So what kind of place do you vote in?

A community building that used to be a library. The weird thing about it is that there are no voting booths, just a bunch of long tables that you sit at and fill out your ballot. You can easily see how the other people at your table are voting.

I wonder if we voted at the same place.

I thought it was kind of odd, as I’m used to the public building church/school/civic center/park district kind of polling place, yet this year I’m voting in the community room of a private (senior living) apartment building. Weird.

Even weirder, about half a dozen of the residents are or were my patients, and a couple of them got very confused that I wasn’t there to see them. :smack:

This year, a large church with a parking lot befitting a shopping mall.

Prior years: precinct voting was in the apartment clubhouse across the block, early voting was done in the county courthouse. When I lived in Indianapolis, I voted in an elementary school, where I got to admire macaroni art and finger paintings while waiting.

OK, so guess who didn’t look at their sample ballot this year?

We voted at the local Community Center. Luckily, my wife let me know before I showed up at the wrong place.

:smack:

Church basement (Congregationalist.) One block away; an easy walk. And I was the only one there, too!

Elementary School.

My dining-room table.

Until today I voted at a church hall. But now the polling place is moved to a fairgrounds building.

Local volunteer fire station. Requisite elderly poll workers. Every year, they remember who I’m married to but can’t come up with my name. I’m that girl who married a local boy.

Our local elementary school. Now that it’s been 10 years since our last child attended it, we feel really old when we go there to vote.

At my university. There’s a big building called an academic center that has a few department offices on the top two floors, a computer lab, meeting rooms, a helpdesk, and the writing center on the second floor, and lots of lounge area, a computer store, and a coffee bar (and voting machines) on the ground floor. And more offices and an auditorium in the basement. It’s had a lot of uses over the years and used to be a library, but now it’s just somewhere to go study. Well. And vote. :stuck_out_tongue:

Directly across the street there’s a co-op you can vote in too. Lines around both were around the building. College students love voting, especially when it’s convenient.

Church around corner from my house. In a kiddie classroom so the geezer poll workers were scrambling to find human sized chairs (don’t get in a twist - I’m a geezer too:)).

Two ballot sheets with one double sided (had some muni ballot measures as well). Fill in the blocks with black pen - 5 minutes and out. Other district had 50+ in line out in the hall.

I wondered if perhaps you lived in Rocky River, OH (until I viewed your profile) because that’s exactly what my polling place was!