks and lockers.

Boarding school dormitories edit

 
Dormitory at The Armidale School, New South Wales, 1898
 
High school dormitory in Sabah, Malaysia

Boarding schools generally have dormitories as resident halls at least for junior or younger children around age 4 to 9 years of age. In classic British boarding schools these typically have bunk beds that have traditionally come to be associated with boarding schools. The Department for Children, Schools and Families, in conjunction with the Department of Health of the United Kingdom, has prescribed guidelines for dormitories in boarding schools. These regulations come under what is called as the National Boarding Standards.[52]

The National Boarding Standards has prescribed minimum floor area or living space required for each student and other aspects of basic facilities. The minimum floor area of a dormitory accommodating two or more students is defined as the number of students sleeping in the dormitory multiplied by 4.2 m², plus 1.2 m².[52] A minimum distance of 0.9 m should also be maintained between any two beds in a dormitory, bedroom or cubicle.[52] In case students are provided with a cubicle, then each student must be provided with a window and a floor area of 5.0 m² at the least.[52] A bedroom for a single student should be at least of floor area of 6.0 m².[52] Boarding schools must provide a total floor area of at least 2.3 m² living accommodation for every boarder.[52] This should also be incorporated with at least one bathtub or shower for every ten students.[52] These are some of the few guidelines set by the department amongst many others. It could probably be observed that not all boarding schools around the world meet these minimum basic standards, despite their apparent appeal.

Floating dormitories edit

A floating dormitory is a water-borne vessel that provides, as its primary function, living quarters for students enrolled at an educational institution. A floating dormitory functions as a conventional land-based dormitory in all respects except that the living quarters are aboard a floating vessel. A floating dormitory is most often moored in place near the host educational facility and is not used for water transport. Dormitory ships may also refer to vessels that provide water-borne housing in support of non-academic enterprises such as off-shore oil drilling operations. Other vessels containing living quarters for students as ancillary support to the vessel's primary function – such as for providing maritime or other training given aboard the vessel – are more appropriately categorized as training ships.

Notable among floating dormitories is SS Stevens, a 473-foot, 14,893-ton ship operated by Stevens Institute of Technology, a technological university, in Hoboken, New Jersey. From 1968 to 1975, Stevens served as the floating dormitory for as many as 150 students of the institute.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The code defines a larger development as "a development where more than 15 students live in one building in rooms off a central corridor, in cluster flats, or in self-contained flats"
  2. ^ The universities with residential colleges rather than halls are Cambridge, Durham, Kent, Lancaster, Oxford and York

References edit

  1. ^ "Dormitory, n. and adj., originally a sleeping chamber, especially a room containing many beds where monks, teachers and students sleep (1485), in American usage a residence hall at a university or college (1865). From the Latin dormitorium." @wordorigins.org, Retrieved 26 September 2014
  2. ^ "Dorm". Collins Dictionary. Retrieved 20 December 2023.
  3. ^ . Oxford Dictionaries | English. Archived from the original on September 25, 2016. Retrieved 2017-04-26.
  4. ^ "Hall". Cambridge Dictionary. Retrieved 20 December 2023. a college or university building where students live
  5. ^ "Hall of residence". Cambridge Dictionary. Retrieved 20 December 2023. a college building where students live
  6. ^ . Oxford Dictionaries | English. Archived from the original on April 27, 2017. Retrieved 2017-04-26.
  7. ^ Mary R. Springer (Spring 2020). "Review of Living on Campus: An Architectural History of the American Dormitory, by Carla Yanni". Panorama: Journal of the Association of Historians of American Art. 6 (1). doi:10.24926/24716839.10010.
  8. ^ "U.S. Naval Academy, Bancroft Hall, Annapolis, Anne Arundel County, MD". Library of Congress. Retrieved 12 December 2023.
  9. ^ "Bancroft Hall (Dorms)". Navy Lacrosse Camp. Retrieved 29 December 2023.
  10. ^ "In student housing, is the coed room the wave of the future?". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. 2002-02-26.
  11. ^ "Considering Unisex Bathrooms in College Decision". The New York Times. 2010-04-18.
  12. ^ "Building renamed in founder's honour". The Northern Echo. 7 May 2005.
  13. ^ "Hatfield College". Durham World Heritage Site. 15 December 2023. University Accommodation: The First or Among the First.
  14. ^ "History of Hatfield" (PDF). Durham University. pp. 1, 5. Retrieved 15 December 2023.
  15. ^ Report of Her Majesty's Commissioners Appointed to Inquire Into the State, Discipline, Studies, and Revenues of the University and Colleges of Oxford. HMSO. 1852. p. 41.
  16. ^ L. W. B. Brockliss (15 April 2016). The University of Oxford: A History. Oxford University Press. pp. 353, 369, 370.
  17. ^ J S Cockburn; H P F King; K G T McDonnell (1969). "The University of London: The Constituent Colleges". A History of the County of Middlesex. Victoria County History. pp. 345–349 – via British History Online.
  18. ^ "University Hall". UCL Bloomsbury Project. Retrieved 18 December 2023.
  19. ^ "Bedford College Papers". Archives Hub. Retrieved 19 December 2023.
  20. ^ "College Hall". UCL Bloomsbury Project. Retrieved 19 December 2023.
  21. ^ William Whyte (6 October 2015). "Halls of Residence at Britain's Civic Universities,1870–1970". In Jane Hamlett; Lesley Hoskins; Rebecca Preston (eds.). Residential Institutions in Britain, 1725–1970: Inmates and Environments. Routledge. pp. 158, 159.
  22. ^ "Student halls and houses". Complete University Guide. Retrieved 20 December 2023.
  23. ^ "Aberdare Hall". Cardiff University. Retrieved 20 December 2023.
  24. ^ "Frequently asked questions". UCL Accommodation. Can I apply for single-gender halls?. Retrieved 20 December 2023.
  25. ^ "Types of contracts, halls and rooms". LSE. Hall layouts. Retrieved 20 December 2023.
  26. ^ "Your right to a quality home". The Student Accommodation Code. Universities UK and Guild HE. Retrieved 28 December 2023.
  27. ^ "Registered Independent Halls of Residence". University of London Housing Services. Retrieved 28 December 2023.
  28. ^ "National Code". Retrieved 28 December 2023.
  29. ^ Annex A of the UUK/Guild HE code; Annex 1 of the ANUK code
  30. ^ "10 things to consider when choosing student accommodation in the UK". British Council. 3. The different types of accommodation. Retrieved 28 December 2023.
  31. ^ "How to find the right student accommodation for you". UCAS. Retrieved 28 December 2023.
  32. ^ "Student accommodation guide #3: private halls". UniGuide. Retrieved 28 December 2023.
  33. ^ Hilary Osborne; Caelainn Barr (28 May 2018). "Revealed: the developers cashing in on privatisation of student housing". The Guardian.
  34. ^ Jim Armitage (27 February 2022). "Feeble property rules keep Russian owners' identities in the shadows". The Times.
  35. ^ "Table 57 - Full-time and sandwich HE student enrolments by HE provider and term-time accommodation 2014/15 to 2021/22". Higher Education Statistics Agency. Retrieved 29 December 2023.
  36. ^ "Is Delhi University ready for 2017-18?". The New Indian Express. Retrieved 2017-07-20.
  37. ^ "Hostels with AC rooms, free wi-fi, housekeeping: Student housing has arrived". hindustantimes.com/. 2017-04-14. Retrieved 2017-07-20.
  38. ^ "With Hostel Shortage in Delhi University, Students Demand Implementation of Rent Act". NDTV.com. Retrieved 2017-07-20.
  39. ^ "Hostel crunch has Delhi University students clamouring for living space". The Hindu. Retrieved 2017-07-20.
  40. ^ "CoHo Dorms offer alternatives to Hostels and PGs in DU". DU Beat. 2016-05-26. Retrieved 2017-07-20.
  41. ^ a b "TYS: Ikituuri" (in Finnish). Turun ylioppilaskyläsäätiö. Retrieved April 11, 2021.
  42. ^ "Rutgers University Facts & Figures".
  43. ^ Asukkaat 2018 – TYS – Turun Ylioppilaskyläsäätiö (in Finnish)
  44. ^ "Talking Tall: Dormitowers" (PDF). CTBUH Journal. Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat. 57 (IV): 46–49. 2010.
  45. ^ Amy DiLuna (22 October 2015). "33 Beekman: Take a Peek Inside the World's Tallest College Dorm". NBC News.
  46. ^ Miran Rahman (19 August 2021). "Tallest student accommodation building in northern Europe is completed". The Business Desk.
  47. ^ "Sandburg Hall North, Milwaukee".
  48. ^ . University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee. Archived from the original on 2010-06-06. Retrieved 2010-10-26.
  49. ^ Leslie, Bill (December 15, 2009). "Cold Dorms". WRAL.
  50. ^ "Greek Housing". Iowa State University. Retrieved 6 September 2014.
  51. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-07-18. Retrieved 2010-09-09.
  52. ^ a b c d e f g "National Boarding School Standards in UK" (PDF). UK: Department of Health. 2002. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-01-27.

External links edit

dormitory, type, community, community, dormitory, originated, from, latin, word, dormitorium, often, abbreviated, dorm, also, known, hall, residence, residence, hall, building, primarily, providing, sleeping, residential, quarters, large, numbers, people, such. For the type of community see Dormitory community A dormitory originated from the Latin word dormitorium 1 often abbreviated to dorm also known as a hall of residence or a residence hall is a building primarily providing sleeping and residential quarters for large numbers of people such as boarding school high school college or university students In some countries it can also refer to a room containing several beds accommodating people An American college dormitory room in 2002 Contents 1 Terminology 2 College and university residences 2 1 United States 2 2 United Kingdom 2 3 Germany 2 4 India 2 5 France 2 6 Hong Kong 2 7 China 2 8 Notable halls and complexes 2 9 Hall councils and staffing 2 9 1 Hall councils 2 9 2 Staffing 3 Other dormitories 3 1 Military dormitories 3 2 Sleeping dormitories 3 3 Company dormitories 3 4 Prison dormitories 3 5 Boarding school dormitories 3 6 Floating dormitories 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksTerminology edit nbsp Broward Hall at the University of FloridaDormitory is sometimes abbreviated to dorm 2 In the UK the word dormitory means a room rather than a building containing several beds accommodating unrelated people 3 This arrangement exists typically for pupils at boarding schools travellers and military personnel but is almost entirely unknown for university students Student housing is normally referred to as halls 4 or halls of residence 5 or colleges in universities with residential colleges A building providing sleeping and residential quarters for large numbers of people may also be called a house members of a religious community or pupils at a boarding school 6 hostel students workers or travellers or barracks military personnel In English speaking Canada the common term is residence or res for short citation needed At colleges and universities in the US the term residence hall is often used instead of dormitory citation needed In Australia the terms halls of residence and halls are common but college or more formally residential college is also used in the cases of halls of residence that are named as such e g Robert Menzies College Trinity College and Mannix College citation needed College and university residences editUnited States edit nbsp Aerial view of Bancroft Hall at the US Naval academy said to be the largest dormitory building in the US nbsp Residential suites at Cal Poly PomonaIn the early colonial colleges residence was often provided for students within the main college building such as the Wren Building at the William amp Mary 1705 and Nassau Hall at Princeton 1756 these went on to inspire other Old Main buildings combining academic functions with accommodation The first primarily residential building was the Harvard Indian College 1650 which also contained a printing press while the first exclusively residential building was Stoughton Hall 1698 also at Harvard 7 Most colleges and universities provide single or multiple occupancy rooms for their students usually at a cost These buildings consist of many such rooms like an apartment building The largest dormitory building in the US is said to be Bancroft Hall at the United States Naval Academy 8 housing 4 400 midshipmen in 1 700 multiple occupancy rooms 9 Many colleges and universities no longer use the word dormitory and staff are now using the term residence hall analogous to the United Kingdom hall of residence or simply hall instead Outside academia however the word dorm or dormitory is commonly used without negative connotations Indeed the words are used regularly in the marketplace as well as routinely in advertising Typically a United States residence hall room holds two students with no toilet This is usually referred to as a double Often residence halls have communal bathroom facilities In the United States residence halls are sometimes segregated by sex with men living in one group of rooms and women in another Some dormitory complexes are single sex with varying limits on visits by persons of each sex For example the University of Notre Dame in Indiana has a long history of parietals or mixed visiting hours Most colleges and universities offer coeducational dorms where either men or women reside on separate floors but in the same building or where both sexes share a floor but with individual rooms being single sex In the early 2000s dorms that allowed people of opposite sexes to share a room became available in some public universities 10 Some colleges and university coeducational dormitories also feature coeducational bathrooms 11 Many newer residence halls offer single rooms as well as private bathrooms or suite style rooms Most residence halls are much closer to campus than comparable private housing such as apartment buildings This convenience is a major factor in the choice of where to live since living physically closer to classrooms is often preferred particularly for first year students who may not be permitted to park vehicles on campus Universities may therefore provide priority to first year students when allocating this accommodation United Kingdom edit nbsp Aberdare Hall at Cardiff University built in 1895 one of the few remaining single sex halls of residence in the UK nbsp Chapter Spitalfields a private hall of residence in London England was the tallest student accommodation building in the world when completed in 2010Until the mid 19th century students at residential universities in England lived in colleges where they rented a set of unfurnished rooms paid their own servants and bought their own meals The first change from this came with the foundation of Bishop Hatfield s Hall now Hatfield College by David Melville at Durham University in 1846 This introduced three key concepts rooms would be let furnished all meals would be taken communally and all expenses would be reasonable and fixed in advance which combined to make the cost of accommodation in the hall much lower than in colleges Melville also introduced single room study bedrooms and in 1849 opened the first purpose built hall of residence in the country at Hatfield 12 13 14 The Oxford University Commission of 1852 found that The success that has attended Mr Melville s labours in Hatfield Hall at Durham is regarded as a conclusive argument for imitating that institution in Oxford 15 this report led to a requirement in the Oxford University Act 1854 that Oxford allow the establishment of private halls although these halls were never very successful 16 The 19th century London colleges were originally non residential King s College London established a hall for theological students in a house adjacent to the college in 1847 although this only lasted until 1858 17 University Hall was opened in 1849 by a group of mainly Unitarian Dissenters for students at University College London This also struggled until taken over by Manchester New College in 1881 after which it flourished for a period but was subsequently closed when that college moved to Oxford in 1890 18 Bedford College London at the time the only women s college in Britain opened a residence in 1860 19 College Hall London was established in 1882 for women students at University College London which had become mixed a few years earlier and the London School of Medicine for Women Like the other London halls with the exception of the Bedford College residence this was initially private but was taken over by the University of London in 1910 20 The provincial university colleges that became the redbrick universities were established as non residential institutions in the 19th century but later became the universities most closely associated with the development of halls of residence as distinct from the residential colleges of the older universities William Whyte identifies four main drivers for the building of halls of residence in the late 19th and early 20th centuries These were firstly for philanthropic reasons often linked to religion such as the Anglican St Anselm Hall 1872 1907 and the Quaker Dalton Hall 1881 both at Owens College now the University of Manchester secondly to provide safe accommodation for female undergraduates who it was felt at that time could not live in lodgings thirdly to attract students from more distant parts of the country particularly for university colleges in smaller urban areas such as Reading Exeter and Leicester and fourthly because residential provision was becoming seen as an essential element of university life allowing for the development of community 21 Most UK universities provide accommodation in halls for first year students who make a firm acceptance of their offer although this may not extend to students who enter via clearing Halls accommodation most commonly consists of shared flats but rooms may also be arranged dorm style along corridors Rooms may be en suite or there may be a shared bathroom for the flat or corridor Halls may be catered part catered or self catered Most universities offer single sex flats within halls and there are a few halls such as Aberdare Hall at Cardiff University that are entirely single six but others such as University College London offer only mixed accommodation 22 23 24 25 Most university or college managed halls of residence are covered by Universities UK and Guild HE s accommodation code of practice 26 Private halls of residence also known as purpose built student accommodation PBSA are available in many university towns and cities Many are covered by the Accreditation Network UK Code of Standards for Larger Developments a and housing services at some universities such as the University of London will only list accredited PBSAs 27 28 Many halls are delivered in partnership between educational establishments and private developers and both codes include the same methodology for defining whether a hall counts as managed and controlled by an educational establishment making it a university hall or is a private hall 29 Private halls may include facilities such as common rooms gyms and study spaces 30 31 Private halls are often the most expensive accommodation option available in university towns 32 Some of the companies which have developed such accommodation are based offshore which has led to concerns about tax avoidance and evasion of sanctions on Russian owners 33 34 In the 2021 22 academic year 347 680 16 per cent of the UK s 2 185 665 students were living in accommodation maintained by their higher education provider including 55 380 at universities with residential colleges rather than halls b and 200 895 nine per cent were in private sector halls 35 Germany edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Dormitory in Karlsruhe Baden Wurttemberg GermanyIn Germany there are dormitories called Studentenwohnheim plural Studentenwohnheime Most Studentenwohnheime are run by the Studentenwerk an organisation providing social financial and cultural support services to students in Germany comparable to student unions in the UK Some Studentenwohnheime are run by a Catholic or Protestant church Church run facilities are sometimes single sex Studentenwohnheime may be situated on or off campus They are usually low cost and serve students with limited budget Flats may be shared with other students or may be studio type with en suite bathroom and kitchen facilities The rooms themselves are mostly single occupancy India edit In India the dormitories are called PG housing or student hostels Even though most of the colleges universities have hostels on campus however in most of the cases it is not enough for the total students enrolled 36 Majority of the students prefer to stay off campus in PGs and private hostels as they usually have better amenities and services 37 For example in 2015 estimated 1 8 lakh 180 000 students enrolled with Delhi University there are only about 9 000 seats available in its hostels for both undergraduate and postgraduate students The university admits an average of 54 000 students every year 38 Which leaves a majority of students to find accommodation off campus 39 This has led to a lot of student hostel or student PG chains to be established near Delhi University 40 France edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message In France dormitories are called chambres universitaires managed by regional public services called CROUS They are usually located nearby or inside university campuses but many exceptions occur as universities may be settled within cities Rooms are usually individual costing around 300US per month with a collective kitchen and often collective bathrooms Some university cities are famous such as the Cite Internationale Universitaire de Paris Hong Kong edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Universities in Hong Kong are modeled on the British education system with halls consequently being similar to those in the United Kingdom China edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message In China dormitories are called 宿舍 pinyin sushe Dorms for mainland Chinese students usually have four to six students of the same sex living together in one room with buildings usually being entirely gender segregated and sometimes intentionally placed at some distance from each other to make inappropriate fraternization between male and female students more difficult Sleeping hours may be enforced by cutting electricity at a given time for instance at midnight Chinese students from Hong Kong Macau and Taiwan live separately in their own dorms as do foreigners Mainlanders who are fluent in English or any foreign language may live in the foreigner Hong Kong Macau Taiwan dorms assuming they will be a roommate and participate in the foreign student activities in order to help people get accustomed to mainland Chinese life The quality of these dorms is usually better than that of mainland student dorms with rooms either shared between only two people or completely private for a single student Sexual decency attitudes are laxer than in mainlander dorms with males and females sharing the same buildings and sometimes corridors though not rooms Students are allowed to bring visitors including mainlanders of the opposite sex to their rooms Guests may or may not be allowed to stay overnight depending on the rules of the dorm Electricity is usually available at all hours of the day Most dormitories for foreigners are run by the Foreign Students Education Office a department providing support services to students in China They may be on campus or off campus They are usually low cost and serve students Notable halls and complexes edit nbsp Watterson Towers Illinois State University nbsp Ikituuri Tower a 43 meter dormitory building of the Turku Student Village in Nummi Turku Finland 41 nbsp Sandburg Halls University of Wisconsin Milwaukee nbsp The Sky Plaza in Leeds England one of the world s tallest student accommodation blocksRutgers University in New Brunswick New Jersey has the largest residence hall system in the United States 16 429 students live within a myriad of housing options including apartments suites and graduate housing Freshmen are guaranteed on campus housing to live on the 39 950 student campus for at least their first year 42 failed verification The Valkendorfs Kollegium at the University of Copenhagen was founded in 1589 Though not as old as some of the colleges of Oxford and Cambridge it is among the oldest dormitories in the world citation needed The Stone Frigate at Royal Military College of Canada in Kingston Ontario was constructed in 1820 to store part of the dismantled fleet from the War of 1812 The former warehouse was converted into a residence and classrooms when the college was established in 1874 citation needed The Turku Student Village in Nummi Turku has more than 4 700 dormitories of which 138 are youth hostels 43 Notable landmarks in the area also include the more than 40 meter high dormitory tower called Ikituuri which maintains nearly 100 dormitories 41 The residents of the entire student village consist mainly of students from the University of Turku Turku University of Applied Sciences and Abo Akademi University Skyscraper dormitories termed dormitowers have included the 93 metre 305 ft Fenwick Tower at Dalhousie University in Halifax Canada built in 1971 the 103 metre 338 ft Sky Plaza in Leeds UK built in 2009 and the 112 metre 367 ft Chapter Spitalfields in London built in 2010 all of which held the title of the world s tallest purely student accommodation building when built Some taller buildings include student accommodation among other uses including the 132 metre 433 ft Het Strijkijzer in The Hague Netherlands the 143 metre 469 ft Roosevelt Tower at Roosevelt University in Chicago and the 144 metre 472 ft Capri at Marymount Manhattan College in New York 44 The 33 Beekman Street tower at Pace University in New York completed in 2015 is also claimed to be the worlds tallest college residence at 104 metres 340 ft 45 Altus House in Leeds UK built in 2021 is described as the tallest student accommodation building in northern Europe at 116 metres 381 ft 46 The Sandburg Halls at University of Wisconsin Milwaukee consists of four high rise towers with the tallest being the northernmost tower reaching 74 metres 243 ft tall building and 146 8 metres 482 ft radio antenna 47 The halls combined have a total housing capacity of 2 700 students 48 Dobie Center an off campus 27 story private dormitory next to the University of Texas at Austin stands at 112 metres 367 ft In addition to being a private residence for students Dobie also contains a small 2 story mall restaurants and specialty stores citation needed Watterson Towers at Illinois State University were among the tallest residence halls in the world when completed The 28 story complex which was built in 1967 holds over 2 200 students and its buildings are 91 metres 299 ft tall citation needed Hall councils and staffing edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Hall councils edit At some institutes each residence hall has its own hall council Where they exist such individual councils are usually part of a larger organization called variously residence hall association resident students association or junior common room committee which typically provides funds and oversees the individual building council In the US these student led organizations are typically connected at a national level by the National Association of College and University Residence Halls Collectively these hall councils plan social and educational events and voice student needs to their respective administration Staffing edit In the United States university residence halls are normally staffed by a combination of both students and professional residence life staff Student staff members Resident Assistants or community advisers act as liaisons counselors mediators and policy enforcers The student staff is supervised by a graduate student or a full time residence life professional sometimes known as the hall director Staff members frequently arrange programming activities to help residents learn about social and academic life during their college life nbsp Connaught Hall London a University of London hall of residenceIn the United Kingdom halls often run a similar setup to that in the U S although the resident academic responsible for the hall is known by the term of warden and may be supported by a team of vice wardens sub wardens or senior members forming the SCR Senior Common Room These are often students or academic staff at the relevant university college Many UK halls also have a JCR Junior Common Room committee usually made up of second year students who stayed in that hall during their first year The facilities in the hall are often managed by an individual termed the Bursar Residence Halls may have housekeeping staff to maintain the cleanliness of common rooms including lobbies corridors lounges and bathrooms Students are normally required to maintain the cleanliness of their own rooms and private or semi private bathrooms where offered Other dormitories edit nbsp A seminary dormitory in Vagharshapat Armavir Province ArmeniaMilitary dormitories edit At most U S military installations dormitories have replaced barracks Much new construction includes private bathrooms but most unaccompanied housing as of 2007 update still features bathrooms between pairs of rooms Traditional communal shower facilities typically one per floor are now considered substandard and are being phased out U S military dormitory accommodations are generally intended for two junior enlisted single personnel per room although in most cases this is slowly being phased out in favor of single occupancy in accordance with newer Department of Defense standards All branches of the U S military except the Air Force still refer to these dormitory style accommodations as barracks citation needed The Air Force in contrast refers to all unaccompanied housing as dormitories including open bay barracks used for basic training that house dozens per room as well as unaccompanied housing for senior ranking personnel which resemble apartments and are only found in a select number of overseas locations Sleeping dormitories edit In the US China UK Ireland and Canada a dormitory may be a room containing more than one bed Examples are found in British boarding schools and many rooming houses such as hostels CADs or cold air dormitories are found in multi level rooming houses such as fraternities sororities and cooperative houses In CADs and in hostels the room typically has very few furnishings except for beds Such rooms can contain anywhere from three to 50 beds though such very large dormitories are rare except perhaps as military barracks Such rooms provide little or no privacy for the residents and very limited storage for personal items in or near the beds Cold air dorms get their names from the common practice of keeping the windows open year round even in winter The practice emerged based on the theory that circulation and cold air minimizes the spread of disease Some communal bedrooms keep the name cold air dorms or cold dorms despite having modern heating or cooling 49 50 Company dormitories edit nbsp Dormitory of Nanjing Shanghai Meishan Company in ChinaWhile the practice of housing employees in company owned dormitories has dwindled several companies continue this practice in the U S and other countries Cast members in the Disney College Program at the Walt Disney World Resort have the opportunity to meet and live with other cast members within their housing complexes in Lake Buena Vista FL 51 In the Netherlands the law forbids companies to offer housing to their employees because the government wants to prevent people who have just lost their job adding to their stressful situation by having to search for new housing In Japan many of the larger companies as well as some of the ministries still offer to their newly graduated freshmen a room in a dormitory A room in such a dormitory often comes with a communal cook for the men or rooms with furnished kitchen blocks for the women Usually the employees pay a very small amount of money to enable the men especially to save money to buy a house when they get married Prison dormitories edit Housing units in prisons that house more than the one or two inmates normally held in cells are referred to as dormitories as well Housing arrangements can vary widely In some cases dormitories in low security prisons may almost resemble their academic counterparts with the obvious differences of being locked at night being administered by jailers and subject to stricter institutional rules and fewer amenities In other institutions dormitories may be large rooms often converted from other purposes such as gymnasiums in response to overcrowding in which hundreds of prisoners have bunks and lockers Boarding school dormitories edit nbsp Dormitory at The Armidale School New South Wales 1898 nbsp High school dormitory in Sabah MalaysiaBoarding schools generally have dormitories as resident halls at least for junior or younger children around age 4 to 9 years of age In classic British boarding schools these typically have bunk beds that have traditionally come to be associated with boarding schools The Department for Children Schools and Families in conjunction with the Department of Health of the United Kingdom has prescribed guidelines for dormitories in boarding schools These regulations come under what is called as the National Boarding Standards 52 The National Boarding Standards has prescribed minimum floor area or living space required for each student and other aspects of basic facilities The minimum floor area of a dormitory accommodating two or more students is defined as the number of students sleeping in the dormitory multiplied by 4 2 m plus 1 2 m 52 A minimum distance of 0 9 m should also be maintained between any two beds in a dormitory bedroom or cubicle 52 In case students are provided with a cubicle then each student must be provided with a window and a floor area of 5 0 m at the least 52 A bedroom for a single student should be at least of floor area of 6 0 m 52 Boarding schools must provide a total floor area of at least 2 3 m living accommodation for every boarder 52 This should also be incorporated with at least one bathtub or shower for every ten students 52 These are some of the few guidelines set by the department amongst many others It could probably be observed that not all boarding schools around the world meet these minimum basic standards despite their apparent appeal Floating dormitories edit Main article Dormitory ship A floating dormitory is a water borne vessel that provides as its primary function living quarters for students enrolled at an educational institution A floating dormitory functions as a conventional land based dormitory in all respects except that the living quarters are aboard a floating vessel A floating dormitory is most often moored in place near the host educational facility and is not used for water transport Dormitory ships may also refer to vessels that provide water borne housing in support of non academic enterprises such as off shore oil drilling operations Other vessels containing living quarters for students as ancillary support to the vessel s primary function such as for providing maritime or other training given aboard the vessel are more appropriately categorized as training ships Notable among floating dormitories is SS Stevens a 473 foot 14 893 ton ship operated by Stevens Institute of Technology a technological university in Hoboken New Jersey From 1968 to 1975 Stevens served as the floating dormitory for as many as 150 students of the institute See also edit nbsp Architecture portal nbsp Housing portalBarracks Hostel List of dormitory buildings Public housing Residential college Student Village disambiguation Notes edit The code defines a larger development as a development where more than 15 students live in one building in rooms off a central corridor in cluster flats or in self contained flats The universities with residential colleges rather than halls are Cambridge Durham Kent Lancaster Oxford and YorkReferences edit Dormitory n and adj originally a sleeping chamber especially a room containing many beds where monks teachers and students sleep 1485 in American usage a residence hall at a university or college 1865 From the Latin dormitorium wordorigins org Retrieved 26 September 2014 Dorm Collins Dictionary Retrieved 20 December 2023 dormitory definition of dormitory in English Oxford Dictionaries Oxford Dictionaries English Archived from the original on September 25 2016 Retrieved 2017 04 26 Hall Cambridge Dictionary Retrieved 20 December 2023 a college or university building where students live Hall of residence Cambridge Dictionary Retrieved 20 December 2023 a college building where students live house definition of house in English Oxford Dictionaries definition 3 Oxford Dictionaries English Archived from the original on April 27 2017 Retrieved 2017 04 26 Mary R Springer Spring 2020 Review of Living on Campus An Architectural History of the American Dormitory by Carla Yanni Panorama Journal of the Association of Historians of American Art 6 1 doi 10 24926 24716839 10010 U S Naval Academy Bancroft Hall Annapolis Anne Arundel County MD Library of Congress Retrieved 12 December 2023 Bancroft Hall Dorms Navy Lacrosse Camp Retrieved 29 December 2023 In student housing is the coed room the wave of the future Pittsburgh Post Gazette 2002 02 26 Considering Unisex Bathrooms in College Decision The New York Times 2010 04 18 Building renamed in founder s honour The Northern Echo 7 May 2005 Hatfield College Durham World Heritage Site 15 December 2023 University Accommodation The First or Among the First History of Hatfield PDF Durham University pp 1 5 Retrieved 15 December 2023 Report of Her Majesty s Commissioners Appointed to Inquire Into the State Discipline Studies and Revenues of the University and Colleges of Oxford HMSO 1852 p 41 L W B Brockliss 15 April 2016 The University of Oxford A History Oxford University Press pp 353 369 370 J S Cockburn H P F King K G T McDonnell 1969 The University of London The Constituent Colleges A History of the County of Middlesex Victoria County History pp 345 349 via British History Online University Hall UCL Bloomsbury Project Retrieved 18 December 2023 Bedford College Papers Archives Hub Retrieved 19 December 2023 College Hall UCL Bloomsbury Project Retrieved 19 December 2023 William Whyte 6 October 2015 Halls of Residence at Britain s Civic Universities 1870 1970 In Jane Hamlett Lesley Hoskins Rebecca Preston eds Residential Institutions in Britain 1725 1970 Inmates and Environments Routledge pp 158 159 Student halls and houses Complete University Guide Retrieved 20 December 2023 Aberdare Hall Cardiff University Retrieved 20 December 2023 Frequently asked questions UCL Accommodation Can I apply for single gender halls Retrieved 20 December 2023 Types of contracts halls and rooms LSE Hall layouts Retrieved 20 December 2023 Your right to a quality home The Student Accommodation Code Universities UK and Guild HE Retrieved 28 December 2023 Registered Independent Halls of Residence University of London Housing Services Retrieved 28 December 2023 National Code Retrieved 28 December 2023 Annex A of the UUK Guild HE code Annex 1 of the ANUK code 10 things to consider when choosing student accommodation in the UK British Council 3 The different types of accommodation Retrieved 28 December 2023 How to find the right student accommodation for you UCAS Retrieved 28 December 2023 Student accommodation guide 3 private halls UniGuide Retrieved 28 December 2023 Hilary Osborne Caelainn Barr 28 May 2018 Revealed the developers cashing in on privatisation of student housing The Guardian Jim Armitage 27 February 2022 Feeble property rules keep Russian owners identities in the shadows The Times Table 57 Full time and sandwich HE student enrolments by HE provider and term time accommodation 2014 15 to 2021 22 Higher Education Statistics Agency Retrieved 29 December 2023 Is Delhi University ready for 2017 18 The New Indian Express Retrieved 2017 07 20 Hostels with AC rooms free wi fi housekeeping Student housing has arrived hindustantimes com 2017 04 14 Retrieved 2017 07 20 With Hostel Shortage in Delhi University Students Demand Implementation of Rent Act NDTV com Retrieved 2017 07 20 Hostel crunch has Delhi University students clamouring for living space The Hindu Retrieved 2017 07 20 CoHo Dorms offer alternatives to Hostels and PGs in DU DU Beat 2016 05 26 Retrieved 2017 07 20 a b TYS Ikituuri in Finnish Turun ylioppilaskylasaatio Retrieved April 11 2021 Rutgers University Facts amp Figures Asukkaat 2018 TYS Turun Ylioppilaskylasaatio in Finnish Talking Tall Dormitowers PDF CTBUH Journal Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat 57 IV 46 49 2010 Amy DiLuna 22 October 2015 33 Beekman Take a Peek Inside the World s Tallest College Dorm NBC News Miran Rahman 19 August 2021 Tallest student accommodation building in northern Europe is completed The Business Desk Sandburg Hall North Milwaukee University of Wisconsin Milwaukee University Housing Website University of Wisconsin Milwaukee Archived from the original on 2010 06 06 Retrieved 2010 10 26 Leslie Bill December 15 2009 Cold Dorms WRAL Greek Housing Iowa State University Retrieved 6 September 2014 Disney College Program Housing Overview Archived from the original on 2011 07 18 Retrieved 2010 09 09 a b c d e f g National Boarding School Standards in UK PDF UK Department of Health 2002 Archived from the original PDF on 2009 01 27 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Dormitories Association of College and University Housing Officers International The Evolution of the College Dorm Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dormitory amp oldid 1192933386, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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