The current students are lucky. A block of two rooms for six people, with its own kitchen, shower and toilet. The furniture is decent, the condition of the rooms is also quite good. What is not unimportant, the rooms are quite spacious, bright, even the one where 4 people should live. A decent bathroom with a floor dryer, sink and shower, toilet with sink (not even everyone has this at home).
I wish there were more dorms like this.
Not a bad hostel compared to other existing ones. The repair is good (except for the showers, which in 90% of cases are covered with mold). It's quiet, despite the fact that only young people live. Everything is ruined by the watchmen and some (!!!) caregivers. They communicate with students in a rude way, from a high, as with children. If you accidentally forgot your pass, wait for a 30-minute lecture about what a moronic idiot you are. In September, they give out rooms with the above-mentioned mold in yellow showers, and in June they demand that everything be washed white. Question: how did the previous tenants have fun then? Minus one star for a company that constantly yells songs under the window in the warmer months. I don't know who might like it, considering that it would be more correct to say that they are shouting songs rather than singing. The same ones for the 2 years that I lived there. Before going to bed, it is simply impossible to open the window to ventilate, because the ears wither,
Hello from Russia.
Get early, pavazhanyya sabres.
Many years ago, my wife and I studied at MGLU (former MGPIIA) and lived in a dorm at 80 Varvasheni (now Masherova, 60 Masherka). There was no hostel on Churlenis in the project either. And I wanted to see how the Alma mater and modern students are doing. I was pleasantly surprised by the changes that have taken place over the years. How much the university and the living conditions of the student fraternity have changed. Everything is just great! I envy you in a good way. We lived much worse, but even then we enjoyed life. And now the conditions are just gorgeous. We never dreamed of such things. It is even interesting how the university management managed to achieve this. We come to Belarus every year, but we don't always visit Minsk. Five years ago, I went to the university, walked through the floors, nostalgic for the past, stood near the dorm at the Locksmith, did not go further. But there were new places for students to live, and I didn't even know. Thank the Internet! There was no sign of him in my student days. I looked at the photos of the dorm and on
Masherke, saw expensive places, the road to the Worm and the Chief (Shevchenko Boulevard). Everything has changed for the better. Appreciate what you have, do not spoil the environment, enjoy life. Everything will be fine!
Michael.
(That's what my friends and teachers called me.)