Branner Hall Branner Hall was designated an all-freshman dorm in 2021 after Stanford implemented the neighborhood system. It was previously a coed upper-class (i.e., no freshmen) dormitory with a focus on public service. It houses 167 students, mostly in two-room triples. It is named after University President
John Casper Branner. It was built in 1924 and was designed by the San Francisco firm of
Bakewell and Brown. It was originally an all-male dormitory and later all-female before becoming coed. The Branner Hall served as an Olympic Village for competitors in
football at the 1984 Summer Olympics.
Crothers Hall Crothers Hall is an all freshman dorm, and the largest frosh dorm on Stanford's campus. It was re-designated an all-frosh dorm in 2021 under the new neighborhood system. It was previously upperclass residence and it occupies two buildings named Crothers Hall and Crothers Memorial (CroMem). The dorm previously had a global citizenship focus. Both Crothers Hall and Crothers Memorial are a mix of single rooms and one room doubles. The dorm is named after an early student and later trustee of the university,
George E. Crothers. Both were originally built as graduate residences; Crothers Hall in 1948 for law students and Crothers Memorial in 1955 for engineering students (the latter provided the name for
Cromemco, an early Silicon Valley company). They were designed by Eldridge Spencer and William Ambrose.
Gerhard Casper Quad Gerhard Casper Quad consists of four houses: Kimball Hall, Castaño (Spanish for chestnut tree), Lantana, and Ng House (Humanities Theme), with a central Gerhard Casper Dining Commons. Built on the site of the former student residence of Manzanita trailer park it was originally named Manzanita Park but was renamed after former university president
Gerhard Casper in 2016. Kimball Hall is named for the primary donors, William and Sara Kimball, and opened in 1991. Ng House was originally opened as the Humanities Theme Residence (aka Humanities House), and was renamed after the Ng family in 2016. The house was completed in 2015 and was the first new undergraduate residence constructed on campus in 20 years. The three-story buildings of Gerhard Casper Quad house approximately 550 students, a mix of underclass and upperclass, in a mix of single rooms, double rooms, and three-person quads.
Stern Hall Lucie Stern Hall, named for a generous Stanford donor, was built in 1948 and renovated in 1995. Its style represents "Stanford's brief departure into architectural modernism" by not following the usual Stanford pattern of sandstone-colored, arcaded buildings with red tile roofs. It comprises six houses that each accommodate about 100 freshmen. The houses named for California pioneers are Burbank, named for
Luther Burbank; Donner; Larkin;
Sally Ride named for the Stanford graduate and astronaut (name changed in 2019 from Serra for
Junípero Serra); and Twain, named for
Mark Twain. The sixth house, originally Muir for
John Muir, was renamed Casa Zapata in 1972 and has a Chicano-Latino cross-cultural theme.
Toyon Hall Toyon Hall is an upperclassman dorm, designed by
Bakewell and Brown and built in 1923 to house 150 men. Toyon was the home of the
Stanford Eating Clubs, a system of originally all-male organizations which served a social function as well as a food service plan. The eating clubs became co-ed during the 1970s, and the eating club system was abolished in 2009.
Wilbur Hall Wilbur Hall houses 707 students in eight houses surrounding a common dining complex. It is named for Stanford's third president,
Ray Lyman Wilbur. It was built in the late 1940s and represents an architectural departure from Stanford's usual theme of sandstone-colored, arcaded buildings with red tile roofs. Originally built for male students, it is now coed. The houses were named in Spanish. Arroyo means creek. Cedro means cedar but was also the name of a cottage on the Stanford land where Charles Lathrop, Jane Stanford's brother, lived. Junipero means juniper. Otero is small hill in Spanish. Rinconada is named for the local Spanish land grant,
Rancho Rinconada del Arroyo de San Francisquito, but, the word also means 'angle'. Soto means thicket. Trancos is for another house that had existed on the Stanford land, Los Trancos Villa; tranco itself means threshold. The last house, Okada, was originally named Madera for another local land grant,
Rancho Corte de Madera, but was renamed Okada when it became the
Asian American cross-cultural theme house. While Wilbur Hall has, at times, hosted a mix of upperclassmen and underclassmen, the Wilbur residences are now mostly freshmen dorms; the non-freshman dorms are the four-class Asian American theme house, Okada, the Outdoor House, Otero, and the upperclass only houses Arroyo and Trancos. Stanford Arroyo May 2011.jpg|Arroyo Stanford Cedro May 2011.jpg|Cedro Stanford Junipero May 2011.jpg|Junipero Stanford Otero May 2011.jpg|Otero Stanford Rinconada May 2011.jpg|Rinconada Stanford Soto May 2011.jpg|Soto ==West Campus (undergraduate)==