Anonymous wrote:Dorm envy and luxury are out of control.
College students should live in squalor -- safe and clean, of course -- but dumpy.
Anonymous wrote:I have a big issue with mold. A young adult in my extended family was unknowingly exposed to black mold and got very sick from it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are UCLA dorms like? They didn’t show any dorms on the tour. We liked the UCLA vibe…until they mentioned housing. Triples “guaranteed” all four years.
There’s no way they want to show potential students and their parents “forced triples”, which are dorm rooms designed and built to be doubles but because of lack of dorm space they have converted into triples.
So now almost all freshman ate in triples unless they have some type of accommodation/ athlete/ special circumstance.
Freshman classic dorms at UCLA Standard measurements for Hedrick, Rieber, Sproul, and Dykstra Halls are 12’5'' L X 10’6'' W which is 130 square feet.
https://ask.housing.ucla.edu/app/answers/detail/a_id/539/~/square-footage-of-rooms-in-on-campus-housing
Well no one is "forced" to live there. They don't have any requirements of who lives on and off campus. Plenty of off-campus housing if someone really cares about a single/double situation.
Blissfully unaware of the challenges of finding housing and the cost it at UCs like UCLA, UC Berkeley, UCSD and UCSC
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are UCLA dorms like? They didn’t show any dorms on the tour. We liked the UCLA vibe…until they mentioned housing. Triples “guaranteed” all four years.
There’s no way they want to show potential students and their parents “forced triples”, which are dorm rooms designed and built to be doubles but because of lack of dorm space they have converted into triples.
So now almost all freshman ate in triples unless they have some type of accommodation/ athlete/ special circumstance.
Freshman classic dorms at UCLA Standard measurements for Hedrick, Rieber, Sproul, and Dykstra Halls are 12’5'' L X 10’6'' W which is 130 square feet.
https://ask.housing.ucla.edu/app/answers/detail/a_id/539/~/square-footage-of-rooms-in-on-campus-housing
Well no one is "forced" to live there. They don't have any requirements of who lives on and off campus. Plenty of off-campus housing if someone really cares about a single/double situation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dorms have gotten too nice.
I don’t think there should be filth, pests, and vermin but a college student doesn’t need a juice bar and sushi chef in their dorm building.
I kinda want a lazy river...sign me up!
Anonymous wrote:Pretty sure the following also have triple dorm rooms for at least some freshmen:
UCSD
Wisconsin
Purdue
Boston College (the tour guide even said they had quads!)
Can anyone add to this list?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Harvard freshmen dorms are lovely from the outside - charming quad! - but disgusting on the inside. Mold, roaches, mice.
The quality of the dorms varies widely. Mather is terrible - high rise heat trap with no ac; rats and mice.
Most New England dorms don't have a/c. My Harvard freshman dorm, Lionel, was small but very nice.
Anonymous wrote:The NCAA has forbidden athlete-only dorms since the 1990s.Anonymous wrote:Some of the nicest dorms are where the athletes live
The NCAA has forbidden athlete-only dorms since the 1990s.Anonymous wrote:Some of the nicest dorms are where the athletes live
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are UCLA dorms like? They didn’t show any dorms on the tour. We liked the UCLA vibe…until they mentioned housing. Triples “guaranteed” all four years.
There’s no way they want to show potential students and their parents “forced triples”, which are dorm rooms designed and built to be doubles but because of lack of dorm space they have converted into triples.
So now almost all freshman ate in triples unless they have some type of accommodation/ athlete/ special circumstance.
Freshman classic dorms at UCLA Standard measurements for Hedrick, Rieber, Sproul, and Dykstra Halls are 12’5'' L X 10’6'' W which is 130 square feet.
https://ask.housing.ucla.edu/app/answers/detail/a_id/539/~/square-footage-of-rooms-in-on-campus-housing