Difference between revisions of "Furnald Hall"

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During World War I, Furnald was a residence for female graduate students. During World War II, it housed "ninety-day wonder" commissioned naval officers, who were sent off to war after only three months of officer training. It then became a [[law school]] dormitory, before once again becoming an undergraduate residence hall in [[1960]].
 
During World War I, Furnald was a residence for female graduate students. During World War II, it housed "ninety-day wonder" commissioned naval officers, who were sent off to war after only three months of officer training. It then became a [[law school]] dormitory, before once again becoming an undergraduate residence hall in [[1960]].
  
In [[1995]], Furnald was falling apart. [[Hartley Hall|Hartley]] and [[Wallach Hall]] had benefited from major renovation and reconstruction in the 1960s and 1970s due to the generosity of [[Ira D. Wallach]] and [[Jerome L. Greene]], but Furnald did not. President [[George Rupp]] ordered a $12m complete gutting and rebuilding.
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By the mid-90s Furnald had fallen into a state of disrepair. [[Hartley Hall|Hartley]] and [[Wallach Hall]] had benefited from major renovation and reconstruction in the 1960s and 1970s due to the generosity of [[Ira D. Wallach]] and [[Jerome L. Greene]], but Furnald did not. President [[George Rupp]] ordered a $12m complete gutting and rebuilding.
  
 
===Famous former residents===
 
===Famous former residents===

Revision as of 22:06, 3 November 2007

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Furnald
Furnald.jpg
Built 1913
Renovated 1996
Population 235
University Residence Halls
548 West 113th Street600 West 113th StreetBroadwayCarlton ArmsCarmanEast Campus47 ClaremontFurnaldHarmonyHartleyHoganJohn JayMcBainRiverRugglesSchapiroWallachWattWienWoodbridge

Furnald is a popular, but controversial, residence hall.

For a long time, only seniors were able to get rooms in Furnald in the Room Selection process. It was very popular, not least because it had its own bar in the basement, which reached legendary status.

Today, after being completely renovated, Furnald is a first year and sophomore residence hall. Therefore, first years who aren't housed in Carman, John Jay or the Living Learning Center, still get to live in the quad and are protected to some extent from juniors and seniors. The remaining space is open to rising sophomores in General Selection. Typically, only sophomores with lottery numbers between 1 and 500 (about 100 or so lucky souls) are able to get rooms in Furnald.

History

Furnald Hall was funded by a bequest from Francis Furnald in memory of his son, Royal Blackler Furnald (CC 1901). It was designed by McKim, Mead, and White, and opened in 1913.

During World War I, Furnald was a residence for female graduate students. During World War II, it housed "ninety-day wonder" commissioned naval officers, who were sent off to war after only three months of officer training. It then became a law school dormitory, before once again becoming an undergraduate residence hall in 1960.

By the mid-90s Furnald had fallen into a state of disrepair. Hartley and Wallach Hall had benefited from major renovation and reconstruction in the 1960s and 1970s due to the generosity of Ira D. Wallach and Jerome L. Greene, but Furnald did not. President George Rupp ordered a $12m complete gutting and rebuilding.

Famous former residents

Facilities

  • All rooms have carpets, air conditioning.
  • Each floor has a spacious lounge with a TV and fully-equipped kitchen.
  • Each floor has 2 large bathrooms (1 male, 1 female).
  • Single laundry room located in basement

Rooms

  • For first years, 78 singles and 17 doubles.
  • For sophomores, 109 singles and 7 doubles.
  • Floors 1, 2 and 10 have especially large rooms.
  • 1002 is an architecturally interesting room.

Advantages and disadvantages

Advantages

  • Recently renovated, so it almost feels like a new building.
  • Convenient location near Lerner, and, well, everything. Perhaps the best location on campus.
  • Great campus and Broadway views.
  • Nice bathrooms. Especially the handicapped shower stalls with removable shower heads.
  • Air conditioning.
  • Lots of closet space.
  • Basically the only place where you can get a single as a sophomore.
  • Ideal choice for independence-minded first years who want lots of privacy. (See below for why Furnald is a bad choice for most first years.)
  • Reliable elevators.
  • Floor lounges have kitchens, so you can actually cook.

Disadvantages

  • Furnald is a relatively quiet and antisocial residence hall. There are only 25 people on each floor, of whom about 12 are first years, compared to 40+ first years on the average John Jay or Carman floor. Furthermore, the sophomores in Furnald already have their own social networks and tend not to socialize with the first years. So the building doesn't have John Jay's or Carman's social atmosphere, where hundreds of eager beaver first years all want to get to know each other. This is a significant drawback since most students' social networks are built up from their first year floormates.
  • Social interaction in lounges is infrequent (relative to other first year dorms).
  • Kitchens are less useful for first years required to be on a meal plan.
  • Layout is not conducive to intra-floor socializing, since stairways and elevators are on the north and south ends of the hall, which somewhat isolates the north and south sides of the floor from one another
  • Uncommon for people to leave their doors open (relative to other first year dorms).
  • Doubles are fairly small.

Pictures

Floor plans

Building address

2960 Broadway
New York, NY 10027

Map

<googlemap lat="40.807335" lon="-73.963826" type="map" zoom="16" width="500" height="300" controls="small"> 40.807335, -73.963826, Furnald residence hall </googlemap>

External Links

Columbia Housing - Furnald