University of Arkansas Begins Construction on new Student Residence Halls

Construction is underway on the University of Arkansas’ (the U of A) newest student residence halls, with the buildings scheduled to open in time for the fall 2019 semester. The Stadium Drive Residence Halls, which will be located south of Pomfret Hall and east of Bud Walton Arena, are the first new student housing additions on campus since Founders Hall opened in 2013. “The growth of our student body has stabilized in the past two years, but we still have a large unmet demand for on-campus student housing,” says Chancellor Joseph Steinmetz. “The investment that University Housing is making will help fill that need while also meeting several University of Arkansas priorities, including student success, innovative teaching and learning, creating a more collaborative campus and advancing the university’s land-grant and flagship mission of service to the state.”

Arkansas Residence Hall

Renderings: Leers Weinzapfel Associates, Modus Studio, Mackey Mitchell Architects

The new residence halls are conceived as a Living Learning Community, housing several multidisciplinary communities focused on architecture, interior design, landscape architecture, art, theatre, music and English. This will allow on-campus students to live alongside others who share their interests and participate in monthly activities that promote academic and personal success. The Living Learning Community will also provide unique access to faculty members and a variety of events and study groups. 

A recording studio Flexible design, art and maker studio Classroom spaces Gallery spaces Music practice rooms Dance/movement/yoga studio, and interior and exterior performance spaces are all part of the community activity-friendly spaces that will be featured. 

“We are committed to fostering a campus that embraces collaboration and interdisciplinary pursuits to stimulate innovation in teaching and learning,” says Jim Coleman, provost and executive vice chancellor for academic affairs. “With this Living Learning Community we will have several departments working together to provide students with a collaborative experience focused on design and the arts.”

“Supporting student success is the U of A’s highest priority,” says Charles Robinson, vice chancellor for student affairs. “Studies have shown that students who live on campus tend to be more engaged in campus activities, more connected to campus resources, are more likely to succeed in the classroom, stay in school and graduate than students who live off campus.”

The endeavor is a collaborative effort engaging University of Arkansas Housing, Facilities Management, the J. William Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences, and the Fay Jones School of Architecture and Design. The project is also a design research initiative of the Fay Jones School.

The residential spaces in the Stadium Drive Residence Halls will each be five stories tall, with more than 200,000 square feet of total space, 368 residential rooms, extensive landscape design, residential kitchens on every other floor, exterior dining and study spaces and even covered hammock space. A community space called the Cabin connects the two residential halls.

The innovative project was conceived and designed by a design collective led by Leers Weinzapfel Associates of Boston; Modus Studio of Fayetteville; Mackey Mitchell Architects of St. Louis; and OLIN of Philadelphia. Nabholz Corporation of Rogers is the general contractor.

The project will include the first residence halls in the United States to use cross-laminated timber and they will be the first multi-story advanced-timber structures in the state of Arkansas. It is an innovation with a possible future economic impact for Arkansas.

“Cross-laminated timber—the most prevalent form of “mass timber”—is a form of ‘super-plywood,’ that is, massive panels made of layers of dimensioned lumber adhered at 90-degree angles to each other,” said Peter MacKeith, dean of the Fay Jones School. “The entire laminate meets structural, fire, seismic, health and other required building code specifications, as must any construction material—and possesses great versatility in design and construction applications. On top of that, wood is a renewable resource—forests can be sustainably managed, harvested and regrown.

“Equally important, this is a building material for the emerging North American market that is grown right here in Arkansas. The market for cross-laminated timber could potentially be a major factor in the economic growth of the Arkansas timber industry."

At this time, the state lacks a processing facility to produce cross laminated timber, but it is hoped that this will change in the future, as projects like the Stadium Drive Residence Halls create a demand for the material, fulfilling another of the University of Arkansas’ priorities: providing service to the state and the adding to the state’s economic development.

Featured

  • Photo courtesy of Kraus-Anderson

    Minnesota District Completes $49.7M Addition, Renovation Project

    St. Paul Public Schools in St. Paul, Minn., recently announced the completion of a $49.7-million addition and remodeling project at two district schools, according to a news release.

  • Academy of Classical Education Breaks Ground in Louisiana

    Charter Schools USA (CSUSA) recently announced the groundbreaking of a new public charter school in Covington, La., according to a news release. The Academy of Classical Education at Covington will enroll students in grades K–8 and is scheduled for completion in August 2026, just in time for the new school year.

  • Can AI Help Build Stronger Communities in Student Housing?

    Student housing success is shifting from operational performance to student experience, with belonging now at the center. A recent 2025 report underscores a growing emphasis on student well-being, community, and engagement, signaling that expectations now extend beyond logistics to ensure students feel supported in their living environments. AI is enabling that shift by reducing administrative workload and giving teams more time to focus on meaningful student engagement.

  • Cal Poly Humboldt Starts Construction on Healthcare Education Hub

    California State Polytechnic University, Humboldt in Arcata, Calif., recently announced that work has begun on a renovation project that will turn the Stewart Building into a new Healthcare Education Hub, according to a news release. The university is partnering with Sundt Construction Inc. for construction services.