BJWilliams wrote:Haha...I had moved back to the quads in 07-08 because a friend of mine had been placed as an RA there so I went with him...for what turned out to be my last year of undergrad, I decided I would move to the hill for two reasons: 1) it was closer to just about all of my classes 2) I wanted a different experience than I had before and it was either there or the circle
Ah, the old "follow-the-student-leader" trick. I should have guessed, seeing as that's a big part of why I have no close friends from living on campus 2011-2014. I just find it funny when students live on East or the Quads as freshman/sophomores and then move to the Hill or the Circle as juniors/seniors. Just seems very backwards, but I suppose that's par for the course for LU housing.
ATrain wrote:I lived on the Hill my first semester...then moved to East and stayed over there until I finished undergrad. Easier to get away with stuff on East than the Hill/Circle. Except, I was a good Liberty kid and followed all the rules, but it would've been easier *whistles*
There wasn't one single semester on the Hill where I didn't
almost move to East. Each time, I ultimately couldn't be convinced that East would be that much better in terms of what I was dealing with. I didn't want to break rules, mind you, I just wanted to be left alone to socialize on my own terms.
Since the conversation has deviated toward housing, I'd like to offer a Master Plan prediction for commentary. The Spring 2013 Master Plan showed M25-M28 (formerly South Campus or the Outer Circle, now just the Circle) being replaced by new dorms. The Fall 2013 Master Plan removed that element, but now it sounds like the three female Hill dorms will be replaced instead (see my earlier post for evidence). Based on that evidence, I'm going to predict that all of the original, traditional residence halls on Main Campus will ultimately be replaced by new dorms. The South Tower ("Hospital") will probably remain, and the Quads
may remain. But I think as the last few years of students graduate and/or move off campus and new classes come in, it's going to become harder and harder to sell the old traditional dorms to new students, and so I think they will eventually all be replaced. They will have such a tiny capacity and low level of amenities compared to the new dorms that it will be too hard to justify keeping them around.
On a side note, I've been told that the Liberty Champion will feature a construction update in its first issue this semester (probably next Tuesday), and construction will be a major topic of conversation throughout the year. So hopefully that means we will have some questions answered and news to report soon.