If These Walls Could Talk

Our place

Illustration of university district houses

Illustration by Wendy Treverton

Victoria Street, just west of the Queen鈥檚 University campus, is a neighbourhood of mostly gracious pre-war homes, two- and three-storey brick-and-frame structures with steep-pitched roofs and welcoming verandas.

And then there is 238 Victoria.

鈥淚t looks like a red brick box,鈥 says Kelsey Goodine (Artsci鈥14), who spent two years in the basement apartment with two roommates. The mid-century triplex 鈥 鈥淟et鈥檚 call it a Woodstock baby,鈥 says Topher Lamm, one of those roommates for the second year 鈥 is matched by identical red brick boxes on either side.

鈥淵ou had to be careful when you were coming home from the bar at night that you didn鈥檛 stagger into the wrong triplex,鈥 says Goodine.

The accommodations were snug. Lamm (Artsci鈥14) remembers the living room being 鈥渁bout half the length of a Leonard (Dining Hall) table.鈥 Just big enough to accommodate the floral pink couch donated by Goodine鈥檚 nana and a battered leather love seat they picked up on the streets of the student ghetto.

Each of the three bedrooms could fit just a single bed and a small dresser/nightstand.

鈥淚 built my stuff up vertically,鈥 says Lamm. 鈥淚鈥檇 have my dresser, and then I鈥檇 have my little guitar amp on top of that, and then I鈥檇 have my record player on top of that, and then 鈥 on top of that would be all my records.鈥

Another roommate who valued his sleeping comfort above all else installed a queen-sized bed that took up the entire room, says Goodine. Everything else he owned was piled on top of the bed.

鈥淚n that place you didn鈥檛 have your own space unless you were in your really small bedroom,鈥 she says. And even then, privacy was at a premium, which led to some interesting arrangements, she adds.

鈥淥n more than one occasion, I鈥檇 come home and (Topher) would have a visitor just sitting outside his (basement) window 鈥 because there was more room outside than inside.鈥

Sometimes, says Lamm, someone entertaining at the apartment would send out 鈥渁 frantic text to his roommates saying, 鈥榃hy don鈥檛 you stay at campus tonight and I鈥檒l buy you coffee in the morning.鈥欌

What the triplex lacked in square footage, it made up for in location. It was central but relatively quiet, unlike some other streets where student housing predominated. The three buildings were filled with students, but the rest of the neighbourhood was mixed, with families and seniors.

鈥淚t was quick to get to your classes; it was quick to get to the bar; it was quick to get to parties or anything else 鈥 but you didn鈥檛 feel like you were living on Aberdeen Street, where you couldn鈥檛 go home and study or go to sleep if you needed to,鈥 says Goodine.

Lamm and Goodine figure they were fated to be roommates after meeting in a history seminar at the end of Frosh Week.

鈥淚 was just doodling on my paper to try and stay awake,鈥 says Goodine. 鈥淚 was walking out of class, and there was Topher right beside me making some sort of quip about my drawings and my artistic ability, and I thought, 鈥榊up, this is my friend.鈥欌

They each tried other off-campus housing 鈥 Goodine shared an apartment with a colony of ants, and Lamm was so far off campus no one wanted to visit him 鈥 but they were delighted to be roommates for the last year of their honours programs.

Goodine is a teacher now in Swift Current, Sask., while Lamm practises law in Toronto, but they still connect whenever they can. And when they do, they inevitably get the giggles about that red brick box on Victoria Street.

Tell us about the University District house you lived in and the memories you made review@queensu.ca

 

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