Housing at the University of Georgia

Housing at the University of Georgia is located in USA Georgia UGA Main
Brumby
Brumby
Creswell
Creswell
Black-Diallo-Miller
Black-Diallo-Miller
Morris
Morris
Reed
Reed
Payne
Payne
Mell
Mell
Lipscomb
Lipscomb
Russell
Russell
Hill
Hill
Boggs
Boggs
Myers
Myers
Rutherford
Rutherford
Soule
Soule
Mary Lyndon
Mary Lyndon
University Village
University Village
Rogers Road
Rogers Road
Brandon Oaks
Brandon Oaks
Church
Church
McWhorter
McWhorter
Busbee
Busbee
Vandiver
Vandiver
Rooker
Rooker
Building 1516
Building 1516

Housing at the University of Georgia is managed by the Department of University Housing. On campus housing for undergraduate students is divided into ten communities, and for graduate students into three communities.

Undergraduate housing edit

Traditional halls edit

Black-Diallo-Miller, Brumby, Russell, and Creswell halls are collectively known as the "freshman high-rises" due to their similarities in design and function. All three are located just off Baxter Street on West Campus. These are the biggest residence halls on campus and houses a total of about 3,500 freshman.

Brumby Community edit

Brumby Community is a formerly all-female residence hall constructed in 1966.[1] It is nine stories tall and houses approximately 935 students. Rooms are double-occupancy with shared bathrooms, and the community is divided into four colonies: Darien, Newport, Sunbury, and Wentworth.

The Brumby Community, which includes Brumby Hall, is one of four high rise residential communities located on Baxter Street and designated solely to first-year students. Beginning fall 2013 Brumby Hall will be coed with each wing designated as male or female.

The Brumby Community is home to several academic and leadership initiatives. Students of the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences are able to complete academic advising through the Franklin College in the Residence Halls program with one of two advisers assigned to this residence hall, and short courses and seminars are regularly scheduled for the Brumby conference rooms. Brumby Hall's famous rotunda is the site of many events and activities. This residence hall is also home to a satellite office of the Division of Academic Enhancement, which provides tutoring and other academic support services to residents.[2]

Brumby Hall was renovated in 2020, and updated to include freestanding furniture in rooms, more programmatic spaces, more bathroom privacy and in-room temperature control. Brumby’s iconic rotunda is a popular gathering space for students.

Creswell Community edit

Creswell Community consists of a nine-story residence hall housing approximately 965 students and is divided into four colonies: Frederica, Gordon, Goshen, and Ogeechee. It has double-occupancy rooms with common bathrooms.[3]

The Creswell Community, which includes Creswell Hall, is one of four high-rise residential communities located on Baxter Street and designated solely to first-year students. Creswell is a coeducational residential community for first-year students.

Named after Mary Ethel Creswell, the first woman to receive a degree from the University of Georgia, Creswell Community is home to male and female first-year students. Creswell residents also live near the Bolton Dining Commons.[4]

In the fall of 2014, a new Bolton dining hall opened at intersection of Baxter and Lumpkin streets. At two stories and 55,000 square feet, the new dining hall will be 20,000 square feet larger than Bolton. The new Bolton can seat over 1000 patrons. The first floor contains with approximately 350 seats on the first floor and around 650 seats on the second floor.[5][6]

Black-Diallo-Miller Hall edit

In the fall of 2022, a new high-rise dormitory was added in the previous location of Old Bolton Dining Commons at the intersection of Baxter Street and E Cloverhurst Avenue.

Black-Diallo-Miller Hall, also referred to as BDM, is the newest residential community on the University of Georgia's campus. Black-Diallo-Miller is a coeducational residential community designated solely to first-year students. Black-Diallo-Miller Hall's community office is located in the Myers Community, yet is commonly referred to as part of the four high-rise residential communities on Baxter Street. Black-Diallo-Miller Hall is named in honor of Harold A. Black, Mary Blackwell Diallo and Kerry Rushin Miller, the first African American students to enroll as freshmen and to complete their undergraduate degrees. [1] The 120,500 square foot and 525 bed dorm features six floors, double-occupancy rooms with privacy-enhanced community restrooms. The building also includes study rooms, student lounges, warming kitchens, a community kitchen, central community room and laundry facilities. [2]

Russell Community edit

The Russell Community, which includes Russell Hall, is one of four high-rise residential communities located on Baxter Street designated solely to first-year students. Russell is a coeducational residential community.

Russell Community consists of a ten-story residence hall housing approximately 975 students and is divided into four communities: Augusta, Halifax, Stewart, and Savannah. Prior to the openings of Black-Diallo- Miller Hall, East Campus Village Community, and Building 1516 within Reed Community, it was UGA's newest residence hall despite having opened in the 1960s.[7] Russell Hall closed for the 2017-2018 academic year to undergo a $44,500,000 renovation and opened 15 months later for the 2018-2019 academic year.[8] Renovations included increased privacy in community bathrooms, in-room temperature control and a complete update of mechanical, electrical and plumbing systems.

Other traditional halls edit

Other than the freshman high-rises, UGA residence halls are located in groups known as communities. Each community is composed of two to seven residence halls.

Hill Community edit

Hill Community is made of seven residence halls: Boggs (named after former UGA president William Ellison Boggs, Church (named after former UGA president Alonzo Church, Hill (named after former UGA president Walter Barnard Hill), Lipscomb (named after Mary Ann Lipscomb), and Mell (named after former UGA president Patrick Hues Mell) halls, Morris, and Oglethorpe House (named after the founder of the colony of Georgia, James Oglethorpe). Hill Community is on West Campus, between the freshman high-rises and Bolton Dining Commons to the west, and the main part of the UGA campus to the east. Morris Hall is located on Lumpkin Street near Baxter Street.

Boggs, Church, Hill, Lipscomb and Mell Halls, collectively known as the "lower five", were built in the 1960s and are all four stories, collectively approximately 800 students. Hill Hall houses the University's freshman all-girl dorm, with the other buildings of Hill Community being co-ed. The Oglethorpe House, nicknamed "O-House" is nine stories tall and houses residents in suites of two bedrooms and a bathroom. The "O-House" nickname is also applied to the neighboring Oglethorpe Dining Commons despite the lack of "House" in the official name of the dining hall. In January 2024, Oglethorpe House and the neighboring Dining Commons were infested with bats for over a week.[9][10] As the University worked to remove the bats, the Georgia Department of Public Health encouraged all students living at the dorm as well as visitors and staff to take a survey assessing their exposure to rabies.[11]

Myers Community edit

Myers Community consists of four residence halls: Mary Lyndon (named after Mary Dorothy Lyndon), Myers, Rutherford (named after Mildred Lewis Rutherford), and Soule halls. The Myers Community is located on South Campus. The Myers Quad is the space within the four halls of the community, bound by Myers Hall to the west, Mary Lyndon to the south, Soule to the east (across Sanford Drive), and Rutherford to the north.

Soule Hall is all-female, while the other halls are co-educational. Myers Hall is the primary hall for the Honors Program at UGA. Rutherford Hall contains Franklin Residential College. Collectively, Myers Community houses approximately 850 students.

During home football games, the Myers Quad is often used as a central tailgating location. Although the University of Georgia encourages good tailgating practices, tailgaters are often found leaving the Myers Quad as a mess, disrespecting the property. Tailgating at the University of Georgia, and on the Myers Quad has become like a ritual. Tailgaters often setup close to the dormitories found in the Myers Community. [12] The noise and actions from the tailgaters is often bothersome to the highly academic students who reside in the Myers Community.

This community is also just a short walk to Sanford Stadium, the Tate Student Center, and the Coliseum.

Reed Community edit

Reed Community consists of two residence halls: Reed and Payne halls. Reed and Payne Halls form the main part of Reed Community, and are located immediately north of Sanford Stadium close to Memorial Hall, Tate Student Center and the Zell B. Miller Learning Center(MLC).

East Campus Village edit

The East Campus Village (ECV) is made up of five residence halls and collectively houses approximately 1,200 students. It is UGA's newer residential community, having opened in 2004. Residents live in apartments and buildings are co-educational. ECV serves mainly upperclassmen, and is also the designated community for varsity student athletes.

The residence halls of ECV are Busbee, McWhorter, Rooker, and Vandiver halls, and building 1516. When ECV opened, most of its buildings were only numbered and not named. Building 1512 was named "Busbee Hall" in 2013 in honor of former governor George Busbee;[13] the other building numbers are 1513 - Rooker, 1514 - Vandiver, and 1515 - McWhorter.

The name McWhorter Hall, prior to ECV's opening, referred to a former residence hall on South Campus, on DW Brooks Drive across from the Driftmier Engineering Center. This residence hall was an all-male dorm housing varsity athletes. The NCAA no longer allows dormitories/residence halls that are exclusive to athletes. This building has since been demolished.

During the summer of 2009, construction began on building 1516 near East Campus Village. The building opened on Monday, Aug. 9, 2010, to more than 550 upperclassmen. The hall has six floors with approximately 550 beds, apartment space, lobby areas, faculty office space and facility shop areas. The structure is a post tension concrete frame with a structural steel framing system for the attic/roof level.

East Campus Village residence halls are completely coeducational, with male and female apartments found throughout all buildings. Residents have the option of paying for cleaning service and have University Housing clean their bathrooms for them. East Campus Village is located near two parking decks, the Ramsey Student Physical Activities Center, the University Health Center, the Performing and Visual Arts Complex and the dining facility and shops of the new East Village Commons. Three of the halls in East Campus Village are rented to students on an 11-1/2 month basis, and one hall is on an academic year basis.[14]

University Village edit

Nearly undergraduate, graduate and students with families live in one and two-bedroom apartments in one of three on-campus apartment complexes within University Village: University Village, Rogers Road and Brandon Oaks. These three communities are located just south of the main part of South Campus and are accessible from East Campus Road.

Health Sciences Campus edit

The University of Georgia's Health Sciences Campus, located on Prince Avenue in Athens, is a 56-acre campus that was the former site of the U.S. Navy Supply Corps School, which moved to Rhode Island in 2011 as part of the U.S. Department of Defense Base Realignment and Closure process. UGA's use of the property continues the 120-year history of education on the Navy School site. In 1891, the Georgia State Normal School was incorporated on the property, and in 1932, the school became the Coordinate College of the university for women. In 1953, the Navy acquired the site for use as the Supply Corps School. Currently, students from the Georgia Health Sciences University/University of Georgia Medical Partnership, graduate students from the College of Public Health and visiting scholars reside on the Health Sciences Campus.

Beginning in fall 2013, undergraduate students will have the opportunity to live on the Health Sciences Campus in Brown Hall. The Health Sciences Campus is located in Athens on Prince Avenue and Oglethorpe Avenue near Athens Regional Medical Center and the Normaltown area. The campus is served by university and city bus routes as well as UGA Campus Transit.

References edit

  1. ^ "Brumby Hall".
  2. ^ "Brumby Community". University of Georgia Housing. Archived from the original on 14 January 2013. Retrieved 8 December 2012.
  3. ^ "Creswell Community". Archived from the original on 2010-04-19. Retrieved 2010-05-04.
  4. ^ "UGA Creswell Community". UGA Housing. Archived from the original on 14 January 2013. Retrieved 8 December 2012.
  5. ^ "UGA reveals location for Bolton Hall cafeteria replacement". Online Athens. Retrieved 8 December 2012.
  6. ^ "New Bolton dining hall on schedule to open for fall". The Red & Black. Retrieved 17 March 2018.
  7. ^ "Russell Community". UGA Housing. UGA Housing. Archived from the original on 14 January 2013. Retrieved 8 December 2012.
  8. ^ "University Housing gives students sneak-peek at Russell renovations". The Red & Black. Retrieved 17 March 2018.
  9. ^ "UGA students complain about bat infestation in campus dorm". Atlanta News First. Retrieved 18 January 2024.
  10. ^ "Bats in UGA Oglethorpe House dorm". The Red & Black. Retrieved 18 January 2024.
  11. ^ "Georgia health officials assessing rabies risk after bats infest UGA dorm". The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Retrieved 22 January 2024.
  12. ^ Fischer, Karin. "A River of Booze". The Chronicle of Higher Education. Retrieved 6 December 2015.
  13. ^ "UGA residence hall to be renamed for late Gov. Busbee". Athens Banner-Herald. March 12, 2013. Retrieved May 9, 2018.
  14. ^ "East Campus Community". UGA Housing. Archived from the original on 14 January 2013. Retrieved 8 December 2012.