Columbia University Housing offers students a unique opportunity to be able to make a living, home to scholars and build a strong relationship with the surrounding communities within reach to New York City that has been offered. Campus housing is provided to approximately 5,600 students. where 94 percent of all students and 99 percent of all first-year students live in dormitories.
There are 19 undergraduate and 18 brownstones dormitory that houses students of traditional housing and community special life, which is located around the Morningside campus, including the Fu Foundation School of Engineering and Applied Science that offers a unique life in campus housing. In addition, the campus housing have also provided summer accommodation, conferences, and guests.
With the program and based on friendliness, the campus housing will continue and remain committed to providing exceptional customer service to ensure satisfaction of the population, work together with partner universities to meet the housing needs of the community, and work to continuously improve the operational activities that have been given by the university while providing opportunities for students to continue to grow and learn.
Guidelines for Life is a compilation of policies, procedures and services made by Columbia Housing and Residential Life for students who live in 18 undergraduate dormitories, and brown stone. For students are expected to read carefully and thoroughly about additional important information and policy Columbia University that has been available available on the site Essential Policy.
Columbia Housing is committed to continue to deliver and provide the student with the highest level of service to ensure that students who live in dormitories with safety and comfort, and they can call home.
There Hospitality desk located in Hartley Hall staff who served 24 hours a day, 7 days a week to help students.
Contact Columbia Housing
Hartley Hospitality Desk
Hartley Lobby - (212) 854-2779
Columbia Housing Office
118 Hartley Hall - (212) 854-2946
Residential Life
Residential Life fosters living and learning environment that is safe and inclusive outside the classroom to develop holistically responsible global citizens. Through programs that have been provided, services, and partnerships University, Residential Life strives to instill core values in all the communities where they live.
Residential Life staff member with whom the citizens will have the most contact is their Resident Advisor (RA). Resident Advisor floor plan events and community development are available to help people who have difficulties they may encounter. Residents must notify the RA them directly if they find the issues of: academic concerns, noise, conflicts between roommates / suitemates and / or neighbors, smoke or anything else that is applicable in community standards.
Contact Residential Life
Office of Residential Life
• Main Office: 515 Lerner
• The Block, West Campus: 103 Broadway
• Southfield, Life Learning Center: 111 Wallach
• Campus east: 310 East Campus
Residential Life Main Line
(212) 854-6805
Columbia Housing and Residential Life work together to make sure your experience is the best student housing that they will get. It is important that the students who live in a residential community to adhere to the policies outlined in the Guide to Living and understand the standard of living in the community and their expectations as citizens in an undergraduate dormitory.
Hope Community Standards and Conduct
All communities must have clear expectations and code of conduct to maintain security and order in society. Each member of the housing shall be responsible for the community in building and maintaining environmental balance between the needs of individuals and society.
Residential Life Doing Administrative Process
Be familiar with Residential Life Process Behavior Administration to document the various problems of society and policy violations, and penalties and the appeal process.
Dean Discipline Process
Dean Discipline is the process used by the Columbia College, Columbia Engineering, and the School of General Studies to investigate and respond to any allegations of behavior or academic error. Dean Discipline process is not intended to be hostile or legal process, but rather aims to educate students about the impact of their behavior that might have implications for their own lives and in the larger community.
Source: housing.columbia.edu/