UCI students graduate into better homes
Alicia Robinson
The apartments in a new campus housing development feature views of
the San Joaquin Hills, cable and Internet hookups in the bedrooms,
and a highly precious commodity -- closet space.
Even the name, Palo Verde, sounds a little like a high-priced
condo project, but the apartments are part of a graduate student
housing community that nearly doubled in size when six new buildings
opened this fall. After a second phase of expansion is finished in
mid-2005, Palo Verde will include 652 apartments.
UC Irvine officials put in the development to address current
demand as well as to plan ahead, Palo Verde housing director Gerald
Parham said.
Graduate students may wait up to 18 months to get an apartment on
campus. With about 4,300 gradate students in a student body of
24,000, UCI is the fourth-largest campus of the nine in the UC
system.
The university spent about $78 million on the Palo Verde project,
but the rental costs there are moderate compared to housing elsewhere
in Orange County, Parham said.
Rents run from $685 for a studio in the older part of the
development to $1,650 for a three-bedroom unit in the expansion.
Those prices are about 20% to 30% below the rest of the market for
such large apartments, he said.
“Using it as a recruitment tool right now, I think, is going to
benefit the university, particularly because the cost of living [off
campus] is so extraordinary,” Parham said.
The brownish-orange stucco buildings were designed in a
Spanish-Mediterranean style to look more like private homes than
dorms, said Thomas Lim, a project architect at JBZ Architecture. The
Newport Beach firm designed the Palo Verde expansion.
“I think the demand is there for the more apartment-style housing
units in student housing as far as universities are concerned,” Lim
said. “Upperclassmen kind of demand that type of housing versus a
dorm-style on campus.”
Unlike some upscale apartment complexes, Palo Verde doesn’t have a
swimming pool or recreation center, but amenities like that drive
rents higher, Parham said. But the development does offer students
the convenience of being on campus.
“It’s very quiet, and it’s a little bit higher, so we have a
better view,” said Weichung Wang, 26, who was washing his clothes in
the communal laundry room last week.
A doctoral student in economics from Taiwan, Wang lived in Verano
Place -- the school’s other graduate housing community -- last school
year. Palo Verde is about $200 more expensive, he said, but he likes
being in a brand new building.
He thought about looking for apartments off campus, but he doesn’t
want to commute.
Also, he said, “the community wouldn’t be that good.”
UCI’s on-campus housing will probably remain viable based on the
climbing cost of living in Orange County. While many apartments are
available around Irvine, Costa Mesa and Newport Beach right now,
rents are high and not likely to fall any time soon, said Patrick
Verge, a manager at Westside Rental Connection.
Westside’s website lists one-bedroom apartments starting around
$900 a month in Costa Mesa -- the same price as one-bedroom units in
the Palo Verde expansion -- but most rents were upwards of $1,100 in
Newport-Mesa and Irvine.
The apartment market slows down around the holidays because people
don’t want to move then, Verge said.
“After Jan. 1, [rent] still [will keep] going up,” he said. “I
just don’t see it going down.”
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers business, politics and the environment.
She may be reached at (714) 966-4626.
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