<p>Okay, I know coed by suite/apartment basically means your suite/apartment mates are of the same gender, but those of the suite/apartment next door could be of a different gender. However, what exactly is meant by coed by floor/section? Well, I guess floor is self explanatory... all people on one floor are of the same gender, right? But I want to know, does a section include more than one floor? Is by section like, one end of the dorm house is of one gender and the other end of the other gender? I'm confused ?.?</p>
<p>I dont think there are any coed by suit/apartment at UF. An ecample of coed by section is Murphree. You have sections A through M and you have guys on the 1st and 4th and girls on 2nd and 3rd, with the kitchen on the 2nd floor. Each floor (or mini-floor) have their own bathroom (1shower, 1 sink, 2 toilets). Thomas has 3 girls sections and 3 male sections. Buckman has 2 male and 2 female. The difference is that the entire section is one sex compared to the coed in Murphree.</p>
<p>From what I read, Keys, Lakeside, Beaty and Hume are all coed by suite/apartment. I have also heard anecdotal evidence for Hume.</p>
<p>Also, I still don't get the coed by section thing... there are guys on the first and fourth floors and girls on the second and third floors? If so, how is that different from coed by floor? Could you draw a map?</p>
<p>when i visited a friend in hume dorm last week their were both guys and girls on the same floor. they were just on different ends of the hall with the commons area in the middle</p>
<p>
[quote]
From what I read, Keys, Lakeside, Beaty are all coed by suite/apartment.
[/quote]
</p>
<p>Which means you have a room (or if you want to call it apartment or suite) with 4 people but they all of the same sex, but your neighbor could be a room of 4 girls. </p>
<p>No rooms on campus were girls and guys share the same room, unless you are marred (in which you would be moved to graduate housing or something). </p>
<p>
[quote]
when i visited a friend in hume dorm last week their were both guys and girls on the same floor. they were just on different ends of the hall with the commons area in the middle
[/quote]
</p>
<p>Broward also has a similar setup. Girls on one side, guys on the other and a common kitchen/lounge in the middle.</p>
<p>
[QUOTE]
Which means you have a room (or if you want to call it apartment or suite) with 4 people but they all of the same sex, but your neighbor could be a room of 4 girls.
[/QUOTE]
</p>
<p>Yes, which is how I defined "coed by suite/apartment" on my opening post, and how UF in general seems to use the term, which is why I was confused when you stated "I dont think there are any coed by suit/apartment at UF."</p>
<p>BTW, I thought it was hilarious you spelled married as "marred." Froid would have a field day with that one. XD</p>
<p>You meant Freud***</p>
<p>Oh yeah, sorry! Wasn't thinking about my spelling there ^.^</p>
<p>Hume has one floor, the "cockpit", which is all male. I don't know if it's always like that, but this year it was.</p>
<p>I think they said that for security purposes the first floor was all male and the first and last room of the other floors (near the entrance and the exit). This was at Hume.</p>
<p>The cockpit, LOL!</p>
<p>"I think they said that for security purposes the first floor was all male and the first and last room of the other floors (near the entrance and the exit). This was at Hume."</p>
<p>...what does that have to do with security? 0_0</p>
<p>Rape. ...</p>
<p>I guess if alligators from Lake Alice go on a rampage they want the boys to be eaten first.</p>
So like if the two rooms connect through the bathroom, UF for example, both rooms would be same sex right?
@RRolm116 Correct! (I live in Hume)