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Top of 2005

Completion 11: University Center of Chicago
Cost: $151 million

The University Center of Chicago, an 18-story student residence in the city's South Loop, is reportedly the nation's largest multi-university dormitory.

The facility offers a range of options to complement practically any student lifestyle and support student education needs.

The 702,000-sq.-ft. residence hall houses 1,680 undergraduate, graduate and professional students from Columbia College, DePaul University and Roosevelt University and 43 resident staff members. The facility boasts a variety of student housing options and amenities and hosts a full-service, year-round conference center for educational and corporate clients, summer housing and 31,000-sq.-ft. of commercial space on the ground floor.

The three universities jointly developed the project and created the Educational Advancement Fund, a nonprofit corporation, to maintain the building.

The student and staff residences are on floors three through 18 of the E-shaped building.

The north side has suite-style units, and the south side features apartments.

Every residential floor has a lounge and study room, and there are student-specific housing sections for undergraduate students and graduate or professional students.

The north side houses 46 deluxe doubles suites and 234 quad semi-suites.

The south side offers 143 quad four-bedroom apartments, 14 quad two-bedroom apartments and 24 studio apartments.

An enclosed communal great room on the third floor features a large gas fireplace with stone mantel. Doors on either side of the fireplace open to a 20,000-sq.-ft. garden terrace with trees, shrubs and flowers.

Carefully Planned Erection

Completing the building in two years was a primary goal, and the building was erected in two different sections that saved about three months.

The larger south tower was constructed first, the north tower came next and a 16-ft.-long pour strip, or gap, was temporarily left to separate the two.

Turner Construction Co., the general contractor, chose to use two tower cranes and expedited the south tower, which included the elevator cores, the mechanical, electrical and plumbing-intensive apartments, cafeteria and penthouse mechanical room.

The concentration on the south tower allowed early installation of the exterior precast concrete panels and building enclosure for interior apartment build-out.



 

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