Housing

Incoming students get to go through the stressful process of choosing somewhere to live when they begin at Oberlin. All students can pick between three types of residence halls (traditional dorms, program houses and co-ops), but only students who have Junior or Senior class standing (barring a few exceptions), can choose to live off-campus. College Housing is run by Residential Education and Dining Services (ResLife).

Hey incoming students: don't kill yourself over finding the perfect dorm for you. It's not too difficult to move around once you get on campus, even later in the semester (though it depends on how many open rooms there are in the dorm you want to move into). Also, don't forget that in the long run, where you live doesn't matter that much.

Finally, keep in mind that even though most halls have somewhat of a personality, it varies greatly depending on the students living there that semester. (So don't be frightened off when someone tells you that everyone in Fairchild is a militant vegan and everyone in North are zombies.)

Contents

[edit] In a Nutshell

  • Traditional dorms are just what you'd expect: a building with lots of other students who may or may not be your age, living in rooms of varying (but mostly small) sizes, usually with one roommate (though sometimes two or three, and sometimes none). All-gender housing is available in some dorms.
  • Program houses are organized around a theme, usually a foreign language or culture.
  • Co-ops are groups of students who do the housework themselves, so they cost less than other housing options. Because co-opers get much more say in how their halls are run (by proposing and directly voting on house policies), co-ops are traditionally very lax on the College's living rules (e.g. smoking, pets, quiet hours, mixed-gender roommates, all-gender housing...). Also, no co-op has divided doubles, and singles are rare. Finally, living in a co-op means you can eat in one too. Most Oberlin co-ops are members of OSCA. This costs less than other College living options.
  • Village housing is only available to upperclassmen or older students; you live in one of the many residential houses that Oberlin College owns around the campus. This costs more than other living options.
  • Off-campus housing is also only available to (a decreasing number of) upperclassmen or older students; you lease a room in a house from one of the many enterprising landlords in Oberlin. Prices and quality of rooms can vary.
  • Fraternities and Sororities: There are none. Although there are (unconfirmed and vague) rumors of an "underground" sorority...?

[edit] Off-campus/Village housing notes

The College has recently declared and taken steps to make Oberlin a more "residential College". What this means is that off-campus housing will be drastically limited, so many students (aside from the high-handed manner in which this decision was made) will be forced to live in overpriced College housing for all 4 or 5 years.

Exceptions to this rule: If you are

  • over the age of 23,
  • you live with your parents within 50 miles of Oberlin,
  • you are married or in a domestic partnership, or
  • you have minor children living with you,

You can apply for a housing exception (and also get off board).

[edit] Room Types

Not all halls have all these rooms. These only apply to Oberlin's residence halls; for off-campus living, it's gonna depend on the house.

  • Super-Singles are rooms classified as doubles, but are occupied by one person. They cost a lot.
  • Singles are a smaller room with one of everything. There aren't too many of these on campus, and first-years rarely (if ever) get them.
  • Open doubles are a room with two beds, two desks, two desk chairs, two closets, a double bureau, a mirror, and a "comfy chair". They're the most common.
  • Divided doubles are like open doubles, but there's a thin wall down the middle of the room. Good if you don't want to see your roommate often or don't get along with other people. It also makes sharing things (e.g. a fridge or what have you) a little more difficult if you two don't already know each other.
  • Triples are a larger room with three of everything. Again, not too many of these. There is only one triple in all of OSCA student housing, located in Old Barrows.
  • Quads are actually three small rooms: the "room" door opens into the middle room, which has two small closets and is supposed to have two chairs, a small couch and a table; two doors on either side of the middle room lead to bedrooms with two beds, two desks, two desk chairs, two closets, and a double bureau each.
  • Sometimes, when too many new students enroll, first-years are placed in lounges. These rooms vary in size and accommodations.

[edit] Other Things to Consider

[edit] Single-sex Halls

There are a few single-sex halls in the bigger dorms. The second floor of Dascomb has a set (women on the eastern hall, men on the western one), as does South. Burton's 4th floor is also women-only.

There may also be single-sex halls in... Barrows?, East? North?

There's also the Women's Collective in Baldwin Cottage.

[edit] Theme Living

[edit] Bathrooms

Most (if not all) halls have a vote early in the semester to decide the availability of the hall's bathrooms to various genders. Gender-neutral bathrooms are pretty common.

[edit] Group Showers

Harkness and Fairchild have group showers. Most people don't mind them, some like them a lot, and there's always the E system if you want your privacy.

(Want some amusement? Chuckle at this.)

[edit] External Links

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