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List of Northwestern University residences

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of residential buildings at Northwestern University; for a list of other buildings see List of Northwestern University buildings

This list of Northwestern University residences catalogues the on-campus housing options for the university's approximately 15,000 undergraduate and graduate students on the Evanston, Illinois campus.

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Transcription

Residential colleges

These are the residential colleges that are located on the Evanston campus.

Ayers College of Commerce and Industry

The Thomas G. Ayers College of Commerce and Industry (CCI) is located next to the Henry Crown Sports Pavilion and Aquatic Center (SPAC) and just off of Lake Michigan. Built in 1991, it is divided into four floors, three of which are co-ed. CCI holds an annual Business Symposium, students to discuss business-related issues with leaders in the field.

The current president is Preena Shroff. The vice president is Shreya Mahesh. The treasurer is Julia Xu. The academic affairs chair is Anurag Chapagain. [1][2]

Chapin Hall (Humanities Residential College)

Humanities Residential College (Chapin)
Type Residential college
Established 1901
Faculty Chair Tom Burke
Associate Chair Jason K. Roberts
Assistant Chair Courtney Rabada
President Kendall Clark
Enrollment 72
Location 726 University Pl.
Evanston IL 60201

Originally built in 1901, Julia A. Chapin Hall became a women's dorm for Northwestern University in 1967. However, in the fall of 1979, Northwestern gave the dorm to the Humanities College, thus establishing the Humanities Residential College at Chapin Hall.[3] One of the smaller dorms, Chapin Hall houses 72 students in the biggest doubles on campus.[4]

Chapin Hall has been renovated but maintained its patterned ceilings, wooden floors, and large stairways. The hall also includes a small library, three kitchenettes, a media lounge, and War Room containing an assortment of board games, a piano, and computers.[4]

Chapin Hall is also known for partnering with Helicon, a literary and arts magazine founded by Chapin alumnae.[5]

East Fairchild (Communications Residential College, CRC)

Communications Residential College (CRC)
Type Residential college
Established 1981
Chair Roger Boye
Assistant Chair Hannah Feiner
President Jessica Dean
Vice President Lillian Ali
Tech Chair James Lee
Academic Chair Natalie Wells
Social Chair(s) Jillian Olson and Amelie Nguyen
Treasurer Emma Manley
Secretary Lizzie Ferrazza
Philanthropy Chair Lindsey Nickel
Special Events Chair Adrienne Scheide
IM Sports Chair Mahalia Foster
Enrollment 104
Location 1855 Sheridan Rd.
Evanston IL 60201

East Fairchild's focus is mass media, attracting students interested in film, television, radio and journalism. Informal lectures, known as firesides, often feature journalists and filmmakers.[6]

CRC was built in 1981 as part of a $23 million South Campus project, which included the construction of 1861 Sheridan, 1835 Hinman and other residence halls. A $2 million gift from the Sherman Fairchild Foundation helped provide equipment and finance other expenses for the residential college. CRC's equipment includes a radio station, WXRU 640 AM, as well as two movie-screening rooms.

In 1987, a beloved and talented CRC resident, named Will Arnold, died in his sleep due to an arrhythmia.[7] Will had been the college's equipment chair, and a fundraiser was inaugurated in his honor with half the proceeds going to the American Heart Association and half for CRC equipment and events. The fundraiser is called Radiothon, and it spans 50 hours of student-run radio shows. Events include a date auction, drag show, and a goods auction, with items and gift certificates donated by area merchants.

Hobart House (Women's Residential College)

Hobart House is the Women's Residential College, and is home to 50 undergraduate women. It was designed by the architect James Gamble Rogers, using Indiana limestone. It was named in honor of Emily Hatfield Hobart, a Northwestern University alumna who was killed in the civil strife in China in 1928 while serving as a missionary.

Hobart House opened as an all-women's residence hall within the East Sorority Quad in fall 1928. In 1981, the all-women's Allison Residential College, which had been founded five years earlier, moved to Hobart House and changed its name to the Women's Studies Residential College (WSRC). In 1988, the name was changed to the Women's Residential College (WRC) to encourage even broader participation by women.[8]

Jones Fine and Performing Arts Residential College

Jones Fine and Performing Arts Residential College
Type Residential college
Established 1982
President Russell Pinzino
Enrollment approx. 120
Location 1820 Sheridan Rd
Evanston IL 60201

Jones Residential College[9] is the fine and performing arts residential college, located on the southern edge of campus, directly across the street from Lake Michigan.

Jones was opened in the fall of 1982 as part of the residential college system. The building cost almost $2.5 million to develop, most of the funds coming from Wayne V. and Elizabeth R. Jones, to whom the building was dedicated. The Joneses were alumni of Northwestern from the graduating class of 1923. The facilities of Jones include spaces for photo editing, music recording, sound editing, ceramics studio, art studio, music and theatrical rehearsal rooms, a dance studio, and a performance space.[10]

Public Affairs Residential College (PARC)

Public Affairs Residential College (PARC)
Type Residential college
Established 1992
Chair Keith Woodhouse
President Dylan Jost
Vice President John McDermott
Treasurer Hayden Harb
Academic Chair Genni Bogdanowicz
Social Chair(s) Hannah Feuer and Nathaniel Unger
Communication Chair Reagan Dennison
Enrollment 72
Location 650 Emerson Ave.
Evanston IL 60201

The Public Affairs Residential College is a politics and social policy-themed residential college at Northwestern University. It is located in the North Mid-Quads (NMQ) building at 650 Emerson Street in the southern half of campus. PARC has one of the best locations on campus, conveniently located in between main campus and downtown Evanston.[11]

In Fall 2015, PARC relocated from 1838 Chicago Avenue as part of the university's Housing Master Plan. PARC's executive board voted later that year to permanently remain in the recently renovated facility.[12] Before that, North Mid-Quads was notably the freshman year dorm of Duchess of Sussex and School of Communications graduate Meghan Markle.[13]

Residential College of Cultural and Community Studies (CCS)

Residential College of Cultural and Community Studies
Type Residential college
Established 1972
Faculty Chair Myrna García
Hall President Regan Andringa-Seed
Enrollment 43
Location 2303 Sheridan Rd
Evanston IL 60201

The College of Cultural and Community Studies is one of the first residential colleges at Northwestern University and also the smallest.[14] Founded in the fall of 1972, CCS was originally called the Urban Studies College. The college's main purpose was to provide a home to students interested in the interaction of diverse cultures and urban communities in the U.S. and abroad. Residents have majors in many different areas but share an interest in cultures and concern for local and global communities. In 2007, CCS won the Northwestern Green Cup, an annual competition among Northwestern undergraduate residences to conserve the most energy. In 2008, 2009 and 2010, CCS was the overall winner of Northwestern's RCB Field Day, an annual competition amongst Northwestern's 11 residential colleges.

Shepard Residential College

Shepard Residential College
Type Residential college
Established 1972
Faculty Chair Mark Witte
Associate Chair Beth Pardoe
Assistant Chair Jakob Reinke
President Molly Stockmeyer
Vice President Max Levine
Treasurer Shanti Gallivan
Academic Co-Chair Jane Mavis
Academic Co-Chair Skye Swann
Social Co-Chair Julianna Feit
Social Co-Chair Ethan Weihl
Outreach Co-Chair Mary “Myk” Kezdy
Outreach Co-Chair Jackson Weber
Tech Chair Jack Burkhardt
Enrollment 72
Fellows 27
Location 655 University Pl
Evanston, IL 60201

Shepard Residential College is one of the two multi-thematic residential colleges at Northwestern University.[15] It is home to 72 students, making it a mid-sized residential college. Located at 655 University Place in a building known as South Mid Quads, Shepard is near downtown Evanston, as well as the southern half of campus.[16]

Shepard Hall was constructed as part of Northwestern's Centennial celebration and was dedicated in November 1952 as an addition to the women's quadrangles. The original building was made possible by a donation from Mrs. Margaret Bowen Shepard to honor her husband and sister (who was the dean of women at Northwestern). Shepard began as a women's residence hall, but became a multi-thematic, coeducational residential college in 1972. In 2015, the Residential College permanently moved from its old home at 626 University Place to its new one in what used to be the South Mid-Quads building at 655 University Place.[17]

Shepard Residential College offers a classroom, TV lounge, study lounge, and a meeting room. The TV Lounge is equipped with a big-screen television, gaming consoles, a ping-pong table. Additionally, Shepard has a full kitchen and laundry room for students to utilize.[18]

The Residential College holds a number of events for its residents. These include fireside chats, where faculty and students give presentations about topics that they're passionate about. Shepard also hosts frequent game nights, movie nights, and culinary events.[19]

Slivka Residential College for Science and Engineering

Slivka Residential College
Type Residential college
Established 2002
Faculty Chair Karen Chou
President Jeremy White
Vice President Emma Sliwinksi
Treasurer Lucas Takayasu
Social Chair Christian Englert
Facilities Chair Joseph Grantham
Academic Chair Nano Goldman
IT Chair Mira Norman
Fellows Chairs Daniel Ozernyi and Kevin Hayes
Philanthropy Chair Alex Gerber
Publications Chair Victoria Israel
Enrollment 137
Location 2332 Campus Drive
Evanston IL 60201

Slivka Hall was built in 2002 as Northwestern's residential college devoted to science and engineering.[20] It was named after Ben Slivka, a Northwestern graduate of 1982 who headed Microsoft's Internet Explorer team up to version 3.0. Slivka is located on the northern part of campus. It lies between CCI and the fraternities. The nearest dining hall is Elder Hall.

While predominantly made up of engineers and scientists, the Slivka community includes students from all six the Northwestern University schools. It is organized into suites by gender and has an unusually high retention rate of upperclassmen in comparison to its sister residential colleges.[citation needed] Slivka frequently invites professors and other Northwestern faculty, such as James Fraser Stoddart, to speak on subjects ranging from nanotechnology to the economics of the internet to social scandals in Elizabethan England. Interestingly, it is also the residential college with the largest Brazilian community.[citation needed] Slivka also hosts semiweekly professor-to-peer (P2P) lunches, where Slivka fellows are invited to join the residents for lunch at Sargent Hall, and quarterly student-fellow receptions in which the fellows join the residents for a catered meal.

Slivka has four floors and a basement. The basement houses the Discovery Room (a room containing computers, printers, and other assorted technology), and a bike room, music room, and laundry room. The first floor connects to a store called Lisa's Cafe, and the second floor has a recreation lounge, which contains a foosball table, along with a pool table, a table tennis table, and two televisions and other furniture. All of the floors contain suites and fully-equipped kitchens.

West Fairchild (International Studies Residential College)

1861 Sheridan Road

[21]

Willard Residential College

Willard Residential College
Type Residential college
Established 1938
Faculty Chair Gary Saul Morson
President Anisha Phade
Vice President Taz Ahmed
Secretary Janse Barkley
Treasurer Jackson Spenner
Social Chairs Aidan Keefe and David Sun
Academic Chairs Alex Olguin and Mingyuan Wang
Diversity and Inclusion Chair Tolu Ogunbomehin
Food and Fireside Chair Helen Davis and Lili Bannister
Service and Philanthropy Chair Anavi Prakash
Public Relations (PR) Chair Greta Cunningham
Enrollment approx. 300
Location 1865 Sherman Ave
Evanston, IL 60201

Willard Residential College was built as an all-female dormitory in 1938.[22] The dorm was originally named Willard Hall after Frances Willard, a women's suffragist and leader in the temperance movement who served as Northwestern's first dean of women in the early 1870s. It became the first co-ed housing on campus in 1970, and it was renamed Willard Residential College in 1972 when the dorm became a part of Northwestern's newly inaugurated Residential College program. Willard is the largest residential college at Northwestern University.

Notable Willard fellows include current Faculty Chair Gary Saul Morson. Notable alumni include Shelley Long, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, J. P. Manoux, Seth Meyers, David Schwimmer, Nicole Sullivan, Dave Revsine, Richard Kind, and Stephen Colbert.

Residence Halls

1835 Hinman

1835 Hinman Avenue

Allison Hall

1820 Chicago Avenue.[23]

Bobb Residence Hall

2305 Sheridan Road

Elder Residence Hall

2400 Sheridan Road

Foster House Residence Hall

2253 Sheridan Road This house came under scrutiny after an alcohol-related death of Matthew Sunshine in 2008, a freshman resident.

Foster Walker Complex

1927 Orrington Ave

Goodrich House Residence Hall

2321 Sheridan Road

Hinman House Residence Hall

610 Lincoln Street

Interfaith Living and Learning Community

Located on the fifth floor of 1835 Hinman, this residence hall is also known as Interfaith Hall.

Kemper Residence Hall

2420 Campus Drive

McCulloch Residence Hall

2315 Sheridan Road

North Mid-Quads Residence Hall

650 Emerson Street, North Mid-Quads (NMQ) houses the Public Affairs Residential College (formerly in 1838 Chicago Ave).

Rogers House Residence Hall

647 University Place

Sargent Residence Hall

2245 Sheridan Road

Schapiro Hall (Formerly known as 560 Lincoln)

560 Lincoln St. Students often refer to it as "Hotel Lincoln", since it is the newest hall and has exceptional common spaces and amenities.

South Mid-Quads Residence Hall

655 University Place

Fraternities

Alpha Epsilon Pi

584 Lincoln Street

Alpha Phi Alpha

Chi Phi

Suspended

Chi Psi

Suspended

Delta Chi

619 Colfax Street

Delta Tau Delta

2317 Sheridan Road

Delta Upsilon

2307 Sheridan Road

Kappa Alpha Psi

Lambda Chi Alpha

2339 Sheridan Road

Lambda Phi Epsilon

Omega Delta Phi

Phi Beta Sigma

Phi Delta Theta

2347 Sheridan Road

Phi Gamma Delta

2331 Sheridan Road

Phi Kappa Psi

2247 Sheridan Road

Pi Kappa Alpha

2313 Sheridan Road Website

Phi Mu Alpha

626 Emerson Street

Sigma Alpha Epsilon

2325 Sheridan Road (headquarters in Evanston)

Sigma Chi

2249 Sheridan Road (headquarters in Evanston)

Sigma Nu

2335 Sheridan Road

Sigma Phi Epsilon

2341 Sheridan Road

Theta Chi

572 Lincoln Street

Zeta Beta Tau

576 Lincoln Street

Sororities

Alpha Chi Omega

637 University Place

Alpha Kappa Alpha

Alpha Phi

701 University Place (headquarters in Evanston)

Chi Omega

1870 Orrington Avenue

Delta Delta Delta

625 University Place

Delta Gamma

618 Emerson Street

Delta Sigma Theta

Delta Zeta

717 University Place

Gamma Phi Beta

640 Emerson Street

Kappa Alpha Theta

619 University Place

Kappa Delta

711 University Place

Kappa Kappa Gamma

1871 Orrington Avenue

Kappa Phi Lambda

Lambda Theta Alpha

Pi Beta Phi

636 Emerson Street

Sigma Lambda Gamma

Sigma Alpha Iota

720 Emerson Street

Zeta Phi Beta

Zeta Tau Alpha

710 Emerson Street

References

  1. ^ "A residential college on the Northwestern campus". Ayers CCI. Retrieved 2013-10-19.
  2. ^ "Campus Maps - Northwestern University". Aquavite.northwestern.edu. Archived from the original on 2009-06-03. Retrieved 2013-10-19.
  3. ^ "History". Humanities Residential College at Chapin Hall. Retrieved October 9, 2017.
  4. ^ a b "Facilities". Humanities Residential College at Chapin Hall. Retrieved October 9, 2017.
  5. ^ "Helicon". helicon.northwestern.edu. December 2016. Retrieved October 9, 2017.
  6. ^ "CRCWhat.com". August 31, 2008. Retrieved 2008-09-02.
  7. ^ "WXRU.com". Wxru.com. April 11, 2009. Retrieved 2009-04-11.
  8. ^ "North by Northwestern Housing Guide". northbynorthwestern.com. Retrieved 2017-10-09.
  9. ^ "Jones Residential College - Media". Jonesresidentialcollege.weebly.com. Archived from the original on 2013-10-19. Retrieved 2013-10-19.
  10. ^ "Media". Jones Residential College. Archived from the original on 2017-10-09. Retrieved 2017-10-09.
  11. ^ "Public Affairs Residential College". sites.northwestern.edu. Retrieved 2017-10-09.
  12. ^ "Shepard and PARC to permanently stay in sorority quads". dailynorthwestern.com. 8 January 2016. Retrieved 2020-02-22.
  13. ^ "The Meghan Markle Tour of Northwestern University". chicagomag.com. Retrieved 2020-02-22.
  14. ^ "Residential College of cultural and community Studies – 2303 Sheridan Road, Evanston, Il, 60201". sites.northwestern.edu. Retrieved 2017-10-09.
  15. ^ "Shepard Residential College | Northwestern Student Affairs". www.northwestern.edu/living. Retrieved 2020-07-13.
  16. ^ "North By Northwestern Housing Guide 2018". North by Northwestern. Retrieved 2020-07-13.
  17. ^ "History". SHEPARD RESIDENTIAL COLLEGE. Retrieved 2020-07-13.
  18. ^ "Common Areas". Shepard Residential College. Retrieved 2020-07-13.
  19. ^ "Events and Traditions". Shepard Residential College. Retrieved 2020-07-13.
  20. ^ "Slivka Residential College". Slivka.northwestern.edu. Retrieved 2013-10-19.
  21. ^ "Executive Board | Willard Residential College".
  22. ^ "Irwin Weil - Professor Emeritus, Slavic Languages & Literature with Joint Appointment in the School of Music". Willard Residential College. Retrieved 2009-06-19. [dead link]
  23. ^ "North by Northwestern Housing Guide". northbynorthwestern.com.

External links

This page was last edited on 12 April 2024, at 01:52
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