University of Dayton Ghetto

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The 200 block of Kiefaber Street in the University of Dayton Ghetto in Dayton, Ohio.
The 200 block of Kiefaber Street in the University of Dayton Ghetto in Dayton, Ohio.

The University of Dayton Ghetto is a neighborhood in Dayton, Ohio that is home to upperclassmen of the University of Dayton, a form of housing commonly called a student ghetto. Houses in the neighborhood are leased to students, an arrangement that resembles both traditional university housing and a landlord/tenant relationship. The neighborhood is also known as the South Student Neighborhood, a term commonly used by the university. [1]

The Ghetto is bounded by Brown Street to the west, Irving Avenue to the south, Trinity Avenue and Evanston Avenue to the east, and Caldwell Street and Stonemill Road to the north. This gives the area a roughly triangular shape. The University of Dayton Web site includes a complete map of the area. [2]

Contents

[edit] Early history

The land on which the Ghetto now sits was owned by John Henry Patterson until the mid 1870s. The land was then divided between suburban housing lots to the east and the NCR factory to the west.[3] The original proprietors of the neighborhood were Thomas S. Babbitt, Dr. Joseph E. Lowes, R. D. Hughes, and Harry Kiefaber. The area was known as the town of Babbitt, and included only four streets – Lowes Street, Kiefaber Street, Hughes (now Stonemill Road) and Wead (now Lawnview Avenue). This core area was measured at 47 acres.[1]

The NCR Corporation used Babbitt as housing for its workers. In 1906, the area was annexed by the City of Dayton, Ohio and continued on as a middle-class neighborhood. The University of Dayton, Babbitt's neighbor to the northeast, began to buy available houses in the neighborhood in the 1950s as an experiment in off-campus housing. By the 1970s, the student population of the area was growing rapidly.[1]

While no one is sure when the area began its life as the Ghetto, there are several efforts to rename it. In the 1960s, Rev. Norbert Burns, who taught at the university for 62 years before retiring in 2007 at the age of 82,[4]was part of one such effort. His committee attempted to change the name to the "Village," an effort which ultimately failed.[3] University administrators now refer to the area as the "South Student Neighborhood", though the phrase sees little use by the student population. [5]

[edit] Recent changes

227 and 231 Irving Avenue, two of the new five-person houses in the University of Dayton Ghetto. While siding and rooflines vary, the interior floorplan of each house is the same.
227 and 231 Irving Avenue, two of the new five-person houses in the University of Dayton Ghetto. While siding and rooflines vary, the interior floorplan of each house is the same.

As the houses in the Ghetto continue to age, and as the number of students wishing to live in the Ghetto expands, the university has begun an aggressive renovation and replacement program with the goal of keeping the current feel of the area intact. In 2000, construction began on several new duplexes to fill land that was unused, resulting in housing for several dozen additional students. The duplexes housed six students per side, for a total of 12 students each.[6] In 2003, the university continued the project by tearing down several houses on Stonemill Road and replacing them with a new five-person design.[7] Several more of these houses have now been built throughout the Ghetto.

In 2006, the university began a new phase of replacement and renovation in the neighborhood, in which $2.5 million was spent to renovate four existing structures, including a duplex, as well as to build a five-unit set of attached townhouses. The houses, located on Frericks Way and Stonemill road, house 55 students and include the famous "Castle" which has been given a new stone facade in homage to its traditional name. The houses became available to students for the 2007-2008 academic year. [8]

The new wave of construction brings the university's stock of houses to 328, including several duplexes.[8] Not including these new additions, as of 2005, the university owned 225 houses in the Ghetto, with the rest on the Darkside, the other half of the University of Dayton campus. Additionally, 73 houses in the neighborhood were owned by private landlords and rented to UD students.[9]

[edit] The Darkside and Holy Angels

116 Chambers Street, located on the Darkside. Built in 1885, it is one of the oldest houses in the neighborhood.  The new siding was added during the summer of 2007, part of the university's improvements to houses in the neighborhood.
116 Chambers Street, located on the Darkside. Built in 1885, it is one of the oldest houses in the neighborhood. [10] The new siding was added during the summer of 2007, part of the university's improvements to houses in the neighborhood.

In addition to the properties the university owns in the Ghetto, there are also student houses located in two other neighborhoods: the Darkside—or North Student Neighborhood, as it is referred to by the university—and Holy Angels. Once considered a single neighborhood and connected by the north-south Alberta Street, the areas were separated when the Thomas J. Frericks Center and a new formal entrance were added. Alberta Street now acts as the main thoroughfare for the Darkside, while the street has been rerouted and renamed College Park Avenue in the Holy Angels neighborhood and is now cut off from the portion in the Ghetto, renamed Frericks Way. [11]

The Darkside, which derives its name from a lack of street lights when students first began to move into the area, is bounded by Stewart Street to the south, Brown Street to the west, Woodland Cemetery to the east and Wyoming Street to the north.[3] Traditionally, the Darkside has served as housing for juniors. This is not due to any university policy, but rather the preference of seniors, who select houses first in the student housing lottery due to their larger number of credit hours. [12] The University of Dayton housing Web site includes a map of the area. [13]

The third and smallest neighborhood, Holy Angels, derives its name from the Holy Angels Church and School which occupies the center of the area. It lies between the Darkside and the Ghetto, but is physically separated from them by Stewart Street and the Frericks Center parking lot. The UD housing Web site includes a map of this area as well. [14]

[edit] Features of the Ghetto

306, 308 and 310 Kiefaber Street, three of the units in the ArtStreet complex in the University of Dayton Ghetto.
306, 308 and 310 Kiefaber Street, three of the units in the ArtStreet complex in the University of Dayton Ghetto.

Not all of the houses in the student neighborhoods are occupied by students, however. Four houses in both the Ghetto and the Darkside — on Trinity Avenue, Kiefaber Street, Stonemill Road and Chambers Street — are home to groups of Marianists, the Catholic religious order behind UD. Between six and 10 Marianists live in each house. They serve the university as ministers, groundskeepers, administrators and professors, among other professions.[15]

The Ghetto also contains several high-density living areas, including the Garden Apartments, the Lawnview Apartments and the Campus South, a high-rise living complex for sophomores. In 2004, the ArtStreet complex opened, intended as a combined living-learning space. It includes housing for 56 students, as well as a cafe, an amphitheater, rehearsal rooms, several activity rooms and gallery spaces, and a new studio for the campus radio station, WUDR.[16] The Ghetto is also home to the McGinnis school house, which was acquired in 1982 and renamed the McGinnis Center; it is used as a central point of contact for Ghetto residents.[1] The McGinnis Center houses several meeting rooms, administrative offices and laundry facilities for those houses which do not include washers and dryers.

Some houses in the neighborhood have been informally endowed with nicknames by which they are commonly known, such as "The Castle" at 1519 Frericks Way,[17] the "Smallest Porch in the Ghetto" at 226 Kiefaber St.[18] and "The Last Resort" at 229 Stonemill Road.[19] For the vast majority of houses, nicknames are arbitrary and vary year to year. In addition, many houses in the Ghetto are those occupied by the various fraternities and sororities on campus, or other special interest groups.[20]

[edit] Future of the Ghetto

1519 Frericks Way, "The Castle." The house was recently renovated, and faux-stone siding was replaced with more realistic stone.
1519 Frericks Way, "The Castle." The house was recently renovated, and faux-stone siding was replaced with more realistic stone.

In 2002, the University of Dayton released a Master Plan which called for the renovation and construction of several houses, an extension to Stonemill Road to connect directly to Evanston Avenue, and the enlargement and clean-up of the parking areas in the alleys behind the houses. [21] Despite ongoing rumors, there were no plans to raze the Ghetto and replace it with more high-density housing and other university buildings, despite the landlocked nature of the campus.[22]

In June 2005, before the plan could be realized, the university made a $25 million purchase of an additional 49 acres—much of the land which was once home to the NCR Corporation—as well as a new 100,000-square-foot (9,300 m²) building on Brown Street.[23] The area, renamed Mid Campus, prompted the development of a new Campus Master Plan. A map of the current layout of campus, as well as a new draft Master Plan, can be found on the Master Plan Web site. [24]

While several new buildings have been planned, many of the changes that had been proposed to the Ghetto in the previous master plan are no longer included in the new plan. The only feature affecting the student neighborhoods is a new building to the east of Alberta Street, between Chambers Street and Obell Court, on the Darkside. According to the draft of the master plan, the building is intended to a "sustainable" residence hall, a 75- to 90-bed facility that would also include an educational wing. The proposed building would use technologies such as solar energy, geothermal heating and cooling, compost piles and low-flow showers. [25]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d Pham, HaQuyen. "Deep roots lead to long, storied past." Flyer News. Volume 52, Issue 33. March 8, 2005.
  2. ^ University of Dayton housing website. http://housing.udayton.edu/facilities/map/map_south.html. Accessed June 14, 2007.
  3. ^ a b c Szink, Jennie and Peter Blazunas. "What's in a name?" Flyer News. Volume 54, Issue 35. March 27, 2007.
  4. ^ Tiedge, Amy. "Well-known professor to retire after 62 years." Flyer News. Volume 54, Issue 35. March 27, 2007.
  5. ^ "UD Lingo." University of Dayton Education and Special Programs website. http://campus.udayton.edu/~esp/January%20Orientation/UD%20Lingo.html. Accessed October 1, 2007.
  6. ^ Gruenke, Jessica. "New duplexes planned to alleviate housing shortage." Flyer News. Volume 48, Issue 20. December 8, 2000.
  7. ^ Dowell, Matt. "Houses to be built on Stonemill." Flyer News. Volume 50, Issue 34. March 7, 2003.
  8. ^ a b Rizvi, Teri. "Citirama with a twist: student housing will be showcased in August event." University of Dayton press release. June 8, 2007. http://www.udnews.org/2007/06/home_show_with_.html.
  9. ^ Martin, Jerry. "Neighborhood gives spice to UD life." Flyer News. Volume 52, Issue 34. March 11, 2005.
  10. ^ Montgomery County Auditor property records website. http://www.mcrealestate.org/Search/GenericSearch.aspx?mode=ADDRESS. Accessed September 29, 2007.
  11. ^ University of Dayton Old plan website. http://campus.udayton.edu/~UDCampusPlanning/Old%20Site/udayton/images/Campus%20Land%20Use%20Plan%20Executive%20Summary.pdf. Page 3. Accessed October 1, 2007.
  12. ^ University of Dayton Housing website. http://housing.udayton.edu/current/lottery/junior_senior/position_determined.html. Accessed October 1, 2007.
  13. ^ University of Dayton housing website. http://housing.udayton.edu/facilities/map/map_north.html. Accessed June 14, 2007.
  14. ^ University of Dayton housing website. http://housing.udayton.edu/facilities/map/map_angels.html. Accessed June 14, 2007.
  15. ^ Ross, Hilary. "Marianists talk about life in the Ghetto." Flyer News. Volume 53, Issue 8. September 30, 2005.
  16. ^ Martin, Jerry. "New facilities welcome UD students." Flyer News. Volume 52, Issue 1. August 31, 2004.
  17. ^ University of Dayton housing website. http://housing.udayton.edu/php/facility_search/view.php?view_opt=full&street=frericks&occupancy=6&bedrooms=4&block=null&start_limit=0&class=UPP-LOT. Accessed July 14, 2007.
  18. ^ University of Dayton housing website. http://housing.udayton.edu/php/facility_search/view.php?view_opt=full&street=kiefaber&occupancy=6&bedrooms=3&block=null&start_limit=0&class=UPP-LOT. Accessed July 14, 2007.
  19. ^ University of Dayton housing website. http://housing.udayton.edu/php/facility_search/view.php?view_opt=full&street=stonemill&occupancy=6&bedrooms=4&block=null&start_limit=0&class=UPP-LOT. Accessed July 14, 2007.
  20. ^ University of Dayton housing website. http://housing.udayton.edu/php/facility_search/view.php?view_opt=full&street=null&occupancy=null&bedrooms=null&block=null&start_limit=0&class=ALL-SPI. Accessed June 11, 2007.
  21. ^ University of Dayton Old plan website. http://campus.udayton.edu/~UDCampusPlanning/Old%20Site/udayton/images/SSNeighborhood2SMALL.jpg. Accessed October 1, 2007.
  22. ^ Griesenbrock, Tyler. "More neighborhood changes planned" Flyer News. Volume 52, Issue 35. March 15, 2005.
  23. ^ Pham, HaQuyen. "UD buys NCR property for $25M" Flyer News. Volume 53, Issue 1. August 30, 2005.
  24. ^ University of Dayton Master Plan website. http://udcampusmasterplan.udayton.edu/masterPlan.aspx. Accessed June 14, 2007.
  25. ^ University of Dayton Master Plan website. http://udcampusmasterplan.udayton.edu/draft.pdf. Accessed September 29, 2007.

[edit] External links