Difference between revisions of "Carman Hall"
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− | '''Carman''' is a first-year residence hall. Carman was built as New Hall in 1960, with a $3m loan from the Federal Housing & Home Agency. The loan specified that Columbia could not build a link between New Hall and Ferris Booth Hall (since rebuilt as [[Lerner Hall]]), lest it develop a "country club atmosphere." | + | '''Carman''' is a first-year residence hall. Carman was built as New Hall in 1960, with a $3m loan from the Federal Housing & Home Agency. The loan specified that Columbia could not build a link between New Hall and [[Ferris Booth Hall]] (since rebuilt as [[Lerner Hall]]), lest it develop a "country club atmosphere." |
The building is named after Harry Carman, fourth Dean of Columbia College (1943-1950), who was beloved by students. | The building is named after Harry Carman, fourth Dean of Columbia College (1943-1950), who was beloved by students. |
Revision as of 00:09, 20 March 2007
Carman | |
Carman.jpg | |
Built | 1959 |
Renovated | 1999-2001 |
Population | 587 |
University Residence Halls | |
548 West 113th Street • 600 West 113th Street • Broadway • Carlton Arms • Carman • East Campus • 47 Claremont • Furnald • Harmony • Hartley • Hogan • John Jay • McBain • River • Ruggles • Schapiro • Wallach • Watt • Wien • Woodbridge |
Carman is a first-year residence hall. Carman was built as New Hall in 1960, with a $3m loan from the Federal Housing & Home Agency. The loan specified that Columbia could not build a link between New Hall and Ferris Booth Hall (since rebuilt as Lerner Hall), lest it develop a "country club atmosphere."
The building is named after Harry Carman, fourth Dean of Columbia College (1943-1950), who was beloved by students.
Contents
Living Arrangements
Carman is suite (sort-of) style living, with two doubles per entryway. While the overall size of the A versus B suites varies based on the particular suite, the B lines generally feel larger and offer more options for furniture arrangement. A line rooms generally feel long and narrow, and the furniture generally fits best with a bed and desk on each long wall.
Each suite has its own bathroom consisting of two sinks, one toilet and one shower.
Each floor has a common area with a couple chairs and a cable television. Floors 2-5 are shorter floors and have their lounge in the open area near the elevator banks. Floors 6 and above have their lounges at the far west end of the floor with a window looking out onto Broadway.
First-Year single-sex housing is located on floors M, 2, 3.
The laundry room has 14 washers and 14 dryers, but at peak usage times, this often isn't even enough. The basement lounge has a non-functional pool table, along with chairs and tables. The sole kitchen in the entire building is located in the basement as well. It contains a microwave, a questionable mini-fridge, and two oven ranges/stoves, as well as plentiful cabinet space.
Carman has the reputation of being the "party" or "social" dorm, probably of it's group living quarters and it's incredibly spacious corridors which function as fantastic unorganized social spaces.
Photos
Floor plans
Map
<googlemap lat="40.806472" lon="-73.963845" type="map" zoom="16" width="500" height="300" controls="small"> 40.806472, -73.963845, Carman residence hall </googlemap>