Parking Space at Boston University Scientific and Art Building

Boston Academy dormitory

Warren Towers
Warrentowers.jpg

Warren Towers during sunset.

Full general information
Type Dormitory
Address 700 Commonwealth Avenue
Boston, Suffolk County, Massachusetts 02215
U.s.a.
Coordinates 42°twenty.945′N 71°6.215′W  /  42.349083°N 71.103583°West  / 42.349083; -71.103583
Completed 1967
Owner Boston University
Technical details
Floor count xviii
Website
world wide web.bu.edu/housing/residences/largedorms/warren

Warren Towers is ane of the iii Boston Academy dormitories traditionally intended for underclassmen, the others being The Towers and West Campus. The building is located at central campus, adjacent to the College of Communication (COM) and across from the Higher of Arts and Sciences (CAS). Housing approximately 1800 students,[1] it is the 2nd-largest non-military dormitory in the country, behind Jester Centre at The Academy of Texas at Austin.[2] The closest MBTA stop is Boston University East on the Green Line B branch, located directly in front of B and C Towers, in a center reservation on Commonwealth Avenue.

Name [edit]

Original proper noun [edit]

Originally, the building's name was simply "700", in reference to its 700 Commonwealth Avenue accost. Its three towers were merely called, from eastward to due west (left to right in the above photo), A Tower, B Tower, and C Belfry. The edifice was first occupied in 1966; residents lived in A and B Towers while construction of C Tower was completed (this fact gave nascence to the student "legend" that C Tower was synthetic of spare parts from A and B towers).[3] The third tower was completed and occupied in 1967.[4]

Renaming [edit]

In 1976 the building was rechristened "Warren Towers" as a tribute to three generations of the Warren family at Boston University: William Fairfield Warren (the University'due south first president), William Marshall Warren (a Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences; son of William Fairfield Warren), and Shields Warren (a famous physician; son of William Marshall Warren and grandson of William Fairfield Warren).[5] Additionally, each tower was renamed in honor of one of the men; A Tower is now "Fairfield Tower", B Tower is "Marshall Tower", and C Belfry is "Shields Tower". Statuary plaques in the main lobby commemorate the 3 men. Although these are the formal names of the towers, it is rare to hear anyone refer to them in this style; the A/B/C convention is far more than popular.[six]

Gender segregation [edit]

The facility opened before the introduction of coeducational housing at BU, and as such A and B Towers housed women, and C Tower men. This reflected the loftier female-to-male ratio, a statistic that BU is still known for today. Although the edifice is now coeducational, some floors remain exclusively female. When in use by the university's summer programs (University of Media Production, Loftier School Honors, Summertime Claiming, Upward Bound, Upward Bound Math Scientific discipline, Visual Arts' Summer Found, Summer Theatre Found, Program in Mathematics for Young Scientists), one tower is exclusively male, while a second is exclusively female.

Layout [edit]

Warren Towers, xviii stories in top, is the largest dormitory on the Boston University campus. Its 3 towers sit atop a four-story base construction.[7] The outset 3 floors (and a basement) are a university parking facility; the fourth floor contains the dorm's foyer, dining hall, and other amenities including study lounges and laundry rooms.

Each of the tower's 14 residential floors firm approximately 40 residents, including the Resident Banana (RA). Most floors are divided into 18 doubles, iv singles (including i for the RA), and a quad, though in that location are exceptions to this. For case, some floors in C Belfry are home to faculty-in-residence, for whom small apartments have been created from the existing flooring plan. Almost all floors have two shared bathrooms (ane for each sex), though some single sex floors have a single bathroom.

In addition, all floors have a common room, except floors 5A and 5B, where a small laundry room is provided, and floor 17 of belfry B, which is a boiler room for the facility. Like other campus housing facilities throughout campus, some floors are designated for sure schools. For example, the 11th and 14th floors of C Belfry house only communication students.

Retail space [edit]

Originally the building presented one long blank wall along the 700 block of Republic Artery, with the exception of the plate-glass entryway leading to the escalator banks. Ane of the initiatives undertaken early in the tenure of President John Silber was to carve retail infinite out of the building at street level, to generate income. Today retail establishments accessible at street-level include Bank of America and Citizens Bank ATMs, Subway, Basho Express, a Japanese fusion to-go eating house, and a City Convenience store.[eight] A Taco Bong airtight in April 2008.[9]

In the 1980s, retail tenants included Rumple'south (a full-service restaurant; this space later on became a Taco Bell); Nikki'due south sandwich store (immediately westward of the escalator entrance for the dormitory); and a Store 24 convenience store, which subsequently converted to a university-endemic "Campus Convenience" store.

Parking [edit]

Despite the aplenty parking space afforded by the multileveled garage in the lower department of the building, student parking is not permitted. The exception to this is for a short time around move-in and move-out periods when parking is costless and the elevator banks are permitted to drop to the 3rd floor of the garage, bypassing security and easing the moving experience.

At all other times parking is for faculty and staff by permit from the Function of Parking Services, or on a cash basis (the University leverages its close proximity to Fenway Park during baseball season to generate income in this way). Overnight parking is forbidden.

The Large U [edit]

Neil Stephenson'south satirical first novel, The Big U, was loosely based on his experiences in Warren Towers, and is set up in a fictional dormitory similar to Warren — with eight towers instead of iii, simply connected at a commons above ground level.

References [edit]

  1. ^ Musikar, Jessica (2004-03-04). "Non much privacy in central, social Warren Towers, residents say". Daily Gratuitous Press . Retrieved 2008-09-ten .
  2. ^ "BU Yesterday". B.U. Bridge. 1999-02-19. Retrieved 2008-09-ten .
  3. ^ Kydd, Emerge Ann (2002-04-03). Boston Academy. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN978-1-4396-1136-iv.
  4. ^ Kydd, Sally Ann (2002-04-03). Boston University. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN978-1-4396-1136-4.
  5. ^ Craig, David J. (1999-10-15). "Who's behind that building?". B.U. Bridge . Retrieved 2008-09-10 .
  6. ^ "50 years of Warren Towers, the "quintessential dormitory" of BU – The Daily Free Press". Retrieved 2020-01-25 .
  7. ^ "Boston Academy Warren Towers | Buildings". Emporis. Retrieved 2013-04-22 .
  8. ^ Rocheleau, Matt (July 26, 2012). "Pinkberry to open at BU prompting Olecito to close, Jamba Juice to relocate". Retrieved 15 September 2012.
  9. ^ Healy, Erin (2008-09-08). "Subway to open in a calendar week". Daily Costless Printing . Retrieved 2008-09-10 .

External links [edit]

  • "Rite Of Passage: Moving Into A Higher Dorm", a September 7, 2010 story about move-in day at Warren Towers

bradleydeconsenry.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warren_Towers

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