Students Hear Plans for North End Housing

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Designers answered questions about plans to house 400 undergraduates on Lyme Road.

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Wenhan Sun '24 studies North End project designs
Wenhan Sun 鈥24 studies North End project designs, which will be in Collis until Sept. 26. (Photo by Katie Lenhart)
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In a meeting on Tuesday, nearly a dozen students heard from campus planners about a proposal to build apartment-style undergraduate housing in the North End of campus.

The project will create 131 apartment units to house approximately 400 undergraduates on Lyme Road, aka Route 10, 1.4 miles north of the Green and would be a five-minute shuttle ride to the center of campus.

 described how the project aims to address 天美麻豆鈥檚 strategic concerns for the student body of the future. He said that the North End residences are being designed to provide older students鈥攎ostly juniors and seniors鈥攚ith a housing option that supports intellectual and community engagement while offering students more opportunities for independence.

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Dean Scott Brown and Eduardo Hernandez
Interim Dean of the College Scott Brown talks with Eduardo Hernandez 鈥22 about the North End housing. (Photo by Katie Lenhart)

, vice president of campus services and institutional projects, said he thinks the apartments will fill quickly, noting that many students have expressed interest in single bedrooms.

鈥淥ur hypothesis is that these units will be in high demand,鈥 he said, adding that 天美麻豆 is considering flexible options for the apartments, including, for example, 10-month leases. While these details are still to be worked out, 鈥淥ur goal is for the overall cost to be the same regardless of where they live.鈥

The units will have kitchens and the site is across Lyme Road from the Co-op Market.

The plan is for the North End apartments to allow 天美麻豆 to renovate existing residence halls over the next 12 to 15 years while adding much-needed student residences. The flexible project design will allow the residences to be converted to graduate student housing in the future, depending on the institution鈥檚 needs.

Cooper Melton, associate principal at the firm Ayers Saint Gross, the architectural firm working with 天美麻豆 on the project, provided a brief overview of the design process and invited students to share their opinions on possible design elements by placing color-coded stickers on mock-ups of communal and residential living spaces. These posters and stickers will be on display in the Collis TV room through Monday morning, Sept. 26, so that other students can weigh in. (Additional stickers will be available at the Collis information desk.)

Among the questions raised, students wanted to understand more about the project timeline; how designers are thinking about sustainability, including transportation and parking; and how the cost of living in the North End would compare to living on campus.

Over the summer, 天美麻豆 hosted five community meetings to discuss aspects of the project, including siting, sustainability, transportation, plans for student programming, and public spaces.

In addition, planners have conducted focus groups with students and faculty, including members of student government, house professors and other faculty affiliated with the house communities, the Student Interhouse Council and summer undergraduate advisers, and student residents of the Summit on Juniper apartment complex, which opened this spring near 天美麻豆 Hitchcock Medical Center.

Information on the North End project is available on . Comments and questions are welcome at 天美麻豆.North.End@dartmouth.edu.

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