The Capital

Student housing sees a sizable shift

- By Kevin Williams

BLOOMINGTO­N, Ind. — When the Standard opened in the fall and welcomed its first batch of residents, it had a decidedly resort vibe. Along with the requisite pool and fitness centers, the off-campus student housing complex enticed students with two pickleball courts, a dog park and a motion sports simulator.

The complex even used a roommate-matching app.

The arms race over amenities in student housing is nothing new, but what is striking about the Standard is its size: 1,000 beds, about twice the size of a typical dorm. The Standard could house 3% of Indiana University’s 34,000-plus undergradu­ates.

Off-campus student housing complexes across the country are getting larger, some home to more than 1,500 students, and they are being built on prime parcels as close to campus as possible, as developers seek to better manage their bottom line.

“Having larger projects enables us to have more amenities, as we can spread the costs out over a larger number of beds,” said J. Wesley Rogers, CEO of Landmark Properties, the developer of Standard complexes in 23 states, including the one in Bloomingto­n.

But developers face challenges, including higher costs of land near campus and the possibilit­y that college enrollment could decline.

The move toward larger complexes comes as the industry is shedding its image as a niche business run by local landlords and drawing more institutio­nal and global investors instead, said Dave Borsos, vice president

A model student housing unit near the University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana. of capital markets for the National Multifamil­y Housing Council in Washington.

The two largest internatio­nal investors in the market now are the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority and Global Student Accommodat­ion, a real estate management firm in London.

Larger investors bring greater scrutiny.

“The industry is demanding a different level of expectatio­ns in efficiency and management,” Borsos said.

One strategy is to put more students in less space. Some of the units at the Standard have five bedrooms, a trend that Borsos has seen become more popular as developers try to squeeze in more beds.

Despite the tighter quarters, more beds mean lower rent for each roommate. Larger developmen­ts also allow for more luxury perks, such as yoga studios, rock-climbing walls and fire tpits.

Landmark’s largest student housing developmen­t is the Standard in Seattle, which opened Sept. 22 adjacent to the University of Washington. It features two high-rise towers and a midrise building, which together will house 1,545 students.

The university, which has more than 34,000 undergradu­ates, does not require first-year students to live on campus as many universiti­es do, so the pool of available residents is larger than elsewhere.

The shift to “bigger is better” has accelerate­d, Borsos said.

Even a few years ago, he would have been hard pressed to imagine a complex with 1,500 beds.

For a time in the early 2000s, developers bet that college students would trade a longer commute for better amenities and roomier digs. Clusters of students lived in areas of cities that were not always part of the college community and would use shuttle buses to commute to campus.

But now, developers can fetch higher rents with housing that is closer to campus, offering a bigger return on their initial investment, which can be high.

LEE KLAFCZYNSK­I/THE NEW YORK TIMES

The cost per bed in a housing complex a halfmile or less from campus is $131,244, which is about 77% more than that of student housing farther than 2 miles from campus.

The higher rate of return has attracted other developers, who are rushing toward campuses with huge developmen­ts.

Cranes are part of the skyline around the University of Texas in Austin, and constructi­on is brisk along the periphery of Purdue University in West Lafayette, Indiana.

Core Spaces, which builds off-campus student housing, is embracing bigger and closer.

Dan Goldberg, president of Core Spaces, said there had been “a proliferat­ion of purpose-built housing farther and farther away from campus,” but that the trend had peaked. The company has since switched gears.

“We usually do 15- to 20-story high-rises as close to campus as possible,” he said.

But securing land near campus is often expensive and subject to local zoning. Projects can take years to get off the ground. Despite the challenges, Goldberg believes “closer to campus” will outlast the other trends.

“We saw competitor­s building outlandish facilities,” such as arcades and movie theaters, he said. “What we have found the past five years, what students want is more wellness, more fitness, more study space and great Wi-Fi.”

But the most desirable amenity is proximity.

“The college students want to be able to roll out of bed and go to class,” he said.

Core Spaces has developed edge-of-campus housing in dozens of cities across the country.

The company’s Hub on Campus brand, for example, stretches from the University of California to the University of Florida. Its biggest, with more than 1,500 beds, is the one near Virginia Tech’s campus in Blacksburg, Virginia.

The developer’s Hub in Champaign, Illinois, opened a block from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 2021, catering to students by offering a rooftop sun deck and pool, a barbecue area and a fitness center with a sauna. Upgrades include smart TVs, memory foam mattresses and sound systems.

The company has more developmen­ts in the pipeline, including several with more than 2,000 beds in Knoxville, Tennessee; Raleigh, North Carolina; and Berkeley, California. Its largest project will be adjacent to Clemson University in Clemson, South Carolina, with more than 2,300 beds.

And Goldberg said he would not rule out developing even larger complexes: “We’re not putting a cap on the building size.”

The appetite to go big could come back to haunt developers, said Anne Villamil, an economics professor at the University of Iowa. They may be banking on an endless supply of students, but Villamil pointed to studies showing that demographi­c shifts would result in a substantia­l drop in the undergradu­ate population beginning in 2025, a trend that some refer to as the “enrollment cliff.”

She predicts that fewer students will mean the survival of the fittest among apartment complexes that may find themselves empty if they cannot compete.

“We have been in such a period of uncertaint­y with all the shocks to hit the economy, but this is another shock that is clear that it is coming,” Villamil said.

Borsos, though, has seen the same studies and predicts a more modest decline. “Larger public universiti­es will continue to see significan­t applicatio­ns way more than they can take in,” he said.

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