91³Ō¹Ļ

ā€˜Welcome homeā€™: 91³Ō¹Ļā€™s on-campus housing offers more than a place to live

The university expects to add 1,450 more spaces across its three campuses over the next several years
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Harmony Commons, a new, 746-bed student residence at 91³Ō¹Ļ Scarborough, is part of 91³Ō¹Ļā€™s broader plan to meet the growing need for student housing across its three campuses (photo by Don Campbell)

Zupaash Naveed arrived at 91³Ō¹Ļ just a few weeks ago, but she already feels right at home. 

The first-year computer science co-op student is part of the first cohort to live at at 91³Ō¹Ļ Scarborough that opened at the beginning of September. 

The residence is part of 91³Ō¹Ļā€™s broader plan to meet the growing need for student housing across its three campuses, with 1,450 more spaces expected to be added over the next three years.

ā€œItā€™s amazing. Thereā€™s so much more here than I expected,ā€ says Naveed, from Oshawa, Ont. ā€œThe technology is great, the layout is modern and clean, and it gives me the opportunity to be fully immersed among my first-year peers.ā€ 

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Zupaash Naveed is one of more than 10,300 students living in university housing this year across 91³Ō¹Ļā€™s three campuses (photos by Racquel Russell)

Reserved for first-year students, Harmony Commons has doubled the number of residence spaces at 91³Ō¹Ļ Scarborough as part of the universityā€™s broader strategy to provide more housing options for students. It is also one of the largest buildings in North America built to . 

Then there is the food. 

ā€œI love it,ā€ says Naveed, pointing to the breakfast pastries and variety of international cuisines on the menu. She also appreciates the halal options and praises food services staff for being attentive to diverse dietary requirements. ā€œThey really take care of me.ā€ 

Naveed is one of more than 10,300 students living in university housing this year across 91³Ō¹Ļā€™s three campuses. Many are new undergraduate students ā€“ both domestic and international ā€“ who, like Naveed, qualified for the universityā€™s . Spaces are also available for upper-year and graduate students, as well as students with families. 

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Staff and volunteers greet new student residents at Harmony Commons on move-in day (photo by Don Campbell)

ā€œLiving in residence can be a transformational experience for our students, particularly in their first year as they navigate the transition from high school to university,ā€ says Sandy Welsh, vice-provost, students. ā€œBeing far from family and friends, adjusting to the demands of university studies, and, for our international students, adapting to life in a new country can be challenging. 

ā€œOur residences provide a ready community and support system that enhance our studentsā€™ well-being and academic success.ā€ 

Demand for university housing is growing amid rising rents and declining vacancy in the Greater Toronto Area. While surveys suggest more than 55 per cent of 91³Ō¹Ļ students live with family and commute to one of the three campuses, many others, particularly in their upper years, seek off-campus rental options ā€“ with 91³Ō¹Ļ providing resources, education and support ā€“ or on-campus alternatives. 

91³Ō¹Ļ is already a major provider of student housing, with several new buildings under construction. These include on the St. George campus near Spadina and Sussex Avenues that is scheduled to open in 2024, and at Trinity College that is expected to be ready in fall 2025. Two more projects ā€“ one at 91³Ō¹Ļ Mississauga and the other on the St. George campus ā€“ are in development and will provide 600 additional residence spaces.  

ā€œWe are working hard to build more residences faster because we know how important they are to our student experience, and we are engaging with governments around policy changes that will help us do this,ā€ says Scott Mabury, vice-president, operations and real estate partnerships. 

The university receives no government support for student housing. 91³Ō¹Ļ is advocating for new financing or funding mechanisms to help universities respond to studentsā€™ demand for housing, as well as continuing to work with governments at all levels on appropriate zoning frameworks that can lower barriers to adding new spaces.   

ā€œStudents bring a lot of life and business to the neighbourhoods surrounding our three campuses. Building more student residences makes for a better academic experience for them and for more dynamic neighbourhoods in this city,ā€ Mabury said. 

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Minister of Colleges and Universities Jill Dunlop tours Harmony Commons a few days before the residence opened to students (photo by Don Campbell)

For Ana Divarzak, an international student from Brazil, living in residence provided a strong foundation for life at university and in Canada. Now in her third year of a biotechnology specialist and chemistry major, she arrived at 91³Ō¹Ļ Mississauga in 2021 three weeks into the fall term due to visa delays and the then-mandatory 14-day quarantine for travellers entering Canada due to COVID-19. When she finally reached her residence she found a ā€œwelcome homeā€ sign with messages from all her floormates that was taped to the door of her room, surrounded by a rainbow of candy. 

ā€œThe support and welcome I experienced from day one in residence have made a huge difference for me, especially as an international student,ā€ says Divarzak, who now works as a community assistant at 91³Ō¹Ļ Mississauga. In that role, she supports eight residence student staff in , which group together students who share similar interests and areas of study. 

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Ana Divarzak (supplied image)

Divarzak chose to live in the life sciences Living Learning Community in her first year and credits it with enhancing her overall university experience. ā€œIt helped me make friends a lot more easily because we were in the same courses and we saw each other all the time in class, and we also had weekly community gatherings hosted by our residence LLC program facilitators and don that offered opportunities for social interaction and reflection.ā€ 

Back at 91³Ō¹Ļ Scarborough, residence adviser Joshua Cloete says that in addition to acting as a resource for students on his floor, one of his main goals is to build an engaged and supportive community. 

He says he can already see the difference Harmony Commons is making to the first-year experience. 

ā€œIn the past month, Iā€™ve seen more social interactions and bonding and friendships form than in my whole first year,ā€ says Cloete, a second-year paramedicine student. ā€œEveryone on my floor already knows everyone else.ā€ 

UTC