Goodnow Hall, Student residence hall at Kansas State University, Manhattan, United States
Goodnow Hall is a seven-story limestone residence at Kansas State University that houses around 600 students in standard and suite-style rooms across its floors. The building provides study rooms, music spaces, drawing studios, and laundry facilities alongside the living spaces.
The building opened in 1960 as Kansas State University's first permanent residence hall for men and was named after early settler Isaac T. Goodnow. Its entrance features a limestone arch from 1859 salvaged from the earlier Bluemont Central College.
Students from engineering, architecture, planning, and design disciplines form specialized clusters, creating dedicated learning communities within the residence.
The hall sits near the Kramer Dining Center on campus, making meal access convenient for residents. Keep in mind that this is an active residential area where certain spaces may have restricted access during certain hours.
The entrance preserves an authentic limestone arch from an earlier college building, visibly linking the site's earlier educational past with student life today. This architectural fragment offers a tangible connection between the region's academic heritage and the residence's contemporary role.
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