List of Northwestern University residences
- 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 houses some of the university's approximately 15,000 undergraduate and graduate students on the Evanston, Illinois campus.
Residential colleges
Ayers College of Commerce and Industry
The Thomas G. Ayers College of Commerce and Industry (CCI) is a residential college at Northwestern University, 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 4 floors, 3 of which are co-ed. CCI holds an annual Business Symposium, bringing together many leaders in business-related fields with students to discuss various issues.[1][2]
Chapin Hall (Humanities Residential College)
726 University Place.
East Fairchild (Communications Residential College, CRC)
Communications Residential College (CRC) | |
Type | Residential college |
Established | 1981 |
Chair | Roger Boye |
President | Megan Ballew |
Enrollment | 109 |
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, presented throughout the year often feature journalists and filmmakers.[3]
CRC was built in 1981 as part of the $23 million South Campus project, which included the construction of 1835 Hinman and other residence halls. A $2 million gift from the Sherman Fairchild Foundation of Chevy Chase, Maryland, 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.[4] 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. 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. Another event is a show called "That's Stupid." Residents encourage their floor mates to charge a certain amount of money to perform a particular stunt or performance.
Hobart House (Women's Residential College)
Hobart House is Northwestern University's Women's Residential College, home to 50 undergraduate women.
Hobart House 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.
Jones Fine and Performing Arts Residential College
Jones Fine and Performing Arts Residential College | |
Type | Residential college |
Established | 1982 |
President | Sally Hausken |
Enrollment | approx. 120 |
Location | 1820 Sheridan Rd Evanston IL 60201 |
Jones Residential College[5] is Northwestern University's fine and performing arts residential college on the southern edge of campus, directly across the street from Lake Michigan.
Jones was opened to students 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: a space for photo editing, music recording, sound editing, ceramics studio, art studio, music and theatrical rehearsal rooms, a dance studio, and a performance space. Jones Website
Public Affairs Residential College
1838 Chicago Avenue. A politics and social policy-themed residential college.
Residential College of Cultural and Community Studies (CCS)
Residential College of Cultural and Community Studies | |
Type | Residential college |
Established | 1972 |
Faculty Chair | David Rapp |
Hall President | Topher Baxton |
Enrollment | 43 |
Location | 2303 Sheridan Rd Evanston IL 60201 |
College of Cultural and Community Studies[6] is one of the first residential colleges at Northwestern University and also its smallest.
The College of Cultural and Community Studies was one of Northwestern's first residential colleges. 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 United States and abroad. CCS emphasizes interaction with the local community through a variety of outings and through community service while maintaining interest in the culture that defines the world outside this community.
Students from as far away as Taiwan and as close as Evanston itself live together in CCS, one of Northwestern University's oldest residential colleges. Residents' majors range from art practice to journalism to engineering, but CCSers are united by an interest in cultures and concern for local and global communities. In 2007, CCS won the Northwestern Green Cup, an annual competition among all the 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.
CCS traditions include Finals Food, the Secret Box, Secret Satan, and camping.
Shepard Residential College
Shepard Residential College | |
Type | Residential college |
Established | 1972 |
Faculty Chair | Randy Freeman |
Hall President | Milana Duggan |
Enrollment | 180 |
Location | 626 University Place Evanston IL 60201 |
Shepard Residential College[7] is one of the two non-themed residential colleges at Northwestern University. It is the second-largest residential college, housing 180 freshman and sophomore students each year. Located at 626 University Place, near Allison Hall and the Public Affairs Residential College, Shepard is near downtown Evanston and the Music Administration Building. It is only 0.15 miles from Burger King, a popular late-night destination for Northwestern students, and less than half a mile away from the Norris student center.[8]
Shepard Hall was constructed as part of Northwestern's Centennaial 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 nonthematic, coeducational residential college in 1972.[9]
Shepard Residential College offers a piano lounge, classroom, TV lounge, study lounge, computer room, and multiple practice rooms. The TV Lounge is equipped with a big-screen television, pool table, ping-pong table, air-hockey table, and foosball table. Additionally, the residential college has the basic facilities offered by all residence halls, such as a kitchen, laundry room, and various offices. The majority of Shepard's facilities are in the building's basement.[10]
"Munchies" occur every Thursday night at 10:15pm, when the college's Munchies Chairs prepare different forms of food free to all "Sheep", as the residents call themselves. Firesides are another event, in which Northwestern faculty discuss various topics with any Sheep who are interested. In addition, Shepard has its own Dance Marathon team and hosts a Shepard Formal every spring. Other activities include the Woo-Shep Olympics (with rival'= residential college Willard), Midnight Ultimate (frisbee), and Midnight Running Club.[11]
Slivka Residential College for Science and Engineering
Slivka Residential College | |
Type | Residential college |
Established | 2002 |
Faculty Chair | Quincy Thomas Stewart |
President | Austin Dickey |
Enrollment | 137 |
Location | 2332 Campus Drive Evanston IL 60201 |
Slivka Hall[12] was built in 2002 as Northwestern's residential college devoted to science and engineering. 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 Sargent 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. 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. 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), the bike room, the music room, and the laundry room. The first floor connects to a store called Lisa's Cafe, and the second floor contains a recreation lounge. All the floors contain a varying number of suites, ranging from two on the first floor to six on the third and fourth floors, and a kitchen with an oven, a stove, a refrigerator, a dish washer, and a microwave.
Slivka's current mascot is the octopus.
West Fairchild (International Studies Residential College)
1861 Sheridan Road
Willard Residential College
Willard Residential College | |
Type | Residential college |
Established | 1938 |
Master | Gary Saul Morson |
President | Chukuemeka Nkemere |
Enrollment | approx. 300 |
Location | 1865 Sherman Ave Evanston, IL 60201 |
Willard Residential College[13] was built as an all-female dormitory in 1938. 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. Willard Hall was renamed "Willard Residential College" in 1972, when the dorm became a part of Northwestern's newly inaugurated Residential College program. It had become the first co-ed housing on campus in 1970.
Notable Willard events include Fall Formal (held in the past at such locations as the Sears Tower, the Adler Planetarium, and the Chicago Public Library), Polka Party, and Woo-Au Loo-Au (a grill-out noted for its pudding wrestling followed by a plunge into Lake Michigan). Willard lists notable Northwestern figures, including current Master Gary Saul Morson, Carl Smith, and Sanford Goldberg, among its faculty fellows. Past Masters of Willard include Gary Galbreath, Carl Petry, Dan Garrison, Shep Shanley, and Irwin Weil. Willard is the largest residential college at Northwestern University.
Notable alumni include Shelley Long, Julia Louis-Dreyfus (room 420), J. P. Manoux, Seth Meyers, David Schwimmer (room 427), Nicole Sullivan, Dave Revsine, Richard Kind, and Stephen Colbert (room 114).
Residence Halls
1835 Hinman
1835 Hinman Avenue
Allison Hall
1820 Chicago Avenue
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
Rogers House Residence Hall
647 University Place
Sargent Residence Hall
2245 Sheridan Road
South Mid-Quads Residence Hall
655 University Place
Fraternities
Alpha Epsilon Pi
584 Lincoln Street
Alpha Phi Alpha
Beta Theta Pi
2349 Sheridan Road
Chi Phi
550 Lincoln Street
Chi Psi
Suspended
Delta Chi
619 Colfax Street
Delta Tau Delta
2317 Sheridan Road
Delta Upsilon
Suspended
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 (whose headquarters is located in Evanston)
Sigma Chi
2249 Sheridan Road (whose headquarters is located in Evanston)
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. (whose headquarters is located 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
- ↑ "A residential college on the Northwestern campus". Ayers CCI. Retrieved 2013-10-19.
- ↑ "Campus Maps - Northwestern University". Aquavite.northwestern.edu. Retrieved 2013-10-19.
- ↑ "CRCWhat.com". August 31, 2008. Retrieved 2008-09-02.
- ↑ "WXRU.com". Wxru.com. April 11, 2009. Retrieved 2009-04-11.
- ↑ "Jones Residential College - Media". Jonesresidentialcollege.weebly.com. Retrieved 2013-10-19.
- ↑ "CCS | Residential College of Cultural and Community Studies". Groups.northwestern.edu. Retrieved 2013-10-19.
- ↑ "Home | Shepard Residential College". Shepardrc.com. Retrieved 2013-10-19.
- ↑ "Freshman housing guide 2009". North by Northwestern. 2009-05-17. Retrieved 2013-10-19.
- ↑ Archived July 16, 2011, at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ Archived December 8, 2008, at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ Archived December 1, 2008, at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ "Slivka Residential College". Slivka.northwestern.edu. Retrieved 2013-10-19.
- ↑ "Irwin Weil - Professor Emeritus, Slavic Languages & Literature with Joint Appointment in the School of Music". Willard Residential College. Retrieved 2009-06-19.