For University of Guelph in Guelph, Ontario

Find the Guelph residence that fits how you will actually live on campus.

This quiz compares Guelph's real residence communities by social intensity, room setup, dining convenience, residence size, and the difference between classic first-year halls and more independent East-side living.

Real Guelph residencesSouth vs East includedTraditional vs townhouse living

9 steps. About 3-4 minutes. Progress saves on this device.

Real Guelph building differences

Compare South Residence, Johnston, Lambton, East, East Village, and West Residence by how they actually differ once you move in.

Dining and routine realism

The quiz treats meal convenience and building scale as practical variables, because they quietly shape stress and time management.

First-year versus independent living

The ranking distinguishes between classic first-year residence energy and the more self-managed apartment or townhouse options.

University of Guelph themed campus illustration
Historic core versus east-side independence

At Guelph, the shortlist changes quickly when you separate a traditional first-year residence rhythm from the more independent east-side options.

Photo: LearnLoop illustration
University of Guelph themed residence illustration
South Residence versus quieter alternatives

Guelph's residence choice often turns on whether you want a large social complex, a smaller heritage building, or a more self-managed apartment or townhouse setup.

Photo: LearnLoop illustration
What the quiz asks and why
Room setup and privacy

Traditional doubles, singles, suites, and townhouse-style layouts do not feel the same once the term begins.

Building size and noise

South Residence feels very different from Johnston or the east-side options. The quiz treats that as a core decision variable.

Dining and daily routine

The easiest food routine is not always the best total fit, but it does matter when your week gets busy.

Independence on the east side

East Residence, East Village, and West Residence only rise when more self-management actually suits the student.