Tour of UCSC Campus Housing Strategies and Stock
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Transcript of Tour of UCSC Campus Housing Strategies and Stock
Overview: Housing, Water, and TransportationUniversity Center Alumni Room
September 4, 201510:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m.
Agenda Introductions Presentation (10:00-10:45)
Colleges, Housing, and Educational Services (CHES) Operations On-Campus Programs Off-Campus Programs Capital Planning Strategy Future Planning
Water Transportation
Campus Tour (10:45-12:00)
Presented BySue MatthewsAssociate Vice Chancellor, CHES
194 CHES Buildings• ~2M Gross Square Feet• >9,000 bed spaces on campus
(fall 2015)• >97% occupied (since 2011))
CHES Facilities
Existing Bed Spaces Residence Halls
Fall 2015: 5,747 Bed Spaces
(Primarily Frosh)
Apartments Fall 2015:
3,277 Bed Spaces
(Primarily Sophomores)
Crown College Residence Halls
7000
7500
8000
8500
9000
9500
Fall 2011 Fall 2012 Fall 2013 Fall 2014 Fall 2015
Temporary Adjusted Capacity (Bed Spaces)
Temporary Adjusted Capacity (Bed Spaces)
Dining Halls(5 Total)
Porter Dining Hall
Cowell Dining Hall
Dining Cafes/Convenience Stores
Banana Joes Quick Mart
Oakes Cafe
Presented ByKevin TreshamAssistant Director, Student Housing Services (CHES)
Community Transfer Community Multi-Affiliate Communities
10 Colleges
UC Santa Cruz offers a housing guarantee to all new undergraduate students. 2 Year Guarantee for all New Freshmen and
New Transfer students. 4 Year Guarantee for freshmen who are Regent
Scholars, Smith Renaissance Society, Military Veterans, or International students.
Housing Guarantee
Live at affiliated college Focus on a first-
year experience Proximity to staff
and support services
NewFreshmenHousing
Fall 2014 Fall 2013 Fall 2012 Fall 2011
Enrollment 4,037 3,303 3,828 3,608
Occupancy 3,954 3,219 3,738 3,534
% 97.9% 97.5% 97.6% 97.9%
Fall 3rd week enrollment and occupancy data.
Live and learn with peers Academically and socially
supportive environment Transition to university and
campus life
TransferHousing
Fall 2014 Fall 2013 Fall 2012 Fall 2011
Enrollment 1,067 1,005 1,220 1,193
Occupancy 553 494 646 569
% 51.8% 49.1% 52.9% 47.7%
Fall 3rd week enrollment and occupancy data.Occupancy totals do not include transfer students living at Family Student Housing or the Camper Park.
Apartment and residence hall facilities
Variety of room and meal plan options Annual rates shown below
Choices
Quad Triple Double Single
Apartments $9,387 $9,225 - 9,711 $9,351 – 12,105 $13,752
Residence Halls $8,865 $8,802 – 9,243 $8,865 - 11,394 $13,095
The Village --- --- --- $10,395
University Town Center --- $8,937 $11,547 ---
Triple Rooms
Theme HousingStudents can live with people with shared interests. Examples include: Academic Focused GLBTI Supportive iFloor Rosa Parks African American Theme House Science Community Diversity Awareness, Gaming, Outdoor Adventure,
Sustainability…and many other options are available
Presented ByKevin TreshamAssistant Director, Student Housing Services (CHES)
University Town Center1101 Pacific Avenue Off-Campus Apartments
“Leased” Space 134Bed Spaces
Double or Triple Bedroom Suites
CommunityRentals
The on-campus resource for off-campus housing: Rental listings database Access to rental resources, laws, and agreements Instructions on preparing a rental application packet Education on tenant rights and responsibilities Online Renters’ Workshop training
Presented ByDonna BlitzerDirector, Government Relations
Presented BySteve HouserDirector, Capital Planning (CHES)
CHES Strategy Drivers Extend Building Life Cycle Make Facilities Appealing to Today’s Students Deliver Additional Beds
Meet 2005 LRDP Bed Space Requirement
CHES Strategy Drivers Extend Building Life Cycle Make Facilities Appealing to Today’s Students Deliver Additional Beds
Meet 2005 LRDP Bed Space Requirement
ProblemExtremely Low Student Demand
Residence Hall Issues
Uninviting Entrances
Circulation ChallengesEnvelope + Infrastructure
Dark Interiors &Dated Finishes
Site Issues
“Way Finding” Problems
Lack of Natural Light
Challenging Topography
(Not ADA Compliant)
Lack of Desirable Social Gathering
Spaces
Core Scope
Accessibility
Sustainability
Campus Goals &
Requirements
UC Goals & Requirements
Building Code Requirements
Goals/Requirements:Campus, UC, State, Federal
Core Scope
Building Code
Campus Standards
Campus Goals and
Requirements
UC Goals and Requirements
Federal Requirements (Accessibility)
Core Scope
Accessibility
Sustainability
Campus Goals &
Requirements
UC Goals & Requirements
Building Code Requirements
Total Scope
Water Conservation MitigationLong Range Development Plan (2005 LRDP)Replacement of Toilets and Shower Fixtures
Triggers ADA Code Compliance(Department of State Architect) Review
Comprehensive Solutions• Bedroom & Restroom Doors• Restroom Turning Radius• Building Entrances• Elevators • Site Accessibility
Resolve Access Issues at Buildings and Merrill Site
Design and Review ProcessDesign Review
Design
Review
Design
Review
Design
Review
Design
Elevator Tower
Light can penetrate buildings and interior corridors are straightened
Natural Light Into Buildings
Social Spaces, Intuitive Way Finding + Natural Light
Merrill Summary Lengthy Reviews and Approvals 3 Construction Phases (2+ Years) Total Project Budget=$51 Million Maintain Prior Bed Count And:
61 Added Beds Increased Student Demand
Priority Applications Annual Average 2007-2014(319 Students ) 2015 (495 Students)
CHES Strategy Drivers Extend Building Life Cycle Make Facilities Appealing to Today’s Students Deliver Additional Beds
Meet 2005 LRDP Bed Space Requirement
CHES Strategy Drivers Extend Building Life Cycle Make Facilities Appealing to Today’s Students Deliver Additional Beds
Meet 2005 LRDP Bed Space Requirement
01,0002,0003,0004,0005,0006,0007,0008,0009,000
10,00011,00012,00013,00014,00015,00016,00017,00018,00019,000
Academic Year
UCSC Enrollment(On Campus, 3 Quarter Average)
01,0002,0003,0004,0005,0006,0007,0008,0009,000
10,00011,00012,00013,00014,00015,00016,00017,00018,00019,000
Academic Year
UCSC Enrollment(On Campus, 3 Quarter Average)
4 + Years
01,0002,0003,0004,0005,0006,0007,0008,0009,000
10,00011,00012,00013,00014,00015,00016,00017,00018,00019,000
Academic Year
UCSC Enrollment(On Campus, 3 Quarter Average)
2+ Years
01,0002,0003,0004,0005,0006,0007,0008,0009,000
10,00011,00012,00013,00014,00015,00016,00017,00018,00019,000
Academic Year
UCSC Enrollment(On Campus, 3 Quarter Average)
4 + Years
Porter College Residence Halls Capital Renewal (2008-09, 2009-10)
Porter A & B - original conditions
Porter A & B - upper floors & building envelope removed
Porter A & B - steel framing and building envelope at lower floors
Porter A & B - building envelope replaced
Porter A - completed project
Porter A - completed project
Porter Summary Lengthy Reviews and Approvals 2 Construction Phases
Residence Hall B (Offline 2008-09) 120 Added Beds
Residence Hall A (Offline 2009-10) 177Added Beds
Total Project Budget= $84 Million Increased Student Demand
Presented ByDean FitchCampus Planner, Physical Planning and Construction
Presented ByDean FitchCampus Planner, Physical Planning and Construction
and the 2014 data:
Presented ByLarry PagelerDirector, Transportation and Parking Ser vices
TopographyUCSC is located on a hillside above coastal Santa Cruz...
Downtown Santa Cruz(40 ft. elevation)
Main Campus Entrance(230 ft. elevation) Upper Campus lands
(1,150 ft. elevation)Central Campus(660 ft. elevation)
UC Santa Cruz (2014-15)
• 17,049 students:
15,503 undergraduates
1,546 graduate students
• ~3,400 faculty and staff work at the main campus
• Ten residential colleges house 50% of the total student enrollment
• 4,840 auto and 330 motorcycleparking spaces in over 65 on-campus parking lots
• Only two roads into/out of campus
• Average Daily Traffic (ADT) in/out of campus = 20,755 vehicle trips/day
UCSC Spring 2015 Mode Split StudyTravel Mode Passenger-Trips Vehicle-Trips
Single Occupant Autos 35.8% 68.3%
Motorcycles 0.8% 1.6%
Service/Construction Vehicles 2.4% 4.6%
Non-TDM Modes 39.0% 74.5%Multi-Occupant Vehicles 22.5% 20.0%
SCMTD Transit Buses 23.6% 2.3%
Other UCSC TDM (vanpools, Bike Shuttle, Campus Transit)
11.6% 3.1%
Bicycles 2.9% 0%
Pedestrians 0.3% 0%
Total TDM Modes 61.0% 25.5%
UCSC Spring 2015 Mode Split StudyTravel Mode Passenger-Trips Vehicle-Trips
Single Occupant Autos 35.8% 68.3%
Motorcycles 0.8% 1.6%
Service/Construction Vehicles 2.4% 4.6%
Non-TDM Modes 39.0% 74.5%Multi-Occupant Vehicles 22.5% 20.0%
SCMTD Transit Buses 23.6% 2.3%
Other UCSC TDM (vanpools, Bike Shuttle, Campus Transit)
11.6% 3.1%
Bicycles 2.9% 0%
Pedestrians 0.3% 0%
Total TDM Modes 61.0% 25.5%
UCSC Spring Mode Split Study
UCSC Spring 2014 Travel Survey
Commuting Students Commuting Faculty & Staff
TransitSOV
Bikes & Walking
MOV
EV/Carsharing
Santa Cruz Metro Transit District
• UCSC’s Average Daily Ridership during the 2014-15 school term exceeded 11,080 students and 560staff/faculty
• Peak UCSC ridership exceeded 15,000 passengers on Friday, October 3, 2014 (2nd day of Fall)
• Total annual UCSC ridership in 2014-15 exceeded 2.53 million passengers
• UCSC accounts for more than 50% of SCMTD’s total in-county ridership
• At the cost of $1.38 per ride, UCSC’s 2014-15 payment to SCMTD totaled $3.612 million
SCMTD Ridership Trends
SCMTD Service to UCSC• UCSC Commuters are concentrated relatively near the campus
Campus Vehicle Traffic Trends
Campus Vehicle Traffic Trends
UCSC Campus Transit• Currently operating four on-campus
routes from 7:25am until 12:12am Monday - Friday and 6:30pm until 12:12am Saturday and Sunday
• Since Fall 2012: Late-night off-campus “Night Owl” service until 1:15am Sunday –Thursday nights and until 2:50am Friday and Saturday nights
• During the 2014-15 school term, daily ridership averaged 10,430 passengers on the Day and Night Shuttles
• Total 2014-15 ridership exceeded 2.17 million
• Campus Transit costs about $1.38 per rider in 2014-15
Car Sharing• Nine years ago, UCSC TAPS
launched a contract with Zipcarto introduce car sharing to the campus
• As of September 2015:– 13 cars in 6 on-campus
locations; 9 cars in 5 off-campus locations
– 1,749 active members, including UCSC students, staff and faculty
– Non-UCSC membership now exceeds 620 as the program grows in the City of Santa Cruz
• Overall utilization in May 2015 exceeded 52%
• Studies indicate residential student parking demand declines as one car may serve thirty-three people
Overview: Housing, Water, and TransportationUniversity Center Alumni Room
September 4, 201510:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m.