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Pennsylvania Hall

3825 University Dr. C
Pittsburgh, PA
15213–4605


Details

  • Houses 420 men and women
  • Nine floors
  • Air-conditioned four-person suites and doubles
  • Private baths
    *Bathroom dimensions: 6'2" x 10' or 10' x 6'6"
  • Lounge and study room on each floor
  • Laundry facilities on each floor
  • Fitness center
  • French Language and Culture Living Learning Community
  • Italian Language and Culture Living Learning Community
  • Leadership Living Learning Community
  • Network connection for each student
  • Refrigerator and microwave
  • Fire safety—alarm and sprinkler system throughout; regularly scheduled fire drills

*Dimensions for standard room only—others may vary by room type

Room Rates**
per Semester

Suite: $3,275
Double: $3,175

** Room rates are subject to change.

 

Description

Pennsylvania Hall, located on the upper campus adjacent to the Petersen Events Center, offers striking views of Oakland. Pennsylvania Hall houses 420 men and women, primarily upperclass students, in air-conditioned four-person suites and doubles with private baths.

An open lounge and laundry facilities are on every floor, and the commons area contains The Pennsylvania Perk coffee cart, a fitness center, a meeting room, and a student mail center.

Pennsylvania Hall houses Living Learning Communities including the French Language and Culture Community, the Italian Language and Culture Community, and the Leadership Community. A resident director, a program coordinator, and seven resident assistants are on staff.

Basic cable television is provided in each room/suite in every residence hall and each bedroom and/or living room in every apartment-style accommodation.

Each residence hall room and apartment-style living bedroom is equipped with an Ethernet connection that links you directly to the University network and the Internet.

 

Location






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Did You Know?

Pennsylvania Hall's namesake, a building that stood where the new residence hall now stands, was part of the University's "Acropolis Plan," which would have modeled the University after the Acropolis in Athens, Greece. The plan won a nationwide 1908 architecture competition but was never implemented.