Willipedia is now back online as of 5/5/2019 |
It has been several years since Willipedia closed. Please help get it updated! |
Go to the Willipedia 2.0 Project to learn more. |
Difference between revisions of "Laundry"
(→How do I pay for laundry?) |
|||
Line 9: | Line 9: | ||
==How do I pay for laundry?== | ==How do I pay for laundry?== | ||
− | To wash or dry a load costs a cool '''$1. | + | To wash or dry a load costs a cool '''$1.50'''. You can feed nickels, dimes, and (the Holy Grail of college students) quarters into the machine--or you can put money on your ID card via the Dining Services section on PeopleSoft. |
==How long does it take?== | ==How long does it take?== |
Revision as of 14:43, September 16, 2013
So you're at college. It took a while, but you've finally learned how to juggle classes, sports, clubs, sleep, friends, phone calls home, homework, and feeding yourself at least daily. Until the morning when you wake up and realize that you have to go to class in your Shrek pajamas, because you have nothing else that's clean. And then you wail in anguish, because you are no longer a successful adult. You forgot to do laundry. This task is, indeed, the proverbial Straw that broke the College Student's back.
Contents
But it's okay.
Just go to class--everyone loves Shrek--and when you come back, find the laundry room.
Where can I do laundry?
Every dorm has a laundry room (except Tyler House and one or two Dodd houses?). These are typically located in the basement or on the ground floor. In this author's limited experience, the machines work well when they are not out of order.
How do I pay for laundry?
To wash or dry a load costs a cool $1.50. You can feed nickels, dimes, and (the Holy Grail of college students) quarters into the machine--or you can put money on your ID card via the Dining Services section on PeopleSoft.
How long does it take?
It takes 40 min to do a cold wash cycle and 60 min for a low dry cycle. Some people like to bring homework down to the laundry room while they wait. It is recommended that you set an alarm on your cell phone so that you can take your laundry out promptly, especially during peak laundry-doing time: evenings and weekends. It's common courtesy.
Other useful information
- Bring your own detergent. Know that if you leave it in the laundry room, other people will use it.
- Don't forget to clean the lint screen before you put your stuff in the dryer.
- Do laundry in the morning or early afternoon, when no one else is there. The earlier the better.
- Get a drying rack and save half of your laundry money. This works very well if you have a lot of synthetic, quick-dry sports clothing.
- Students who pay a small fee can have their clothes taken care of by the nearby Waterworks Laundry, which will even pick the laundry up from your dorm.
- Some clever person made a website where you could keep track of which machines were free when--unfortunately, this author can't find it.
- The website in question is LaundryView, and this editor thinks 2014 class rep Teddy Onserio may be the clever person described above (the website belongs to the laundry company, but it was definitely a student who set up our access). Unfortunately, the only laundry rooms currently listed are Armstrong, Dennett and Morgan (which appears to be offline at the moment.)