Vanderbilt to Build Housing for Graduate, Professional Students

Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tenn., will begin construction this week on a housing development for graduate and professional students. Construction was originally slated to begin in summer 2020 but was delayed during the COVID-19 pandemic. It’s scheduled to be finished in time to house residents for the 2023-24 school year.

“This important project will further strengthen our support of graduate and professional students by providing an environment in which they can engage and learn from one another beyond the classroom,” said Vanderbilt Chancellor Daniel Diermeier. “These informal spaces for collaboration are central to our mission of shaping the future leaders of tomorrow and to empowering scholars to think boldly across disciplines.”

The new facility will lie adjacent to campus in midtown Nashville. The design is set to include about 615 beds, a fitness center, a collaborative workspace, and a public courtyard. The ground floor will feature retail establishments open to both residents and the larger community.

In a public-private partnership, Vanderbilt teamed with Balfour Beatty Campus Solutions (a developer and operator of higher-education infrastructure projects) and Axium Infrastructure (an independent portfolio management firm) for the project. Balfour Beatty and Axium will develop, operate, and maintain the facility, according to the terms of the agreement.

“The university’s graduate and professional housing development plan is essential as we continue to attract and retain some of the best students from across the country and the globe while building on the growth and achievement of our schools,” said André Christie-Mizell, dean of the Graduate School and vice provost for graduate education. “While the pandemic has certainly impacted our timeline, we never lost sight of our long-term goals, and we are excited to once again focus on this important effort.”

The new housing development—to be known as Graduate Village—is just one of several efforts by the university since 2016 benefitting post-baccalaureate students. Others include additions and renovations to the schools of nursing and divinity, renovations to the Walker Management Library in the Owen Graduate School of Management, and renovations to the Annette and Irwin Eskind Family Biomedical Library and Learning Center.

About the Author

Matt Jones is senior editor of Spaces4Learning. He can be reached at [email protected].

Featured

  • How One School Reimagined Learning Spaces—and What Others Can Learn

    When Collegedale Academy, a PreK–8 school outside Chattanooga, Tenn., needed a new elementary building, we faced the choice that many school leaders eventually confront: repair an aging facility or reimagine what learning spaces could be. Our historic elementary school held decades of memories for families, including some who had once walked its halls as children themselves. But years of wear and the need for costly repairs made it clear that investing in the old building would only patch the problems rather than solve them.

  • KI Launches K–12 Classroom Furniture Giveaway

    Contract furniture company KI recently announced the launch of its fourth-annual Classroom Furniture Giveaway, which awards $50,000 each to four K–12 educators across the U.S., according to a news release. The goal is to address decreasing student engagement and increasing teacher burnout numbers by updating learning spaces to accommodate modern needs.

  • Tennessee State University Gains Approval for New Engineering Facility

    Tennessee State University in Nashville, Tenn., recently announced that it has received approval from the Tennessee State Building Commission to build a new engineering building on campus, according to a university news release. The 70,000-square-foot, $50-million facility will play home to the university’s engineering programs and the Applied & Industrial Technology program.

  • Colorado State University Global, SCTE Launch Online Certificate Program

    Colorado State University Global (CSU Global), based in Denver, Colo., recently announced a partnership with CableLabs subsidiary the Society of Cable Telecommunications Engineers (SCTE) to launch an online certificate training program for broadband professionals, according to a news release.