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Comprehensive Housing Market Analysis and Recommendations for Student Housing

This draft executive summary presents a comprehensive analysis of the student housing market, including occupancy rates, rental rates, and the preferences and needs of students. It provides recommendations for future development and improvements in student housing options.

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Comprehensive Housing Market Analysis and Recommendations for Student Housing

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  1. Comprehensive Housing Market Analysis DRAFT - Executive Summary December, 2007 BRAILSFORD & DUNLAVEY

  2. Presentation Agenda Scope & Schedule Review Goals & Objectives Market Analysis Summary Recommendations

  3. Scope & Schedule Review Original Schedule

  4. Presentation Agenda Scope & Schedule Review Goals & Objectives Market Analysis Summary Recommendations

  5. Goals & Objectives Strategic Asset Value (SAV) SAV Work Session • Educational Outcomes • Enrollment Management • Campus Community • Financial Performance Guides Decision Making • Quantity and Location of Housing • Target Market and Unit Types / Programmatic Priorities • Financial Accessibility & Quality Reconciliation • Level of Service / Underwriting Criteria & Institutional Will

  6. Goals & Objectives SAV Review Educational Outcomes • Freshmen focus and facilities appropriate for freshmen through senior students • Encourage greater faculty participation Enrollment Management • Provide enough housing for 100% freshmen and guarantee Sophomore housing Community Creation • Increase density of students on northeast campus (Hill Square) to establish critical mass • Out of class activity focused at the College House level Financial Performance • New developments should implement sustainable practices per University standards • Achieving occupancy is more important than achieving debt coverage

  7. Presentation Agenda Scope & Schedule Review Goals & Objectives Market Analysis Summary Recommendations

  8. Market Analysis Off-Campus Housing • What’s the market (student perspective) • Rental rates / occupancy performance • Market focus & services • Measure impact of location, product type, condition, amenities on prices & occupancy • Consider the dynamics • Demand shifts (student & non-student) • Projected & potential additions to supply (reductions?) • Impact of zoning & land-use policy • Market concentrations

  9. Off-Campus Housing Development

  10. Off-Campus Housing Development 12% of Undergrad & 8% of Grads prefer New Luxury Unit Proximate to Campus

  11. The Radian

  12. Market Analysis Student Focus Groups • Information goal is qualitative • What students care about (identify issues) • Why they care about it • How much they care about it • Format & Process • Groups of eight to twelve • Planned strategy (macro => micro) • Test prevailing wisdom, intercept information & concepts

  13. Market Analysis Student Focus Groups - Undergraduates • 3 focus groups, 30+ participants • 2 undergraduate on-campus focus groups, both with 10 students each • Students were a diverse group, all academic years, varying majors, and with good representation from RAB as well as other students drawn at random to participate. • 1 undergraduate off-campus focus group, with 12 students • Students typically look at Penn and other Ivy League Schools • Student are familiar with the College House system • Freshmen use the Residential Programs to get preferred housing • Navigating the College House system is difficult • Overall, students enjoyed living on-campus but were turned off by the housing selection process, decentralization of administration and the disparities in College House conditions and policies • Sophomores feel stuck: stay in current hall or move off campus • About ½ have changed College Houses • Many because Quad and Hill are freshman focused and offer facilities that are less appealing to upper class students • Satisfaction higher for students at smaller College Houses • College House system isn’t perceived as 4 year experience • Off-campus leases begin in November & December • Risk the system or go off campus

  14. Market Analysis Student Survey • Quantitative measure • Current housing choices • Views of existing housing operations • Preferred housing options • Demographics • Data analysis • Sample size & integrity • Cross-tabs • Demand modeling

  15. Market Analysis Student Survey • 4,669 Surveys • 20% of student population • Closely match student demographics • +/- 1.44% margin of error (95% confidence level)

  16. Market Analysis Survey Analysis - Undergrad • 87% of students said sense of community was important to their college experience • 63% prefer to have freshmen-only halls • 77% felt it was important to have freshmen-focused communities • 23% prefer to living in mixed communities • 60% felt is was important to have mixed communities • 94% felt is was important to guarantee freshmen & sophomore housing • 91% felt is was important to provide suitable junior & senior housing • 64% of off-campus students live in 4+ bedroom units • 80% of off-campus students found living conditions convenient to class, work, etc. • Median Rent $750/mo incl. utilities (83% 12.mo lease - $9,700/year incl. deposit) • 25% prefer a 4-bedroom single on-campus (all other units 2-8% each)

  17. Market Analysis Peer Institution Analysis College House Peers • Brown • Rice • Harvard • Yale • Princeton • Columbia • Cornell • Chicago • Wash U. • Stanford Levels of Research • Programs • Policies • Unit Design & Amenities • Community

  18. Market Analysis College House Drivers Key Policies: • Random Assignment to College House • Harvard has Freshmen House System followed by So.-Sr. College House • Commitment thru Sr. Year (Princeton expand Jr & Sr. by 2009) Key Facility Requirements: • Dining halls in each College House • Common Rooms • 300-500 Students Other Key Factors: • High percentage of students living on campus 70 - 98% • History: College House Systems are 60 - 100years old • No Greek System (Yale is an exception)

  19. Presentation Agenda Scope & Schedule Review Goals & Objectives Market Analysis Summary Recommendations

  20. Demand-Based Program (DBP) Capture Rates

  21. Demand-Based Program (DBP) Capture Rates

  22. Demand-Based Program (DBP) Capture Rates

  23. Demand Based Program (DBP)_ Undergraduate Demand (includes impact of Radian)

  24. Demand Based Program (DBP)_

  25. Recommendations Existing Conditions Risks: • 500 bed Radian comes on line in 2008 • Analysis shows that 168 undergrads from on-campus will relocate to Radian • New 340 Bed Complex 2010 • Will dilute on-campus demand for, and impact occupancy of, less desirable units and houses Risk Mitigation Strategies: • Strengthen College House System with Key Policy Changes • Create Freshmen House system (with appropriate bed type and amenities) • Create link to College House for freshmen to matriculate as sophomores • Guarantee Sophomore Housing • Provide market responsive housing to upper-class students • Convert Sansom to College House or Graduate (not current hybrid) • Develop New Housing as Market Responsive College House Model

  26. Recommendations College House Goals Goals: • Enhance identification with House • Retain both first and second year students • Retain all upper-class students wanting to remain on campus • Make the best use of existing facilities • Small Traditional Houses for Freshman • Ideally with Separate Dining and Programming Areas • Larger Houses with more amenities to attract Upper-class students • Graduate Housing based on Market Demand

  27. Recommendations Key Policy Changes Institute Freshmen College & Upper-Class College House System • 2009 Freshmen in traditional-style houses • Fisher-Hassenfeld, Hill, Kings Court / English, Riepe, Ware • Capacity: 2,349 beds 2006-07 Freshman Class Size: 2,385 students • 2009 Creation of two university-wide College Houses • Gregory, Du Bois • College Houses that accommodate Freshmen through Senior Students • 40 Freshmen in Du Bois / 40 Freshmen in Gregory • 2010 Sophomores, Juniors, and Seniors in mixed-unit College Houses • Stouffer, Rodin, Harnwell, Harrison • Balance between Sophomore and Upper-Class students so that both groups represent no less than 30% and no more than 70% of the House population

  28. Recommendations Key Policy Changes with New Development Institute Freshmen College & Upper-Class College House System • 2010 Sophomore Housing Guarantee • Bed assignments can accommodate 62% of Sophomores – the maximum number of beds demanded by surveyed students • 2010 Sansom remains primarily Graduate Housing with approximately 300 Undergraduate Beds • 2010 New College House is Developed • Balance of Sophomore and Upper-Class Students • Suggested configuration based on Demand: • 140 Private Suite beds • 200 Three- or Four-Bedroom Apartment Private beds

  29. Recommendations Key Policy Changes & New Development Capture Rates / Assignment Reconciliation House Configuration

  30. Demand Based Program (DBP)_

  31. Recommendations Scenario I – Sophomore Guarantee & Sansom as Graduate Housing Institute Freshmen College & Upper-Class College House System • 2009 Freshmen in traditional-style houses • Fisher-Hassenfeld, Hill, Kings Court / English, Riepe, Ware • Capacity: 2,349 beds 2006-07 Freshman Class Size: 2,385 students • 2009 Creation of two university-wide College Houses • Gregory, Du Bois • College Houses that accommodate Freshmen through Senior Students • 40 Freshmen in Du Bois / 40 Freshmen in Gregory • 2010 Sophomores, Juniors, and Seniors in mixed-unit College Houses • Stouffer, Rodin, Harnwell, Harrison • Balance between Sophomore and Upper-Class students so that both groups represent no less than 30% and no more than 70% of the House population

  32. Recommendations Scenario I – Sophomore Guarantee & Sansom as Graduate Housing Renovate Sansom for Graduate Housing • 2010 Sansom is renovated to accommodate Graduate Housing Demand • Efficiency / One-Bedroom Apartment Private Beds • Two-Bedroom Apartment Private Beds • No Undergraduate Students Remain in Sansom • 2010 New College House is Developed • Balance of Sophomore and Upper-Class Students • Suggested configuration Based on Demand: • 140 Private Suite beds • 200 Three- or Four-Bedroom Apartment Private beds

  33. Recommendations Scenario I – Sophomore Guarantee & Sansom as Graduate Housing Capture Rates / Assignment Reconciliation House Configuration

  34. Demand Based Program (DBP)_

  35. Recommendations Scenario II – Sophomore Live-on Requirement & Sansom as College House Institute Freshmen College & Upper-Class College House System • 2009 Freshmen in traditional-style houses • Fisher-Hassenfeld, Hill, Kings Court / English, Riepe, Ware • Capacity: 2,349 beds 2006-07 Freshman Class Size: 2,385 students • 2009 Creation of two university-wide College Houses • Gregory, Du Bois • College Houses that accommodate Freshmen through Senior Students • 40 Freshmen in Du Bois / 40 Freshmen in Gregory • 2010 Sophomores, Juniors, and Seniors in mixed-unit College Houses • Stouffer, Rodin, Harnwell, Harrison • Balance between Sophomore and Upper-Class students so that both groups represent no less than 30% and no more than 70% of the House population

  36. Recommendations Scenario II – Sophomore Live-on Requirement & Sansom as College House • 2010 Sansom is converted into a College House • Balance of Sophomore and Upper-Class Students • No On-Campus Graduate Housing • 2010 Sophomores Live-On Requirement • Approximately 85% of Sophomores are required to live on campus • 2010 New College House is Developed • Balance of Sophomore and Upper-Class Students • Suggested configuration based on Demand: • 140 Private Suite beds • 200 Three- or Four-Bedroom Apartment Private beds

  37. Recommendations Scenario I – Sophomore Live-on Requirement & Sansom as College House Capture Rates / Assignment Reconciliation House Configuration

  38. Demand Based Program (DBP)_

  39. Comprehensive Housing Market Analysis DRAFT - Executive Summary December, 2007 BRAILSFORD & DUNLAVEY

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