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Showing posts with the label Student Housing

Student Apartment Tower

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  Time period: 21st century Location: Within walking distance of a flagship state university Large apartments designed to be shared by roommates, plus amenities and retail. If you live in a college town, chances are you've seen a number of large apartment towers pop up on the skyline just outside campus. These massive buildings, the largest of which house over 1,000 students, might be called "luxury student housing" or "student containment blocks" depending on who you ask.  They are the result of a number of trends that started as far back as the 1970s and have converged today.  Unlike other apartments that often end up stuck with vacant retail spaces due to there being too much retail space relative to the number of customers, student housing has a high enough population density to support first floor retail. Dining, cafes, and bubble tea are common retail tenants, so the space should be built kitchen-ready. Enrollment Trends at Public Universities In the USA...

Fraternities, Sororities, Co-ops, and Mini-Dorms

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Examples shown are smaller buildings located in urban areas. Group living at suburban and rural colleges have larger yards and more parking. The largest sororities are found in the South, and have over 40,000 square feet of indoor space and are located on 1-acre lots. Time period: Mid/late 1800s to present Location: College towns Four types of student group living, separated by gender or economic system Key features - Located in clusters close to college campuses - Shared common spaces and bathrooms - In addition to residential uses, may also contain study halls and space for parties From the 1600s to the mid 1800s, college education in the United States was rare, limited to small institutions established by churches to train ministers. Liberal arts education was added in the 1800s. Enrollment was small - a couple dozen to a couple hundred students per college. In the mid 1800s, as the country grew and started to industrialize, there was a movement to expand higher education as farmin...

Texas Donut (Wrap)

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  Time period: Late 20th century to present Location: Suburban downtowns and car-centered cities across the country How to provide lots of apartments, while hiding the parking. Key features - Mid-rise apartment building wrapped around a multi-story parking garage. - Requires large piece of land. - Higher density than garden apartments, less dense than a podium building. Everything's bigger in Texas - including the apartment buildings. After World War II, advances in air conditioning technology made urban living in hot and humid climates more desirable. Texas was also going through an oil boom. While oil fields tapped out and production peaked in the 1970s, the state's early lead in oil production locked in its position as a headquarters for oil companies, as well as banks and suppliers that supported oil drilling elsewhere in the world.  Since the 2010s, the fracking boom has brought a new wave of oil related jobs to Texas. While its main Sunbelt rival - California - went down...

Double Duplex

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  Time period: mid-late 2010s, 2020s Location: Los Angeles The double duplex is a rooming house pretending to be a bunch of houses.  Key features - Four homes, each with 4 or 5 bedrooms that are designed to be rented out to 16-20 separate households. - Since each building only has two homes, it's built to the simpler standards of the Residential Code instead of the Building Code.  This simplifies approvals, saves costs, and means more small contractors know how to build them. - Since it's technically only four units, it doesn't need to provide as much parking. The double duplex is a pair of duplexes on a single residential lot.  In South LA and Central LA, where this type of housing was invented, it is a pair of boxy 3-story buildings on a 50' wide x 150' deep lot, replacing an older house.   These are not fancy buildings. While rents in California are high, so are construction costs, and every expense is spared when it comes to designing a double duplex. A...