George Washington University residence halls
Established | February 9, 1821 |
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Location | Washington, D.C. |
Campus | Urban — Foggy Bottom; Suburban — Mount Vernon; Rural — Ashburn |
Website | www.gwu.edu |
The George Washington University is one of the largest United States private universities in terms of enrollment. Almost 10,000 undergraduates attend George Washington. GW has residence halls on two of its three campuses. The Foggy Bottom campus is the university's main campus, where most of the residence halls can be found, in an urban setting. Also in Washington's Foxhall neighborhood is the Mount Vernon campus, formerly the Mount Vernon College for Women. The Mount Vernon campus provides a more suburban residential setting.
Foggy Bottom
There are over 26 residences at the Foggy Bottom campus. Residences come in residence halls, or dormitories, and townhouses. Some residence halls were originally constructed as hotels and apartment buildings. The current residences on the Foggy Bottom campus vary in age; some residences were built in the 1920s and the newest, South Hall at 2135 F Street, opened in September 2009. Hattie M. Strong Hall is a women's only residence found on 21st Street, between G and H Streets. I (Eye) Street residences such as Munson and JBKO are very close to the Foggy Bottom–GWU Washington Metro station, which is also right next to George Washington University Hospital.
The following is a list of residence halls found on the Foggy Bottom campus:
Name | Year built | Capacity | Street | Class | Image | Notes |
Potomac | 2006 | 379 | F | Freshman | Potomac House houses 379 Freshman men and women in doubles.[1] | |
Madison | 1926 | 222 | 22nd | Freshman | Madison Hall houses 222 Freshman men and women in doubles and quads.[1] | |
Thurston | 1929 | 1,116 | F | Freshman | Largest freshman residence hall. Thurston Hall houses 1,116 Freshman men and women in doubles, triples, quads, fives and sixes.[1] | |
Lafayette | 1926 | 126 | I | Freshman | Lafayette Houses 126 Freshman men and women in doubles. It was completely renovated in 2011.[1] | |
2109 F Street | 1935 | F | Sophomore | |||
Mitchell | 1929 | 350 | 19th | Sophomore | Singles Only. 7-11 at street level. | |
Munson | 1937 | 155 | I | Sophomore | ||
West End | 1925 | I | Sophomore | Closed as of Fall 2013; currently being demolished to make way for a large residence hall taking the place of West End, Schenley, and Crawford. The front facades of all three buildings are being preserved, and will be incorporated in to the combined "superdorm". | ||
Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis (JBKO) | 1936 | 265 | I | Sophomore | ||
Building JJ | 1920 | F | Sophomore | Greek-letter affinity housing for Kappa Sigma. | ||
Fulbright | 1939 | 250 | H | Sophomore | ||
Francis Scott Key | 1940 | 160 | 20th | Sophomore | ||
Guthridge | 1926 | 250 | F | Sophomore | ||
Schenley | 1920 | H | Sophomore | Closed as of Fall 2013; currently being demolished to make way for a large residence hall taking the place of West End, Schenley, and Crawford. The front facades of all three buildings are being preserved, and will be incorporated in to the combined "superdorm". | ||
South Hall | 2009 | 450 | F | Seniors | GW's newest residence hall. | |
Amsterdam Hall | 1997 | H | Upperclassmen | Formerly known as New Hall. | ||
Strong | 1936 | 21st | Upperclassmen / Freshman / Sophomore | Women only, Greek-letter affinity housing for Chi Omega and Pi Beta Phi sororities, National Register of Historic Places | ||
1959 E Street | 2002 | E | Upperclassmen | Starbucks and Subway at street level. | ||
Shenkman Hall | 2004 | 730 | 23rd | Upperclassmen | Basement level features a food-court, including: Dunkin' Donuts and Pita Pit. Street level Potbelly. Formerly known as Ivory Tower. | |
City Hall | 1989 | 378 | 24th | Upperclassmen | ||
Dakota, The | 1989 | 200 | F | Upperclassmen | Affinity housing. | |
Hall on Virginia Avenue (HOVA) | 1965 | Virginia Avenue | Graduate | Across from the Watergate Complex. Rooftop pool. No longer available for housing; currently being sold. | ||
Aston, The | 1960 | New Hampshire Avenue | Graduate | |||
Townhouse Row | 2002 | 23rd | Sophomores / Upperclassmen | Greek Housing for Sigma Chi, Alpha Phi, Pi Kappa Phi, Sigma Kappa, Phi Sigma Sigma, Delta Gamma, Phi Kappa Psi, and Alpha Delta Pi | ||
International House | 1966 | Virginia Avenue | Sophomores / Upperclassmen | Greek housing for Kappa Delta, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Alpha Epsilon Phi, Beta Theta Pi, Lambda Chi Alpha, Pi Kappa Alpha, Sigma Delta Tau, and Zeta Beta Tau. | ||
Scholars Village Townhouses | Sophomores / Upperclassmen | Each townhouse is different. | ||||
Mount Vernon
The following is a list of residence halls found on the Mount Vernon campus:
Name | Year Built | Class | Image | Notes |
Merriweather | 1960 | Freshman | Merriweather houses 43 female residents in doubles.[1] | |
Hensley | 1945 | Freshman | Hensley houses 39 men and women in singles and doubles.[1] | |
Clark | 1945 | Freshman | Clark Hall houses freshman in singles and doubles.[1] | |
Somers | 1945 (renovated 2002) | Freshman | Somers was fully renovated in 2002. It houses 246 men and women in singles and doubles.[1] | |
Cole | 1945 | Sophomore | Cole Hall houses freshman in doubles.[1] | |
West | 2010 | Freshman and sophomore | MV Campus Center/Dining Center West Hall houses 287 men and women in singles, doubles or quads. | |
References
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to George Washington University. |
- GW Housing Website
- Official website
- Foggy Bottom Campus Map
- Mount Vernon Campus Map
- The GW and Foggy Bottom Historical Encyclopedia
Coordinates: 38°54′03″N 77°02′50″W / 38.900750°N 77.047100°W