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Archives: April, 2012

Power outage update  April 24th, 2012

The West side of campus is experiencing unexpected interruptions to power on Tuesday, April 24, in the following buildings:

  • Buxton
  • Cauthorn
  • Hawley
  • Poling
  • Marketplace West Dining Center

Please use caution while navigating your building.  Elevators may not be functioning properly at this time. Residents are also encouraged to turn off computers and other sensitive electronic devices during the outage.  The wireless network in Hawley Hall has been impacted by this outage as well.

Pacific Power has been contacted to determine the cause of the power outage and UHDS will provide an update as soon as more information is available. We apologize for any inconvenience this might cause. If you have any questions or concerns please contact your RA.

Afternoon update (3:30 p.m.): At this time, power has been restored to the West side of campus; however Pacific Power is still working to complete the necessary permanent repairs. Given the work in progress, we anticipate another short-term power outage later today in Buxton, Hawley, Cauthorn halls and Marketplace West Dining Center.

Marketplace West will reopen with limited dinner service and menu offerings. Again, a short-term disruption may occur during meal times.

Thank you again for your patience as we resume normal operations in our residence halls and Marketplace West.

Sincerely,

 

University Housing & Dining Services

Oregon State University

541-737-4771

oregonstate.edu/uhds

 


(Re)building community  April 23rd, 2012

[Corvallis Gazette-Times, April 22, 2012} — On the official zoning map of Corvallis, Oregon State University appears as a big blue blob framed by a checkerboard pattern of multicolored rectangles.

Many of the blocks adjacent to campus are tinted brown, designating high-density residential zoning. The effects of that zoning have been playing out for years, as single-family homes and small apartment houses have gradually given way to rows of student townhouse rentals and ever-larger apartment blocks.

For Charlyn Ellis, the scope of this rapidly accelerating transformation became clear in January, when the World War II-era Wilson Woods Apartments on Northwest 29th Street were torn down to make way for a 215-bedroom townhouse complex.

With wave after wave of OSU enrollment inundating the local rental market, pressure for new student housing continues to build, leaving many of the older neighborhoods around campus ripe for high-density redevelopment.

“If you talk to OSU and the city about where students will live,” Ellis said, “we’re in (the path of) the wrecking ball.”

Rather than wait for the wrecking ball to strike again, Ellis and other preservation-minded area residents decided to push back with a new group called Citizens for Livable Corvallis.

With about 25 active participants, the fledgling organization has no officers and is still defining its mission, but its basic goal is to preserve established neighborhoods as much as possible — not just near the university but all over Corvallis.

“We have representatives from every neighborhood association in the flat part of town, and we’re going up the hills,” said Ellis, a high school English teacher who’s active in the Chintimini Neighborhood Association. “We’re trying to get people from all the key groups who can pass on information.”

Among other things, Citizens for Livable Corvallis advocates adaptive reuse rather than demolition of older buildings, new construction that is compatible with surrounding structures, solving neighborhood parking issues and addressing conflicts between college students and older residents.

Members meet periodically and communicate regularly via Facebook and a lively Google Groups account, sharing information about pending teardowns and construction projects.

They also send delegates to observe City Council and Planning Commission meetings wearing CLC buttons and have begun working on ways to influence local policy. Several members have been appointed to serve on work groups of the OSU-Corvallis collaboration project, a long-term effort to address town and gown issues.

“I think that’s why this group formed,” said Lori Stephens, an architect who testified before the Planning Commission against plans for a 279-bedroom student apartment complex on Northwest Harrison Boulevard.

“Let’s not just say, ‘Well, that’s just the way it is — we can’t do anything about it.’ Let’s see what can be done.”

And the organization wants to see Oregon State University take a more active role in addressing the issues arising from skyrocketing enrollment growth.

Eric Hansen, an associate director of University Housing & Dining Services, said OSU officials are working on it, but there are no easy solutions.

For instance, his agency has legislative approval to build a new residence hall. But with 250 vacant dorm beds right now, it’s holding off until demand picks up.

“What we are best at is first-year student housing,” Hansen said. “Typically we have about 80 percent of first-year students living on campus.”

The housing agency is exploring ways to boost its freshman numbers still further while expanding offerings that will appeal to upperclassmen. Steps under consideration include requiring all freshmen to live on campus, holding down cost increases for dorm rents and meal plans, and grouping older students in “cohorts” in designated residence halls.

“We probably agree with a lot of the ideas and principles of Corvallis community groups,” Hansen said. “The question is, how do we get there from here?”

Beierle said the university just needs to get more creative about building on-campus housing that is cheaper and less dorm-like.

“There’s a tremendous amount of design talent on campus. They could come up with student housing that meets the students’ needs at a reasonable price,” Beierle said.

“I’m persuaded that no matter what the problem is, there’s a way to design a solution.”

Ultimately, Citizens for Livable Corvallis wants the university to thrive, said Courtney Cloyd, a retired Forest Service geologist who’s active in the Central Park Neighborhood Association. But CLC also wants OSU to be a good neighbor to its host city, and the organization intends to make sure that happens.

“Without this kind of drive, without this kind of pressure from the community, OSU isn’t going to take the initiative,” Cloyd said.

“They’re going to be as good a neighbor as we make them be.”

Read the full article by Corvallis Gazette-Times reporter Bennett Hall.


Important message for West Hall residents  April 2nd, 2012

Today, April 2, is the first day of Priority Housing Selection. Unfortunately, because of space pre-reserved in West Hall for 2012-13 by groups such as the University Honors College and INTO OSU, there are no spaces available at this time for current West residents who had hoped to return to live in the same room or the same hall in 2012-13.

University Housing & Dining Services apologizes that this was not communicated earlier to current West residents. We are working with our Housing Assignments office to help place returning West students in other halls around campus such as the upperclassmen communities of Halsell and Finley halls, and will give those students the most priority possible. See the full list of housing themes.

If you have questions regarding your housing application, please contact our Housing Assignments office at (541) 737-4771 or at housing@oregonstate.edu.

More information of Housing Selection.