URI Plans More Student Housing Amidst Housing Crunch in South County

The university hopes a plan to build an additional 1,100 beds will fill a need for on-campus housing. Local communities have said student rentals contribute to a housing shortage

The University of Rhode Island opened the 500-bed Brookside Hall in 2020.
The University of Rhode Island opened the 500-bed Brookside Hall in 2020.
Courtesy University of Rhode Island
Share
The University of Rhode Island opened the 500-bed Brookside Hall in 2020.
The University of Rhode Island opened the 500-bed Brookside Hall in 2020.
Courtesy University of Rhode Island
URI Plans More Student Housing Amidst Housing Crunch in South County
Copy

As interest in attending the University of Rhode Island continues to grow, the state’s flagship university said Wednesday it plans to build more student housing.

URI plans to lease state land on the Kingston campus to a private developer, which would then build and operate student housing on the land, the university said in a press release. URI said it hopes the deal with the Gilbane Development Company will eventually provide more than 1,100 additional student beds.

A report commissioned by the town of Narragansett and released earlier this year found that URI has not built enough housing for students, which has significantly altered the town’s housing market and contributed to a housing crunch for year-round residents. The university enrolled 17,511 total students in Fall 2021, according to the most recently available enrollment data submitted to the state Board of Education.

Ellen Reynolds, URI’s vice president for student affairs, says that many students choose to live off-campus and closer to the shore. But “if there’s a desire for students to live on campus,” Reynolds said, “we want to meet that need for them.”

This story was reported by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

Three decades after being elected to Congress, Rhode Island’s senior U.S. senator is running again, in part to oppose President Trump
With a March 17 deadline looming, officials say the town cannot absorb what amounts to nearly 10% of its annual budget
Gunfire at a Pawtucket high school hockey game forces a painful reckoning about violence, division and responsibility
The shooter had a flareup of domestic disputes with their family in 2020, but investigators say they are still searching for a ‘trigger event’ closer to the shooting six years later
Microplastics are all around us, even if we can’t see them. This week, the Possibly team investigates where they come from and why sometimes, they’re even made on purpose