University of Michigan Housing

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Palmer Field with Couzens Hall (left) and Alice Lloyd Hall (right), two of the Hill Area residence halls.
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Palmer Field with Couzens Hall (left) and Alice Lloyd Hall (right), two of the Hill Area residence halls.

The residence hall system at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, which is called the University Housing (which is a unit of The Division of Student Affairs at the University of Michigan), is the sixth-largest campus housing system in the United States and the third-largest family housing operation, accommodating up to 12,562 people.[1] The dormitories, or residence halls, are organized into three distinct groups or "neighborhoods:" Central Campus, Hill Neighborhood (between Central Campus and the University of Michigan Medical Center) and North Campus. Family housing is located on North Campus and mainly serves graduate students.

The largest dormitory, Bursley Hall on North Campus, has a capacity of 1,277 students, while the smallest accommodates 31 residents. A majority of upper-class and graduate students live in off-campus apartments, houses, and cooperatives, with the largest concentrations in the Central and South Campus areas.

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[edit] Recent developments

As part of the Residential Life Initiative, Mosher Jordan Hall, which opened in 1930, closed at the end of the Winter 2006 semester for extensive renovation. The hall will be the first to undergo major renovations. Plans include the addition of air conditioning, a new main entry with a grand staircase, ADA compliance, new elevators, wireless internet, music practice areas, and other improvements. Plans also call for the construction of a new dining center seating approximately 700 guests. Once completed, all exisiting cafeterias in the Hill neighborhood with the exception of Mary Markley Hall will close. Stockwell Hall is planned to undergo a similar renovation upon the reopening of Mosher Jordan.

North Quad will be the university's first all new housing construction since 1967. The dorm will house approximately 500 students and be located on Central Campus on the current site of the Frieze Building. The facility is expected to combine living and learning with a large class room wing housing the School of Information, Screen Arts and Culture, and Communication Studies. Schematic plans for the project were withdrawn for approval by the UM Board of Regents, which delayed the hall's opening to at least 2010.

[edit] Campus Neighborhoods

Central Campus

  • Betsy Barbour House
  • Cambridge House
  • East Quadrangle
  • Fletcher Hall
  • Helen Newberry House
  • Martha Cook Building
  • South Quadrangle
  • West Quadrangle
  • North Quadrangle (in planning stage)

The Hill

North Campus

  • Baits I & II Houses
  • Bursley Hall - largest dormitory with a capacity of 1,277 students
  • Northwood Community Apartments

Other

  • Henderson House
  • Lawyers Club

[edit] References

  1. ^ Housing Fact Sheet. UM Housing (2005).

[edit] External links


The University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

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