A list and quick summary of various dorms that have been mentioned.
Brigadoon Hall – Originally Briggsmeyer, it shows up every 100 moons. Don’t be inside it when it vanishes again.
Carnarvon Memorial Building – Art Deco, quiet, always cool, full of shag carpeting.
Childe House – Thoroughly normal. Statistically improbably numbers of students who haven’t the faintest idea of Elsewhere University’s true nature. Vacated every 305 days for surely unrelated reasons.
The Chinese House – A relic of 19th century Orientalism and the subject of fierce debate among students, but pleasant and homely.
Dadd House – A beautiful old Victorian that is absolutely not a repurposed asylum. Accommodation offered solely to those majoring in Fine Art, Art History, Music, Music Theory, Ceramics, and Animation.
Elsewhere Square – Decisively the ugliest accommodation on campus. The hallways are enough of a maze that RAs are referred to informally as Pathfinders. Don’t go too far into it. Pay attention to what is carved on the walls
Greenwood Hall – On the outskirts of campus. The portrait of the founder (?) has been vandalized, the third floor is the strangest, and the elevators are your safest bet. Supervised by the groundskeeper Miss Rosemary.
North Dorm - Safe, full of iron, and surrounded by thriving plant life all times of year. The crows frequently nest around it.
Taliesin House – Romantic-style dorm between the river and the playing fields, dating back to the days when Elsewhere University had a proper name. Holds popular socials on the equinox which border on (spill over into?) revels. For the most part it accommodates student athletes.
The Towers – Center of campus, the party flats, thin walls, full of poor decisions.
West Dorm - Treacherous. Moving halls, and the entire third floor is a liminal space. For some reason a few students are unaffected by any of this, and consequently notice none of it.
Whitehall Dorm - A fairly standard dorm except for the way it keeps being subject to magical arson attempts, due to the Gentry’s distaste for the inhabitants of the second floor.