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Encyclopedia > Dormitories
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A typical American college dorm room

A dormitory or dorm is a place to sleep. The word derives from the French 'dormir', to sleep.


Dormitories are usually referred to as 'dorms'. The word is used in two contexts:

  • room with many beds (a sleeping dormitory);
  • building with many small private rooms (a dormitory building);
Contents

Sleeping dormitory

A common usage of the term 'dormitory' is for a large room with many single beds. Examples are found in many rooming houses such as hostels, fraternities, sororities, and other scholarship halls. The room typically is a large room with very few furnishings except for beds. Such rooms can contain anywhere from 2 to 50 to hundreds of beds (though such very large rooms are rare except perhaps as military barracks). Such rooms provide little or no privacy for the residents, and very limited storage for personal items in or near the beds. Storage and personal spaces is often provided in other locations in the building, but these other locations are not usually called a 'dorm'.


Dormitory buildings

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Beta Hall, the largest co-ed traditional-style dormitory at the University of South Florida.

At boarding schools, colleges, and universities, the word dormitory is used to describe the entire building used to house students. It is this usage which is much more common in the United States. In UK Universities these buildings are usually called Halls of Residence. In the United States this terminology is often controversial at best among professionals and the term "Residence Hall" or simply "Hall".


Most colleges and universities provide (usually for a rental fee) single or multiple occupancy rooms for their students. These building are comprised of many such rooms, like an apartment building, and the number of rooms varies quite widely from just a few to hundreds. The largest dormitory building is Bancroft Hall at the United States Naval Academy


Formerly, many companies in the U.S. and elsewhere housed employees in dormitories. This practice has dwindled, but continues in many other countries.


Dormitories have replaced barracks at many U.S. military installations.


Typically, these dorm rooms are about 25 square meters (15 feet by 15 feet of floor space), and provide the following minimal furnishings:

  • twin bed (sometimes in a bunk-bed configuration);
  • desk;
  • mirror;
  • closet space (sometimes);
  • drawers (clothes storage) (sometimes);
  • window;
  • sink with running water (rarely);

Most often, bathrooms are provided for a group of rooms, which provide shower, toilet, and sink facilities.


In the U.S., dormitories are most often segregated by gender, with men living in one group of rooms, and women in another. Some dorms are single-sex with varying limits on visits by persons of each gender.


Most dorms are much closer to campus than comparable private housing such as apartment buildings. This convenience is a major factor in the choice of where to live since living physically closer to classrooms means being able to sleep later and still arrive at to class on time.


Examples

  • University of Kansas, Lawrence Kansas, USA, Joseph R. Pearson Dormitory:
    • Overall size: 6 floors of 36 rooms each (total 216 rooms approx.), typical population 380 (some people had single rooms);
    • Room: 15 x 15 ft. square, 3 feet was a dual closet, with built in drawers, and lighted mirror alcove;
    • Contents: Single-sized bed which folded into a couch (or bunk beds, by choice), desk, lamp (no sink);
    • Bathrooms: One bathroom for 18 rooms, containing 5 shower stalls, 8 sinks, 4 toilets, and 3 urinals;
    • Genders: Single sex dorm (for men), though in summer had men in one wing and women in the other;
    • Extras: Cafeteria in basement, workout room, laundry room, elevators, lobby, music / piano room, game room;
  • College of St. Catherine, St. Paul, Minnesota, USA, Stanton Hall Dormitory:
    • Overall size: 3 floors with a total of 29 rooms;
    • Room: 14 x 14 ft. square, 3 feet dual closet, lighted mirror aclove with built in drawers;
    • Contents: Single-sized bed, desk, lamp (no sink);
    • Bathrooms: One bathroom for 20 rooms;
    • Genders: Single sex dorm (for women).
    • Extras: Campus-wide cafeteria in another building, one 'kitchen/rec room' per floor, laundry, lobby / meeting room;

Housekeeping

University dorms have housekeeping staff to maintain the cleanliness of common rooms including lobbies and bathrooms. Stereotypically, college dorm rooms are small and messy; this stereotype has a strong basis in fact.

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Another (not-so-clean) college dorm room

Disambiguation

The term dormitory is also often applied to suburbs or towns adjacent to large cities. For instance, Porirua is a dormitory city for Wellington, New Zealand. (In the United States, these would be called bedroom communities, and they are also referred to in some countries as commuter towns.)


  Results from FactBites:
 
Scottish Rite Dormitory, Austin, Texas (151 words)
Scottish Rite Dormitory, known affectionately as SRD since 1922, is situated on seven expansive and gorgeous acres just one block north of The University of Texas at Austin.
Close to the hustle and bustle of UT, SRD has maintained the elegant traditions of the past and blends them with modern amenities to provide a special place where the whole person is considered and supported.
We provide the elegance and traditions of the past combined with modern amenities and an energetic staff who do everything possible to provide a safe, caring home during your time at The University of Texas at Austin.
GB Dormitory (649 words)
The NRAO in Green Bank, West Virginia operates a dormitory for groups of individuals of all ages who have educational activities arranged at observatory facilities.
Dormitory reservations may not be made until the educational activities have been requested, approved and scheduled.
The group is responsible for ensuring that the dormitory is left in a clean state.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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