Billionaire Seeks To Build Largely Windowless Dorm In 'Social and Psychological Experiment' (vice.com) 136
The University of California, Santa Barbara is preparing to spend $1.5 billion on a new 4,500-person student dorm designed by a billionaire mega-donor whose layout so closely resembles that of a prison a consulting architect resigned in protest, according to the Santa Barbara Independent. From a report: The architect likened it to a "social and psychological experiment with an unknown impact on the lives and personal development of the undergraduates the university serves" in his resignation letter. The building in question is the planned Munger Hall on the university's beachside campus, which the university's website says "will fulfill visions for both UC Santa Barbara and the donor, Charles Munger," a billionaire investor often described as Warren Buffet's "right-hand man." Munger has also financed the construction of graduate residences on the University of Michigan and Stanford campuses fashioned on his architectural ideas to promote collaboration and bonhomie. While the Stanford residences are essentially normal apartments, the Michigan hall resembles its UCSB sibling in that "most bedrooms don't have windows," according to VeryApt.com. The vision Munger Hall is fulfilling is alternately described two ways, depending on who is doing the talking. The universities that take his money -- on condition they use it to build his designs to his exacting specifications, as he reportedly considers himself an amateur architect -- describe such projects as having "a focus on providing ample interactive spaces for students" and "minimizing costs by maximizing the number of beds on a given site, employing the concept of repeatability..."
No windows (Score:5, Funny)
No windows sounds fine with me, but how is the fiber bandwidth?
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This is just crying for Gates to supply some of those massive LCD art/fake window displays. Then the students can 'look' out at anything they choose, including their view from home.
As long as it meets fire codes it should be fine.
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Almost Terrafoam (Score:2)
I think this is the closest thing in the real world yet to a Terrafoam building, the only difference is that it has some windows instead of none and is made with conventional materials and processes.
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It looks like the construction is not quite "conventional" as pods are to be built off site and trucked to the site and "dropped in". Although this technique is more common in recent years (for prisons and cruise ships for example), it's not quite "conventional" yet.
There are nine residence floors in the building.
Each residence floor consists of eight "houses".
Each "house" has a shared "great room" and kitchen (with 3 ranges, four dishwashers and four refrigerators), a laundry room, a game room, and two "to
Squid game hall (Score:2)
It's like one of those Japanese or Korean game shows where people do humiliating and dangerous things for money . I guess the us has those now like naked and afraid.
Perhaps he will make all the toilets live webcam with broken glass on the seats ? Sure it's nasty but the rent is free.
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No windows, is illegal. It's a death trap in a fire, flood, carbon monoxide (natural gas) leak, etc. You're allowed to not have windows in closets and bathrooms because you don't sleep in them.
Now, is it possible to design a building that is "safe" without having windows? Yes. Because the building code says "two means of egress", which means it simply needs to have two doors on opposite ends, in every room.
But you also need to recognize that any apartment less than 650sq ft is not an apartment, it's a walk-
There is one obvious benefit. (Score:5, Funny)
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A sure win for the school to prison pipeline!
Not windowless (Score:5, Informative)
Here's a link to the actual plans [google.com]. You can see there are actually windows, and a lot of them, just not in the room where actual sleeping is done. That seems fine with me.
Re:Not windowless (Score:5, Insightful)
Here's a link to the actual plans [google.com]. You can see there are actually windows, and a lot of them, just not in the room where actual sleeping is done. That seems fine with me.
Nor in the "bedroom clusters". The only windows seem to be in the common areas.
It might work out for the students who are highly social, but the introverts or simply the ones focusing on studying aren't going to get any natural light.
I'd be worried about the mental health effects of no windows not to mention the really screwy sleep schedules from lack of exposure to natural light.
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I'd be worried about the mental health effects of no windows not to mention the really screwy sleep schedules from lack of exposure to natural light.
I think that's the point. The summary describes this as an "experiment", but is seems more like this asshole just wants to torture some poors for having the audacity to try to work their way out of poverty.
Maybe an experiment for lower cost student housing (Score:2)
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For most of those you merely need to study sailors in the Navy. :-)
Good point. I'll note that these sailors are under "martial law". This may give a clue as to what it would take to make this universal.
As a child my dad took me aboard his carrier. A maze of twisty little passages, all alike. Spacious bunks towering to the ceiling. As a teen I went aboard another of his ships, and found the bunks were actually three high, and not so spacious. I'm not claustrophobic, but I like some room. I did not join the Navy.
Re:Not windowless (Score:4, Interesting)
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To be honest, I'm more concerned about ventilation. When one person with COVID boards a cruise ship, they all get it. Will it be the same here?
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Probably. And since there are no windows, they basically cannot do anything except wearing masks when they sleep.
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Way to miss the point. Covid is just one of many many illnesses spread in the air. If one person gets sick everyone gets sick. I haven't seen any mitigations as you'd need some pretty fancy air handling to go with this social experiment.
If students are getting sick all the time then they aren't studying or going to class, it becomes counterproductive.
Also, due to the modular nature of the construction process you aren't going to be tearing out walls to renovate later when the experiment fails.
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COVID is the least of their worries. When I lived in residence during university there was a Japanese guy who across the hall. One day his parents visited and brought him sushi. He had leftovers. He didn't have a fridge.
Fortunately all our rooms had windows. Even so, we spent a week holding our breath and running from our rooms to the door to the common area, and our wing was a no go zone for anyone who didn't have to sleep there.
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Please go look at the plans again.
Page 6 shows the kitchens backed against what looks like an external wall. However, go back and look at page 5: the back of the kitchens on the north side of House 8 are touc
Ask sailors not prisoners (Score:2)
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It's designed to promote interaction and bonhomie. Can't do that if you're hiding in your bedroom studying all the time, right?
Eventually CEOs, architects and random billionaires might figure out that people don't like being manipulated, least of all by the buildings they're in.
Not a prison, walk outside for a view (Score:2)
... the introverts or simply the ones focusing on studying aren't going to get any natural light. I'd be worried about the mental health effects of no windows not to mention the really screwy sleep schedules from lack of exposure to natural light.
They are free to walk outside and remain introverted and study in isolation. That is probably healthier. There also may be sleep schedule benefits to having a small bedroom that is more focused, sleep vs sleep/study/internet.
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Re:Not windowless (Score:4, Informative)
From the article:
McFadden said the university had provided no justification for ignoring established research that natural light and views of the outdoors are vital to healthy living, except to say they were bound to Munger’s vision.
If the bedrooms have no access to natural sunlight, the natural light-dark cycle would be disrupted, which affects having an healthy circadian rhythm. Theoretically such light-dark cycle can be artificially replicated, but I found no mention of such thing in the article.
Re:Not windowless (Score:5, Interesting)
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The shutters are not mainly meant to prevent the morning light to wake you up, but to prevent the sun to heat the interiors during summer.
Note that in some of these regions air conditioning is still not so widespread, so it's quite important to keep the sun from entering too much during the day. Conversely, sleeping in summer with the shutters closed would be uncomfortably hot due to the limited air circulation.
Furthermore, even if the shutters can be used to prevent the morning light to wake you up... that
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I'm speaking from experience of living in the hottest region of Europe - temperatures routinely hit 45C (body temp is 36-37C). Yes, the shutters also keep the heat out during the day. BTW, I don't know of anyone who doesn't have air-conditioning & you can see all the air-con units mounted on the walls & rooves. Also, it's a dry climate so the temperature drops quickly at night & fans, rather than air-con, are sufficient for sleeping (running air-con all night would be expensive). Because it gets
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Wrong. The heat isn't an issue until about 9-10. I certainly dont have the blinds and curtains down to prevent heat since the whole room and building should been cooled down during the night.
As I wrote, the shutters are mainly to prevent sun from heating the interior during the day. During the night until morning when the sun is not that strong you want to maximize airflow to cool the interior, which means opening the shutters and curtains...
Oh and the whole dont let the sun in during the day to keep the temp down with curtains/blinds is so dumb, the air quality is going to be terrible making it worse to breathe and hot. Any time someone claims that it helps keep their rooms cooler it has never been below 2.5C of outdoor temp yet still felt like shit being inside. Vast majority of homes dont have the isolation and ventilation capabilities to do this properly (as well as the thing i cant remember the name but to store the coolness energy). Hardly any windows have sun/IR films to block the heat.
It definitely works, but your comment about windows with filters makes me suspect you are doing it wrong.
Curtains also basically make them into convection heaters, sun hits the curtain, warms it up (they tend to be dark btw....), air moves upwards moving the heat away from the textile, releasing it into the room.... and guess what? Sucking cold air from the floor.
Yes, you are doing it wrong. The sunlight needs to be blocked by a shutter on the outside, and there needs to be good air circulation between the shutte
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People in college aren't going to be with the sun and waking up with the sun.
Uh...students don't have normal light-dark cycles (Score:2)
Many students don't have normal light-dark cycles anyway. Needing to study late into the night, sleep during some daylight hours is normal for many students. Having a bedroom where the occupant can control day/night via lights and not have to fight normal sunlight, window, and curtains may actually be a benefit to the student/occupant. It would at least be easier than relying on curtains.
While it may not be mentioned in the article, would it be safe to assume the windowless bedrooms have interior lights
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Renderings of the interior seem to show every bedroom in a cluster with a "window" and clusters with a clerestory window above the sink.
I wonder if, at least, the cluster "window" above the sink is a frosted pane with (perhaps optional by vote of cluster residents!) the ability to simulate night/sunrise/daytime/sunset cycles throughout the year. Perhaps the obviously fake (at least in most of the rooms) windows shown in the bedrooms have a similar feature (which, hopefully, the resident has complete control
They are not prisoners, they can leave the bedroom (Score:2)
Or studying. Or gaming. Or socializing (Score:2)
You can probably get away with this as kids are fairly resilient and it's generally only for a few years, but it will take a psychological toll. Ask they guy if he'd send his kids to live like that for 4 years...
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Also worth mentioning that the dorm rooms are single-occupancy. If they are also relatively quiet, then it would have been a huge improvement over the quality of life in the dorm rooms I stayed at. People weren't "getting up with the sun" in college.
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People weren't "getting up with the sun" in college.
Well, most weren't but some of us were. I've always been a morning person, and I always tried to schedule an 8:00 class. My first term in college, all of my classes met in the morning except for an afternoon physics lab. Which meant I'd be getting back to the doem for lunch about the time my roommate was waking up.
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It can be a pain, because everyone else in the dorm is awake until late.
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I see no ventilation there, without good ventilation CO2 levels will build up and the last thing students need is brain fog due to CO2 levels being too high. Also many people are affected by lack of natural light, that can cause or exacerbate depression.
Great idea (Score:5, Funny)
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Climate change will foster that future. [businessinsider.com]
Hope it goes better than ... (Score:4, Insightful)
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When this guy read about that, he really wanted to get in on the action.
Someone should probably ask around his staff to see if they've noticed any mysterious disappearances or sudden departures.
Sadly already done at Santa Barbara (Score:5, Informative)
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This building has lots of windows, they just aren't in the bedrooms. All of the common rooms are positioned on the exterior of the building and the bedrooms are in the center.
Re:Sadly already done at Santa Barbara (Score:5, Informative)
I looked at the plans [google.com]. What you say is partially true but misleading. The larger common areas that have windows are on the shorter sides of the rectangular building -- leaving most of the exterior area of the building having only small windows that aren't even drawn on some of the drawings. For the sub-units with 8 sleeping rooms and a smaller common area (likely to get the most use) - they have chosen to use the outer wall of that common area for the kitchen with a tiny window above head level over the sink. That whole WALL should be a window - this is Santa Barbara! Some of those look over wetlands towards the mountains and the others look over (since this building will be so tall) campus toward the ocean! Whatever moron decided to put the kitchen against the exterior instead of the interior wall of that common room should be sent back to college to live in a dorm.
Honestly that thing reminds me most of the city blocks from Judge Dredd. Yikes. I don't see how that thing would even be legal from a fire safety point of view it is so dense.
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The fire code came to my mind as well. A bedroom is supposed to have two exits, one the door, and the other an escape window, as in an openable window you can fit through.
So are they going to use prison building codes?
On the other hand, after the pandemic maybe the new crops of students will be used to living in the basement and not mind.
I would bet (Score:3)
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Somebody fell for the lying headline, I see...
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To be fair both of you missed the fact that 'Social and Psychological Experiment' is in quotation marks clearly showing that it was some one else's statement (in this case the architect who left the project) as opposed to a statement of fact so you both got it wrong.
Single quotation marks are what are grammatically correct for quotes in headlines if you didnt know https://grammar.yourdictionary... [yourdictionary.com] .
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No, I think he just read The Big U [nealstephenson.com]
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He's not paying for the building... He's donating $200 million and the school has to come up with $1.2 billion balance.
Re: I would bet (Score:2)
Munchers is a crazy old kook who managed to stay out of the home where nurses would scratch him, orderlies would throw him around (and ball gag him! See https://www.mddionline.com/new... [mddionline.com] ) only because of his wealth.
Really, he should be the one with a vamp digging her fingernails into his flesh, not some poor innocent person who never had the wealth he had.
You are the product (Score:2, Troll)
Despite paying for your education, you are not a customer and you are not respected in any way.
That is not how education should work. That is how training obedient slaves works though.
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I am not framing anything. I see that (at least in the US) you _pay_ for your education. That completely rules out it being an investment by society in the future.
I completely agree that education should be free and still high quality. Sure, restrict access to the ones that can actually benefit from the respective levels offered, but do not make it a question of hoe much money somebody has.
Billionaire Seeks To Build Largely Windowless Dorm (Score:5, Funny)
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Submarine, aye. Or cruiser perhaps. (Score:3)
Yah, not many windows and small space per student ratio. Sounds like an extremely roomy version of an SSN. Or an even roomier version of an SS....
Not sure what the problem is, really, having spent time on an SSN. The lads/lasses in this building will have to spend more time in "public", but will have way more personal space than a squid does (basically, a submariner has a personal space not much bigger than a coffin, and public space smaller than your average McDonald's shared by the entire enlisted crew).
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It also has more space than my college dorm room had.
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Designing a building like a submarine is as bad an idea as designing a submarine like a building.
Plan for Immortality? His name will be on it. (Score:4, Funny)
Maybe Munger will become a verb? As in: they really “Mungered” that design?
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lol, it is an allegory to Muntzing [wikipedia.org]
Only, in this case they reduce amenities until all the students are dead
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Thanks for Muntzing! Learn something new everyday.
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windows are ok (Score:3)
A huge blank wall to install my 70+ inch tv is way better.
If I want to look outside, I'm sure there are plenty of campus webcams.
It must be *shockingly* horrible (Score:2)
if an *architect* thinks it would be too depressing to live in.
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Ayn Rand: Fountainhead (Score:4, Insightful)
for some reason this sounds like an excerpt from the book The Fountainhead, describing an architect that demands his buildings to his exact specifications, despite protests from people he considers intellectually inferior, leading to him demolishing a building when they violated those designs, and being forced to go to trial.
plan has merit (Score:2)
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you live closely with 7 other people
Interrupt the urge to jump.
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I've never liked even 2 per dorm room - it can be really unpleasant if you are not well matched - 8 in a room seems far worse.
I guess its necessary since the cost of college has gone down so much.... oh wait...
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a much higher chance of ending up forced to live with someone totally incompatible
That is a fair point. In the military, you are forced to live together in a disciplined way and if someone is a problem they get disciplined by whoever is in charge. In college you don't really have that. Maybe back in a time when there was more discipline (Charlie Munger's time?) it would work better.
7X the chances one of your roommates will be intolerable
But it also works the other way, you get 7 flavors of people and so you are not stuck with just a single flavor you dislike.
So you have 7 other people interrupting your sleep as the come and go at all hours of the day / night?
In this plan you do have your own room for sleeping (I assume you can close the do
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Here is a video of one of the Munger University of Michigan dorms: https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com] It looks much better than I ever had, but these are graduate dorms and quite expensive (maybe $800 to $900 a month). So maybe not for everyone, but not as bad as some of the posts make it out to be.
Re: plan has merit (Score:2)
I don't care how 'pretty' it looks. Nobody wants to be in a tomb, especially a densely packed one.
Re: plan has merit (Score:2)
"8 in a room seems far worse"
It is. You have to navigate through 7 other people's habits, personalities, and flaws. And this is just asking for fights and arguments to break out.
Fuck that shit. Either shack me up in the local Motel 6 (more tolerable than this 8 in a room crap) or I'll be goimg to a different school.
Man With Limitless Resources Does Crazy Shit (Score:2)
No story here.
Charlie Munger is 97 years old (Score:2)
Just make sure windows can be retrofitted and it's all good.
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If you look at the design, you can see that this is not possible.
Sick fuck (Score:2)
Just saying.
Uh... where's the problem? (Score:2)
I mean, the basement I used to live in didn't have windows either, so...
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Agreed! When I was a student I had a window in an apartment that cost so much ($925/mo) I had barely enough money left to eat - I had to budget $2 per meal on average. That was even after student loans and my wife and I working pretty much every day, sometimes until after midnight. She got pneumonia from the grueling schedule and life was pretty tough for a year or two.
My education was worth it in the end - I now earn a lot due to my education. Still, the cost of housing was crippling when I was a stude
Not the first time (Score:4, Insightful)
Apparently ol' Charlie, (he's 97 years old), did something similar in 2013 at the U of M: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]. Most of the single bedrooms there are also windowless. I wonder what the guy has against windows; maybe it's just a way of packing 'em in tighter, or perhaps he's into forcing people together when they wouldn't otherwise choose each other's company.
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I wonder what the guy has against windows
They cost money. Both for the window itself, and for the structural load you have to transfer around the window.
I'm guessing he's decided people only sleep in bedrooms, so windows there are a waste of money. Doesn't quite understand that some folks will want to spend time in the only private space they have.
UCSB should just say no thanks (Score:2)
"I'd like to be more evil, but can't think how..." (Score:2)
"Maybe we could build a torture dorm for children?"
"BINGO! That's the winner. You're fired."
So totally dependent on electricity for HVAC ? (Score:2)
Beyond the psychological value of views and lighting, Windows exchange fresh air. California electricity can be cut off. So is there sufficient backup for the Heating Ventilation and Air conditioning systems? And will students be given battery lighting systems? Will these sleeping rooms be habitable during power failures without the reliable option of opening a window or having daytime natural lighting?
Control freak with tons of cash (Score:2)
The building appears to be depersonalizing, dehumanizing and degrading. This guy funds buildings and then insists on designing them himself to foist his abusive ideas on people. Sounds like a psychopathic control freak.
Re: Control freak with tons of cash (Score:2)
He is. A piece of shit narcassist who is taking out his revenge for whatever on unsuspecting people; a sick clown who makes the world a much worse place to live.
Too bad we can't lock him up in a windowless padded cell for the rest of his life.
The fire department will love this (Score:2)
I bet this billionaire loon never thought of this. And what the fuck made him think anybody would want to live in a windowless box?
Nut cases are scary. Nut cases with money are dangerous.
Re: The fire department will love this (Score:2)
I read the article, and it's worse than I thought. Really fuck him and he needs to burn in hell for this shit.
A fucking ultra narcassist piece of shit that wants to pack students in like cattle. Really, he needs to commit suicide.
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Does California not have fire code laws?
Compare with good hospital architecture (Score:2)
At the hospital in Birmingham (UK) where I stayed for a couple of months, it was obvious that the layout of the wards was designed to make sure that each bed got access to natural light. This required more land area than a compact block with mostly windowless wards. I read up about this at the time. One of the problems experienced by long term patients is disruption of natural rhythms. This can actually be quite bad for recovery. Turning on artificial light in the day, and turning it off at night, does not
Bill Watterson got it right, as usual (Score:2)
Architects should be forced to live in the buildings they design, and children's book authors should be forced to read their stories aloud every single night of their rotten lives.
Designed by a non-architect (Score:2)
Basically he designed a living situation that disobeyed traditional architectural rules because he is not an architect. Of COURSE the architects objected. It clearly breaks all the rules they were taught.
Socratic question: If no windows in a bedroom is so bad, and 'prison-like', why do we allow a prison bedroom to have no windows? Yeah, I know everyone likes to punish prisoners, but that is supposed to be done intentionally, not just randomly. Any study showing exactly how bad a no-windows prison is?
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What happens when there are more people than there is housing?
Santa Barbara is space limited because it sits between the ocean and the mountains. Now UCSB is really in Goleta but still they are space limited.
urban prisons with unlimted loans that are hard (Score:2)
urban prisons with unlimited loans that are hard to get rid of helps the big banks.