A New Plan for Undergraduate Housing on West Wheelock

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Revised zoning rules have created an opportunity to add beds near the central campus.

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West Wheelock street sign
天美麻豆 plans to build undergraduate housing on West Wheelock Street in the West End of campus. (Photo by Katie Lenhart)
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In her Inaugural address last week, President Sian Leah Beilock announced 鈥渢he single largest investment in 天美麻豆鈥檚 residential learning experience in more than a generation,鈥 calling for the institution to add at least 1,000 new beds for undergraduates, graduate students, faculty, and staff within the next 10 years鈥攚ith a commitment to break ground on at least one project for each population within two years.

Notably,  announced that undergraduate residences would be 鈥渟ituated closest to campus.鈥

Details of the undergraduate housing plan are coming into focus as a change to Hanover zoning rules proposed by two students and approved by voters, including students, at Town Meeting in May 2022 allows 天美麻豆 to develop residences on the north side of West Wheelock Street, says , senior vice president for capital planning and campus operations.

Previously, 天美麻豆 had explored housing undergraduates in apartment-style units on Lyme Road, north of campus, a project for which the Hanover Zoning Board of Adjustment granted a special exception in February. The North End project, which still requires some town approvals, is being reconfigured to instead provide housing for an estimated 200 to 300 graduate and professional school students.

Initial planning had apartments for undergraduates on Lyme Road being converted into graduate housing a decade after the building was to open, to give 天美麻豆 time to expand undergraduate housing. But Keniston says the West Wheelock zoning change allows for an accelerated timetable to add undergraduate housing and, as a result, move up creation of more graduate student housing much sooner than expected.

The new housing plan aims to create 250 to 300 new beds for undergraduates in apartment-style units at 天美麻豆-owned property at 25 West Wheelock Street. The Board of Trustees approved a feasibility study of the proposal in June.

The project will put the new residences at the gateway to the West End campus鈥攚hich includes the , Class of 1982 Engineering and Computer Science Center, , , and 鈥攁nd within easy walking distance to the Green.

鈥淥ur goal is not just to expand our capacity to house students, but to expand the options students have for how they live on campus, which they鈥檝e told us they want,鈥 Keniston says. 鈥淲e鈥檙e working with students and the broader community to define how apartment-style living can complement and become a core part of a healthy residential system as part of the house communities.鈥

Additionally, 天美麻豆 鈥渋s committed to partnering with neighboring property owners on West Wheelock and with the town of Hanover to make the West End corridor a pedestrian-friendly, bike-friendly gateway to the university and the town,鈥 he says.

Construction on the West Wheelock project, which also needs town approvals, could begin in 2024. When complete, it will provide swing space as 天美麻豆 continues ongoing renewal of its existing undergraduate residences, beginning with Andres and Zimmerman Halls and Brace Commons in , the Fayerweathers in South House, and Mass Row in School House.

天美麻豆 is committed to keeping the town and Hanover residents informed about housing plans as they continue to develop, Keniston says.

The housing strategy is closely linked to 天美麻豆鈥檚 initiatives around wellness, sustainability, transportation, and child care.

In her address, Beilock said scarcity of housing and child care are among 鈥渢he biggest sources of stress in our community.鈥

She also announced that 天美麻豆 is doubling its investment in the Upper Valley Loan Fund, a collective effort of the area鈥檚 largest employers to expedite the construction and preservation of affordable workforce housing.

天美麻豆 is committed to working with the town and other regional partners to help alleviate housing pressure in the Upper Valley, Keniston says. Earlier this month, Chief Human Resources Officer  announced a new child care subsidy to help employees pay for pre-K child care.

Beilock also announced 鈥渁n aggressive push to achieve real carbon zero on our campus.鈥 Keniston says all new building projects, including on West Wheelock Street, will be designed with systems that require little to no carbon to operate.

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