<p>Part Deux! (Again, I didn't write this)</p>
<p>Upper Residences (McConnell Hall, Molson Hall, and Gardner Hall): These are called the BMH residences, for Bishop Mountain Hall, which is the name of the central round structure that the residences surround. All these halls are virtually identical, which is why they are grouped together.</p>
<p>They are located up the infamous hill. However, this hill isn't as bad as some make it out to be in summer. In winter, there is a period of time where it can be pretty darn nasty because of ice. However, living there is a great way to ward off the freshman 15! McConnell is the first one you come to, then Molson. Gardner is a little bit further up the hill (1 staircase further). BMH is the cafeteria and it's located in the center between those three buildings (on level with Molson, up a staircase from McConnell, down a staircase from Gardner) so you have to go outside, albeit not by very much, in order to eat.</p>
<p>All rooms are singles except for a few doubles (I believe the ratio is 80/20), and are your most traditional dormitory styles, sqarish shaped, twin bed, closet, desk unit, dresser, yep. If you've seen a dorm room you probably have a pretty good idea of what the residence rooms look like. Most of the rooms have beautiful views, whether overlooking Parc Mont Royal, or the downtown skyline. My (jewish) friend has a teriffic view of the cross from his window. If that's not irony i don't know what is...but moving on. All three dorms are coed, though McConnell is single sex wings. This means you go up the stairs and there are doors on each side of the stairs. One leads to the "girls side" and the other to the "guys side". There are bathrooms on each side, and one tends to be the girls and the other the guys, though there are no rules about this. There is a kitchenette on every floor, i think and every room comes equipped with a mini fridge. </p>
<p>Meal plan is the standard one. Residents eat at BMH, though a lot of times they'll eat lunch at RVC because it's close to classes. They can also eat at Douglas Hall. They do not get weekend meals. </p>
<p>Major Plusses: Most traditional of residences, coed, great view, cheapest trad. dorms
Major Minuses: The hill in winter, not the nicest of rooms, long lines for lunch/dinner because three residences dump into one cafeteria</p>
<p>Douglas Hall: The last of the "Traditional" McGill residences, Douglas is very very pretty. It's up the hill, but not as far as Upper Residences. It's right above the stadium. Inside is nice too. Their grand salon is beautiful with a piano. It's divided up into Houses, so you have A house through H house, the houses are connected via tunnels. Each floor has a common room and some floors have study rooms. Rooms are smaller than BMH rooms but tend to be nicer (hardwood floors!). You don't have the large windows that the other dorms do, however. The douglas community is supposed to be very nice and close. Doubles and singles are available though more singles than doubles. </p>
<p>Their cafeteria freaking looks like Hogwarts. I am serious. A high table, with three (OK, so not exactly like hogwarts) long tables stretched out. They have a cappucino machine too, which I am in love with. Food is the same in quality as RVC/BMH, not as big a selection but still pretty good, plus Doug residents can eat at the other two cafs. It's fully coed, girls and guys on the same floor. They have a full kitchen too, in the hall between the houses. </p>
<p>Major Plusses: Nice residence, nice rooms, nice common room, etc, good sense of community
Major Minuses: smaller rooms, kind of a cramped feeling sometimes, darker rooms (some of them)</p>
<p>Solin Hall: Ok, moving on to the nontraditional residences...Solin Hall used to be a chocolate factory (too cool..) but was bought by McGill not long ago. It's out near Atwater, a metro ride or 30 minute walk away from school. Rooms are suite style--3 people to a room, three small bedrooms, 1 bathroom, a living room, and a kitchen. Also big nice windows. No meal plan provided, you have to cook for yourself. Generally there's a good sense of community at Solin because the people that move in there are pretty responsible, and the community is tight because of their distance from school. You're a two minute walk from the metro, so that is how most students travel to school and back.</p>
<p>Major Plusses: A more apartment style feel, you aren't subjected to cafeteria food, the rooms are nice generally, you buy the monthly metro pass so you can travel freely around montreal.
Major Minuses: A lot of variation in room size, you gotta cook, you should allow 30 minutes between leaving rez and arriving at your class, you have to be out of downtown before the metro closes or else you're stuck walking or taking a cab. </p>
<p>Greenbriar Apartments: I don't know too much about these. They are apartment style, you share them with one other person. They're located on University street and are the 2nd closest residence (other than RVC) to campus. The room styles are a bit weird, I've heard, in that they house two people but one person's bedroom is in what would normally be the living room of an apartment. They all have balconies though, so they'd be a good choice for someone who wanted an apartment style living arrangement close to campus. I haven't actually been inside Greenbriar however, so I can't say much about it. </p>
<p>Major plusses: Close to campus, share with only one other person, ability to cook, deck
Major Minuses: no meal plan, awkward room layout (this is on hearsay). </p>
<p>MORE houses:Chances are your first year, you won't know anyone living in a MORE house. They are rare, rare animals. Yet, here is the little I know about them. They are fully furnished large houses scattered around the McGill area. They house 8-12 students. Some rooms are doubles, others singles. There is great variation, as you probably imagine, in room size and layout. ALl houses come with 1 or 2 bathrooms, a kitchen, a living room, some have a basement/office type space, they are very nice. You don't have floor fellows persay like you do in the other residences, there is one MORE fellow for all the MORE houses, or so I have heard. I'm not sure. All the houses are coed except for one that is all female. I'd imagine it would be an opportunity to be very close to people, however if there was someone you couldn't stand it'd be harder to avoid them as well. </p>
<p>Plusses: Relatively close to campus, a very tight knight atmosphere with others in your house, you have an actual house complete with full kitchen
Minuses: you're isolated from the McGill community in residences except for the others in your house, it's kind of an unknown quantity what size/shape room you'll be in.</p>