Cabrini College - Residence Life

Residence Life

Cabrini College has several residence halls, which include traditional halls, houses, suite-style, and an apartment complex.

  1. Woodcrest Hall is a residence hall that previously housed only freshman females. However, in 2009 it became a co-ed freshman building. It only holds an approximate of about one-hundred and fifty five (155) students.
  2. Xavier Hall is mostly a freshman male residence hall, but it has become more co-ed in recent years. It holds approximately one-hundred and sixty (160) students and is divided into "quads," which are small clusters of rooms.
  3. Maguire House, or House 1, is a mostly sophomore student residence hall that houses about twenty-two (22) students.
  4. Dixon House, or House 2, is also mostly Sophomore students. A larger house, it holds about eighty-three (83) students.
  5. Infante House, or House 3, is a female-only sophomore residence hall that houses about twenty (20).
  6. McManus House, or House 4, is an upper-classmen house, females only, and houses about twenty-five (25).
  7. Casey House, or House 5, is almost identical to House 4 in layout. It is an upper-classmen female house housing twenty-seven (27) residents.
  8. Lanshe House, or House 6, is a co-educational house which houses approximately twenty-six (26) students.
  9. Sullivan House, or House 7, houses thirty-three (33) co-educational upper classmen
  10. Cabrini Apartment Complex is only offered to junior and senior co-ed students and houses about 116.
  11. East Residence Hall, formally known as "New Residence Hall," houses mostly freshman and sophomore students and is co-educational, varying by wing. It houses 260 students.
  12. West Residence Hall is Cabrini's newest residence hall, finished in 2006. It is a junior-senior residence hall that houses 138.

Read more about this topic:  Cabrini College

Famous quotes containing the words residence and/or life:

    My residence was more favorable, not only to thought, but to serious reading, than a university; and though I was beyond the range of the ordinary circulating library, I had more than ever come within the influence of those books which circulate round the world, whose sentences were first written on bark, and are now merely copied from time to time on to linen paper.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    In this loveless everyday life eroticism is a substitute for love.
    Henri Lefebvre (b. 1901)