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Housing

 

Husky Village House Manager Training
Fall 2007

UConn Husky Village

Consistent with providing world-class residential living options for students, the University of Connecticut built and manages housing for fraternities and sororities. Construction began in the summer of 2002 and 13 chapters assumed residency in the fall of 2003. Currently, seven fraternities and six sororities are housed in Husky Village near the north entrance of campus.

The houses are built in a beautiful townhouse style, with eight of the units holding 30 people each and the other four units holding 15 people each. Each house has a full kitchen, chapter office, common living room, central air, and a spiraling front staircase that leads up to two more floors of bedrooms and baths. Each chapter has decorated their housing unit to provide a unique and personalized décor. The lit volleyball and basketball courts provide for numerous hours of community recreational enjoyment.

Fraternity Residents

  • Alpha Epsilon Pi
  • Beta Theta Pi
  • Delta Chi
  • Kappa Sigma
  • Lambda Chi Alpha
  • Sigma Chi
  • Tau Kappa Epsilon

Sorority Residents

  • Alpha Phi
  • Delta Gamma
  • Delta Zeta
  • Kappa Alpha Theta
  • Kappa Kappa Gamma
  • Pi Beta Phi
 

Husky Village Housing Assessment

 

Husky Village House Manager Forms

 

Housing Corporation Alums


Contact: Todd.C.Sullivan@uconn.edu

Husky Village Housing Meeting Minutes

Early Move-In Information


Husky Village Map


Click to enlarge

Facts about Housing

  • Nationally, fraternities & sororities own and manage $3 billion in student housing and are the largest Not-for-Profit Student Landlord. (North-American Interfraternity Conference, www.nicindy.org)
  • Across the United States and Canada, fraternities and sororities house 250,000 students in 8,000 facilities. (North-American Interfraternity Conference, www.nicindy.org)
  • At UConn, 7 fraternities and 6 sororities live in Husky Village.
  • Two fraternities own and operate their own facilities off campus.
  • Fraternities and sororities have occupied University leased housing since 1979.
  • Husky Village is the first University housing that was specifically designed for fraternities and sororities.
  • In 2003, the University dedicated approximately $12.4 million for the construction of the Husky Village.

Sigma Alpha Epsilon House


Delta Zeta house in Husky Village