<p>what shraf isnât telling you guys is that while sophomore housing can be bad, junior and senior housing can be really good. East Campus is a 20-story high rise where sophomores live in doubles, juniors live in singles, both groups have kitchens with dishwashers and 600-sf lounges, half have incredible views of morningside/harlem/central park. There are corridor-style buildings with big floor lounges and air conditioning and 14-16 floors; one of them, Broadway, has the definite feel of a hotel. </p>
<p>Seniors also have more options on apartment-style places with big living rooms, kichens, private baths, etc, some with 5-6 single bedrooms of 120-150 square feet (Hogan and EC Townhouses), some with 1-2 bedrooms and big living rooms (Watt and Woodbridge, both converted grad student apartment houses). Thereâs a lot of really nice stuff out there. </p>
<p>Freshmen have it better than sophomores, but upperclassmen can have it pretty sweet. By comparison with the dorms at a lot of other colleges, especially inner-city colleges, youâre paying less and getting more by and large.</p>
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ainât that the truth. finding an apartment in manhattan is one of the most stressful things iâve had to do in the past 5 years. arrogant mercenary brokers, deceptive listing practices, tremendous pressure, obscene prices. Columbia housing is a dream by comparison. Good luck to all those NYU kids who strike it out on their own with delusions of grandeur about living the life from âRentâ.</p>
<p>edit: if you want to know about my connection to housing, this article (despite being terribly written) isnât a bad summary:</p>
<p><a href=âhttp://media.www.columbiaspectator.com/media/storage/paper865/news/2006/04/25/News/Lord-Of.The.Lottery.Steve.Estes.Prepares.For.His.Final.Checkout.From.Housing-2027216.shtml[/url]â>http://media.www.columbiaspectator.com/media/storage/paper865/news/2006/04/25/News/Lord-Of.The.Lottery.Steve.Estes.Prepares.For.His.Final.Checkout.From.Housing-2027216.shtml</a></p>
<p>I was in the office on thursday to write a bit of code for Mark Chatoor, but to his credit he really ran the whole thing very smoothly and understood it well without much help from me. He and Joyce, theyâre not just competent, theyâre compassionate - they honestly care about students and about meeting their needs, and will go to the limits of fairness to help somebody out. Nobody gets their numbers rigged, but a lot of advice and lesser favors get dispensed. Every year there are plenty of people who are disappointed, but almost nobody gets furious or feels treated unfairly, and even those who end up in the âworst rooms on campusâ find that itâs not that much of a downer.</p>