Largest Fraternity and Sorority Houses
Rank | Square Footage | Fraternity or Sorority | University Affiliation | Location | Year Completed |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 39,500 | Pi Kappa Alpha | Florida State University | Tallahassee, Florida | 2005 |
2 | 39,264 | Zeta Beta Tau | Florida State University | Tallahassee, Florida | 2005 |
3 | 38,853 | FarmHouse | Oklahoma State University | Stillwater, Oklahoma | under construction |
4 | 35,000 | Phi Kappa Psi | University of Kansas | Lawrence, Kansas | |
5 | 32,445 | Beta Theta Pi | University of Missouri | Columbia, Missouri | 2012 |
6 | 30,534 | Kappa Alpha Theta | Oklahoma State University | Stillwater, Oklahoma | |
7 (tie) | 30,000 | Pi Kappa Alpha | Missouri S&T | Rolla, Missouri | 2007 |
7 (tie) | 30,000 | Alpha Omicron Pi | University of Arkansas | Fayetteville, Arkansas | 2009 |
9 | 29,068 | Kappa Sigma | University of Arkansas | Fayetteville, Arkansas | 1931 |
10 | 29,000 | Phi Gamma Delta | University of Oklahoma | Norman, Oklahoma |
2008 |
11 | 28,500 | Kappa Sigma | Missouri S&T | Rolla, Missouri | 2011 |
12 | 27,000 | Pi Kappa Alpha | University of Illinois | Champaign, Illinois | 2011 |
13 | 26,000 | Phi Sigma Kappa | Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute | Troy, New York | 2011 |
14 | 25,425 | Sigma Alpha Epsilon | University of Cincinnati | Cincinnati, Ohio | 1925 |
15 | 24,000 | Kappa Sigma | University of Florida | Gainesville, Florida | 2008 |
Read more about this topic: North American Fraternity And Sorority Housing
Famous quotes containing the words largest, fraternity and/or houses:
“The largest pond is as sensitive to atmospheric changes as the globule of mercury in its tube.”
—Henry David Thoreau (18171862)
“In the kingdom of consumption the citizen is king. A democratic monarchy: equality before consumption, fraternity in consumption, and freedom through consumption. The dictatorship of consumer goods has finally destroyed the barriers of blood, lineage and race.”
—Raoul Vaneigem (b. 1934)
“It breedeth no small offence and scandal to see and consider upon the one part the curiosity and cost bestowed by all sorts of men upon their private houses; and on the other part the unclean and negligent order and spare keeping of the houses of prayer by permitting open decays and ruins of coverings of walls and windows, and by appointing unmeet and unseemly tables with foul cloths for the communion of the sacrament.”
—Elizabeth I (15331603)