Header image

The Slate | http://www.theslateonline.com
February 18, 2013

By Kevin Kline

http://www.theslateonline.com/article/2013/02/a-new-home-for-shippensburg-university-students

Watch the accompanying video here.

For the first time in more than 50 years, students at Shippensburg University are breaking in new residence halls on campus.

Phase 1 of a lengthy three-phase housing replacement project opened in time for the beginning of the spring 2013 semester — with students moving into Presidents Hall, Seavers Hall and McLean Hall II at the end of finals week of the fall 2012 semester.

Three buildings will occupy about 930 beds total within its different suite-style living areas. Each hall is 306,436 square feet and four stories high.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Dr. Roger Serr, SU’s vice president of Student Affairs said the university conducted tours during an open house at the end of the fall semester to give students and parents a glimpse of the new buildings. “There were a lot of students and their parents in the buildings and from what I understand that feedback was through-the-roof positive. Our current students who have seen it were also very excited as well.”

The paperwork for the next two phases is currently being written, and the entire project should be complete by summer 2015. The residency for next semester is very high — in the upper 90 percent range — with roughly 900 students set to get nestled into their new homes in January.

Some students have complained about the high cost of living in the new buildings, with the price ranging from $3,500 to $4,300 depending on the unit. With the high price of construction and the costs of the furnishings, the rent is more expensive to meet the obligations of the project.

But it is an expense that both Serr and Shippensburg University Student Services, Inc., (SUSSI) President Darrell Miller believe is worth taking on.

“Although the price is higher for the new residence halls than the current expense, if students are more comfortable and can select compatible roommates, it may lead to more learning and knowledge that can be invaluable to a better life and career,” Miller said.

Phase 1’s construction costs were just under $50 million, and with the development costs and financing added in, the total cost came to more than $70 million. The entire project will wind up costing $200 million by the time Phase 3 is finished. With a price tag that hefty, the school had to select a 501©(3) non-profit organization to fund the project.

Most schools simply select their foundations, but the Shippensburg University Foundation eventually backed out, making way for SUSSI to swoop in and accept the cost.

After that was straightened out, the school had to hire a developer and contractor. The Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education, of which SU is a member, had already identified 21 pre-approved developers through various construction projects, which helped Shippensburg narrow down the candidates. Several developers then responded to SU’s request for proposal.

The university narrowed its candidates down to three after further screening and negotiated with two of them before eventually settling on Campus Apartments based in Philadelphia as well as its architectural partner CUBE 3 Studio out of Massachusetts.

SUSSI then agreed to terms with a contractor, Harkins Builders, based in Maryland. The company agreed to a certain cost but got cold feet late in the negotiating stage when it saw the final totals exceeded what it had budgeted.

SUSSI wanted to close on the deal, but Harkins bailed, pushing the target date for the completion of Phase 1 from August 2012 to December 2012.

“That’s what made the whole thing slide, because once you miss it, poof, it’s gone,” said Bruce Herring, SU’s assistant director for planning and engineering. “You can’t move in mid-semester, you can move in winter break, but not in October or November.”

Campus Apartments had no previous working experience with Harkins, and with SUSSI left searching for a contractor, the company suggested a group that it had previously worked well with: Fortune Johnson, based out of Georgia.

This particular construction project was unique because of the many entities involved. Herring was one of the main designers while serving as the liaison between the design team and the school’s facilities management department and both Campus Apartments and Fortune Johnson.

“You have the university providing input and we rely heavily on our shops to make sure their input is involved, too,” Herring said. “And residence life and police and traffic and safety and all those people, but then the developer and contractor have a seat at the table as well.”

The construction project is easily the biggest and most expensive in the school’s history, despite the difficulty of recent projects such as the $26-million dollar CUB renovation (while the building was occupied) and the $10-million dollar construction of the H. Ric Luhrs Performing Arts Center. The university primarily handled those projects with little outside assistance.

“From a number of people involved, [this housing project is] definitely one of the more complex ones that I’ve ever had to deal with,” Herring said. “But it’s also been more rewarding because this is the only project we’ve had where there’s a different relationship with the contractor and they’re part of the team and part of the process from early on.”

The construction process did not come without its fair share of setbacks, however.

The fall and summer of 2011 were extremely wet, which immediately put the project behind schedule beginning in August. Shippensburg averages 35 inches of rain per year, but during the first 12 of the 16 construction months, the area received 75 inches of rain. The project accumulated weeks of contract delay days, including 22 in November alone.

The rain saturated the soil while also ruining dirt piles that had been intended to be put back in the ground. That dirt then needs to be compounded off-site (an additional expense) and fresh new soil needs to be purchased and shipped in its place.

Further, the geographic region where Shippensburg is located has karst soils, which is a mixture of solid granite, decaying granite and decaying soils that is hard to remove from the ground.

Small blasts helped clear some of the soils, but blasts were considered too dangerous to remove the soils that surrounded university utilities for fear of damage. Thus, construction crews had to use rock chippers to chip away at the karst soils.

“The students had to hear our rock chippers going 12, 13 hours a day for months and months, so it was aggravating and annoying to them, understandably, but also to us because it was slowing us down considerably,” said Tom Bradley, senior director of development for Campus Apartments. “Students complained to the university about the chipping but there was nothing anybody could do about it, it’s granite and we just had to keep trudging along until we were done.”

There was also a delay with getting the structural steel contract straightened out, which specifically pushed back construction of Building 1, according to Mark Knapley, senior project manager for Campus Apartments. The buildings are all wood-frame construction per the standards for residential units.

However, the basement level of Building 1 houses a wellness center, which is a commercial construction that requires stricter steel frames. The majority of the building’s construction thus could not move forward until the steel needed for the basement had arrived.

With all these issues holding the project back, construction took eight months to actually get off the ground when the plan had been for it to only take three or four months — all on a 16-month schedule.

Yet despite these holdups, Fortune Johnson made a commitment to finish the project on time even if it meant round-the-clock operations — a guarantee that Herring says the university does not typically see from contractors.

Week after week, the project began to slowly catch up on schedule and finally, in August 2012, the project was fully caught up to where it would have been sans the setbacks.

“Fortune Johnson went the extra mile and really staffed this project to try to get it done on time because we had problems with the steel design and weather and things like that that held them up. But they’ve bent over backwards to try to please us,” said Harry Carroll, SU’s assistant director for construction management.

“They made up all that lost time by overstaffing the project. They worked seven days a week and a lot of them are working 10-hour days. It’s pretty impressive the way they got all of them to buy into working that many hours, because you’re talking 35-40 people working on a Sunday and that’s a lot of overtime.”

The feeling is mutual, as Fortune Johnson considers Shippensburg University one of the most straightforward and cooperative clients it has worked with.

“There’s an old joke about how you have too many chiefs and not enough Indians, but all the chiefs here have all the same interests,” said Dennis Baldwin, group vice president for Fortune Johnson. “They all set the bar and they don’t move it, which is good for us. Everything has been consistent, and it’s nice when we can have that level of communication.”

Baldwin realizes that he may have burned his construction workers out with the amount of overtime and seven-day weeks they had to work over the last year to get the project caught up on schedule to meet the commitment they made to the university.

“I tell my guys that the shame of it in construction is that there’s no silver or bronze here for second and third,” Baldwin said. “You either get the gold or you don’t and everybody hates you for not living up to your commitment. We don’t break our commitments.”

Student Housing Business| http://www.studenthousingbusiness.com
February 1, 2013

http://studenthousingbusiness.com/latest-news/2295-campus-apartments-completes-first-phase-at-shippensburg-university-student-housing.html

Shippensburg, Pa. — Shippensburg University Student Services, Inc. (SUSSI) and Campus Apartments have completed the first phase of a development project to upgrade all of the university’s on-campus residences. The three-phase project, an estimated $200 million initiative, will continue with the groundbreaking of the second phase to improve the quality of housing and reshape the campus environment.

Photo courtesy of CUBE 3 Studio and Tangram 3DS.

The $70 million first phase included three new housing residences, involving two facilities on the north side of campus and one on the south side. The residences accommodate 924 students with semi-suite and full-suite floor plans, multipurpose programming areas and generous study and social lounges. One of the north-side buildings also includes a state-of-the-art 13,000 square foot wellness center, while the south-side building includes a new home for an honor’s program.

The second phase of the project, an estimated $65 million, will continue the plan to upgrade on-campus housing with three new residences on the south side of campus. Designed to accommodate 922 students, the living-learning facilities will also include semi-suite and full-suite floor plans with common areas for student interaction and learning opportunities. The project, scheduled for completion by fall 2014, will also include a new green space for outdoor recreational activities.

WHTM-TV, ABC| http://www.abc27.com
February 1, 2013

WHTM-TV an ABC affiliate in Harrisburg, PA covered the Shippensburg University dorm dedication and Phase II groundbreaking ceremony.

Watch the video here.

 

The Sentinel| http://www.cumberlink.com
February 1, 2013

http://cumberlink.com/news/local/shippensburg-university-dedicates-new-residence-halls/article_7e3c146a-6cd0-11e2-aea3-0019bb2963f4.html

 

Officials break ground Friday, Feb. 1, on the second phase of Shippensburg University's construction plan for its campus. From left to right, Bill Ruud, president of Shippensburg University; Darrell Miller, president of Shippensburg University Student Services, Inc.; Ethan Goldbach, president of Student Association; Warren Burke, vice president of Development, Campus Apartments; B. Michael Schaul, chair of Shippensburg University Council of Trustees; and Roger Serr, Vice President for Student Affairs at Shippensburg University.

Shippensburg University Friday officially dedicated three new residence halls constructed at a cost of $70 million and also began the next phase of its construction project.

The three new structures — President’s Hall, McLean Hall II and Seavers Hall — are part of a $200 million three-phase project to construct all new residence halls on the campus. The halls house 924 students in semi-suite and full-suite style living as part of a living-learning concept, said Pete Gigliotti, the university’s executive director of communications and marketing.

Students moved into the new halls in mid-December.

The first construction phase also includes a state-of-the-art 13,000-square-foot wellness center and a new home for the university’s honors program.

The three-phase project is under the direction and ownership of Shippensburg University Student Services Inc., which partnered with Campus Apartments to design, develop and finance the project.

“Partnering with Campus Apartments enabled us to secure a highly favorable financing arrangement for the project’s first two phases,” said Darrell L. Miller, President of SUSSI. “With this partnership, the university is able to modernize its student residences while still preserving capital for other core academic initiatives.”

The development team also includes architect CUBE 3 Studio, general contractor Fortune-Johnson and consulting engineer Greenman-Pedersen.

Immediately following the ribbon-cutting, a ground-breaking ceremony marked the beginning of the second phase of the project, which, at a cost of about $65 million, includes demolition of Kieffer, Lackhove, McCune and Seavers halls, and creation of a new green space for outdoor recreational activities.

“Demolition of McCune started Tuesday, and the others will follow,” Gigliotti said.

Etters Health Center is scheduled for demolition following spring break. It will be relocated in McLean Hall II.

The second phase of construction is expected to be completed by 2014, and the final phase, which includes demolition of remaining residence halls and construction of new halls, should be finished in 2015.

When completed, the new halls will provide housing for about 2,975 students.

“The completion of the first phase of this project brings the university one step closer to reaching our goal of providing top-quality housing to all of our students,” Shippensburg University President Bill Ruud said. “The living, social and study spaces of phase one will foster a living-learning environment for students, and we look forward to expanding these amenities through the second phase of this milestone project.”

Participating in the ceremonies were Ruud; Miller; B. Michael Schaul, university council of trustees chair; Darrell Miller, SUSSI president; Warren Burke, vice president of development for Campus Apartments; Roger Serr, university vice president of student affairs; and Ethan Goldbach, Student Association president.

 

DDC Journal | Summer 2012

Shippensburg University

http://viewer.zmags.com/publication/bd0e94aa#/bd0e94aa/74

Shippensburg University in DDC Journal Summer 2012

Shippensburg University

ShipNewsNow | http://www.shipnewsnow.com
February 29, 2012

http://www.shipnewsnow.com/2012/02/new-su-dorms-to-offer-full-suite-floors

By Morgan Young
Staff writer

New SU dorms to offer full-suite floors

On time: Construction continues at one of the newest dorms Monday at Shippensburg University. Public Opinion/Markell DeLoatch

Construction of several new student residential facilities at Shippensburg University is on schedule, according to university officials.

The university broke ground on the initial phase of the project in November. The three buildings will replace a majority of the on-campus residence halls,

“It’s going well. (The builder) still thinks that they are going to meet the deadline,” said Darrell Miller, SU Student Services Inc. (SUSSI) president, about the first phase of construction. “We had a mild winter and feel confident that we are on target for January 2013.”

“To date, framing is under way on building three. Buildings one and two are projected to start framing over the course of the next two to four weeks as anticipated,” said Warren Burke Jr., vice president of development at Campus Apartments, in an e-mail.

The three-phase, $200 million project is under the direction of the SUSSI, an independent nonprofit that serves the student community, and is one of the largest in the university’s history.

An estimated $70 million is the price tag for the beginning phase, which includes three new residence halls, two on the north side of campus and one on the south. The new buildings will accommodate 924 students.

Semi-suite and full-suite floor plans, study and social lounges and a 13,000-square-foot wellness center are among the features in the north building, with the south side building including a new home for the university’s Honors Program.

“We are beginning our marketing to underclass students, allowing them to sign up for new suites,” Miller said.
Students will be able to move into phase one facilities by the spring 2013 semester.

To finance the first phase, Campus Apartments (which includes architect CUBE 3 Studio, general contractor Fortune-Johnson Inc. and consulting engineer Greenman- Pedersen Inc.) worked with RBC Capital to obtain bond financing totaling approximately $70 million. The buildings will also be paid for with the students’ housing fees.

All eight residence halls and one suite-style facility on campus were built between 1959 and 1976, making their replacement “long overdue,” according to Miller.

After the overall project is completed, expected in the summer of 2015, total capacity for the facilities will be about 2,500, an increase of 260.

“We have signed the Interim Services Agreement for phase two with Campus Apartments to begin working with the architects, CUBE 3 on the design for three more new buildings on the south end of campus with a completion date of August 2014,” Miller said.
——————
Morgan Young can be reached at myoung@publicopinionnews.com and 262-4753, or follow him on Twitter @ShipGirlNews.

 

AZo Building
November 22, 2011
http://www.azobuild.com/news.asp?newsID=14628
By Joel Scanlon

Campus Apartments and Shippensburg University Student Services (SUSSI) have started construction of the first phase of a three-phase development project worth $200-million for upgrading most of the on-campus residences of the Shippensburg University.

The $70-million first phase is scheduled for completion by January 2013, with the completion of the entire project by the summer of 2015. During the first phase, three residential facilities to house 924 students will be constructed, with one facility on the south side of the campus and two other facilities on the north side.

The facilities will feature full- and semi-suite floor plans, social lounges, generous study and multi-use programming areas. The south-side building will have a space for the Honors Program of the Shippensburg University and one of the north-side facilities will feature a sophisticated wellness center measuring 13,000 sq. ft.

SUSSI, an independent not-for-profit organization serving the student community, is the owner of the project. It has collaborated with Campus Apartments to finance, design and construct student housing in order to upgrade the Shippensburg University’s on-campus residences. To fund the first phase of the project, Campus Apartments in partnership with RBC Capital has raised roughly $70 million through bond financing.

The project’s consulting engineer is Greenman-Pedersen and its general contractor is Fortune-Johnson. CUBE 3 Studio is the architect of the project.

Source: http://www.campusapts.com

The Shippensburg News-Chronicle
New plans will change campus landscape

http://www.shipnc.com/articles/2011/11/21/news/doc4ecab4b921a6b218424727.txt

By TRISHA GRACE
Staff Writer
Published: Monday, November 21, 2011 3:57 PM EST

On a blustery Friday afternoon, representatives from Shippensburg University and Campus Apartments gathered to break ground on the first phase of a project that will upgrade the university’s on-campus housing.

“I am confident that our new live-learn facilities will appeal to the needs of our students and ensure that the University exceeds expectations for decades to come,” said President Bill Ruud. “The project may be the largest single growth at the University.”

The three-phase project, estimated to cost $200 million, is slated for completion by Summer 2015.

“It is the biggest investment the University has ever seen,” said B. Michael Schaul, Chair, Council of Trustees. “It is all about those that came before and those to come after us.”

For over two years, Shippensburg University Student Services, Inc. (SUSSI), a non-profit organization that serves as the voice for the student community, has worked with Campus Apartments to design, develop and finance the project to improve the quality of on-campus housing at the university.

According to Dan Bernstein, Executive Vice President and Chief Investment Officer of Campus Apartments, the updated student housing will transform the University’s landscape.

“It is not often that we get to work on such a transformative project,” he said.

Bernstein described Shippensburg University as the “most organized, disciplined and committed partner we have ever worked with.”

The first phase, a $70 million project, will build three facilities, accommodate 924 student residents and include multipurpose programming areas, wellness center and a new home for the University’s Honors Program. It is slated to open in January 2013.

The need for improved on-campus housing came from survey responses of prospective students and parents. According to Roger Serr, Vice President of Student Affairs, modern and up-to-date housing played an important role in determining whether or not students decide to attend a particular university.

“This puts us on another level,” said Darrell Miller, SUSSI President. “It continues the University’s tradition of excellence…and drive to serve students in any way.”

Comfort Dixon, Student Association President, said, the project “shows the University’s depth of care for the wellbeing of students.”

In sum, the project will allow the University to better “serve students in the curricular and co-curricular realm,” said Serr.

“It is for, of and about students,” said Ruud.

Citybizlist

http://phillyrealestate.citybizlist.com/2/2011/11/21/Shippensburg-University-Breaks-Ground-on-200M-Project.aspx
November 20, 2011

SHIPPENSBURG, Pa. – Construction has begun on a $200 milliondevelopment project at Shippensburg University, the largest on-campus undertaking in its history. The $70 million first phase will be completed by January 2013 and the balance by summer 2015.

Campus Apartments LLC and Shippensburg University Student Services Inc, a non-profit organization, are partnering on the development. The non-profit is the owner and the Philadelphia-based Campus Apartments is tasked with the design, development and finance.

The first phase will add 924 beds in two buildings on the north side of campus and one on the south side. One of the north side buildings will house a 13,000-square-foot wellness center while the south side addition will host the university’s honors program office. The unit designs are semi suites and full suites, with multipurpose programming areas as well as study and social lounges.

Campus Apartments worked with RBC Capital to close bond financing for the first phase.

“Through our partnership with Campus Apartments we were able to secure a highly favorable financing arrangement,” saidDarrell L. Miller, president of the student services’ non-profit.

Cube 3 Studio is the project architect, with Fortune-Johnson Inc. as general contractor, and Greenman-Pedersen Inc. as the consulting engineer.

The project is being touted as transformational for the university, founded in 1871. About 8,300 undergraduate and graduate students are enrolled at the regional state-owned university.

Central Penn Business Journal
November 18, 2011

http://www.centralpennbusiness.com/article/20111118/CPBJ01/111119810/Shippensburg-U-to-begin-$200M-housing-project

By Holly White

Shippensburg University today will break ground for the first phase of a $200 million campus housing project, according to a news release.

The construction will be the largest development project in the Shippensburg Township school’s history, according to the release.

The project partners are Shippensburg University Student Services Inc., an independent organization for the college’s students; and Philadelphia-based Campus Apartments, a college housing management company.

Phase 1 includes three buildings with 924 beds, a wellness center, multi-purpose rooms and space for the university’s honors program, the school said. The first building will be 104,694 square feet, the second 85,765 square feet and the third 115,977 square feet.

When the project is complete, it will accommodate 2,700 residents at the Cumberland County school, spokeswoman Kelsey Ruane said in an email.

The architect for the project is Massachusetts-based Cube 3 Studio and the general contractor is Fortune-Johnson Inc. in Atlanta. The school is using consulting engineering firm Greenman-Pedersen Inc. in New York.