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Housing
Campus Accommodations Office
100 SASB
Phone: (801) 378-2611
Fax: (801) 422-0837
E-mail: housing@byu.edu
Internet: http://www.byu.edu/oncampushousing/
Quality residential living is an important, indeed an integral, part
of the total educational experience at BYU, and students should
carefully consider the accommodations available in view of the
type of living experience they desire, the time they have available
for activities within their housing situation, and their economic
needs. Housing is available on campus and in the surrounding
communities, and programs have been established within campus
residence halls and with off-campus landlords to integrate living
experiences with the total university educational program.
On-Campus Housing
On-campus housing includes room-and-board residence halls and
apartment-style living for men and women, each directed by a
competent resident adult, and family apartments. Assisting the
hall advisor in room-and-board areas and the apartment-style
living are several resident assistantsmature, advanced students
who reside with the student group. Students are known
personally by the staff and have someone available to assist with
normal student problems.
The residence hall program is designed to provide experiences
in self-government, sharing relationships, and other
responsibilities that encourage maturity and independence.
All residents have access to CougarNet, which provides them
with an e-mail address, Internet access, printing capabilities on
campus network printers, file storage, and access to the library
(BYLINE) and registration (AIM) databases.
Residence Halls for Men and Women
Board and room in Helaman Halls and Deseret Towers is
provided for both men and women. Each hall contains student
lounges; study rooms; common shower and restroom areas; and
laundry and storage facilities. Reading and writing labs, as well as
math and computer labs, are also provided in the central
buildings and are staffed by teaching assistants. The central
buildings for each complex feature spacious cafeterias, dining
rooms, reception areas, offices, and mail service for the entire
residence area. Recreational facilities include a swimming pool,
sports courts, and large lawn areas.
Apartment Living for Men and Women
Heritage Halls provides apartment-style housing for both men
and women. Most apartments have a combination kitchen-dining-study
room, three bedrooms (designed for two people
each), and a bath. Each building has a large lobby/living area,
recreation room, laundry, and storage facilities. Apartments are
furnished, except for bedding and kitchen items.
The Heritage Halls Central Building includes a resource center,
staffed with specialists who are available to provide information
and equipment for residents, and a computer lab, staffed by Office
of Information Technology (OIT) teaching assistants.
Residences for Families
Accommodations for 1,324 student families are provided at
Wymount Terrace and Wyview Park. Each apartment is furnished
with an electric or gas range, refrigerator, garbage disposal, and
blinds. A limited assortment of furniture can be rented from the
Student Family Housing Office. Residents have access to sports
courts, childrens playgrounds, large lawn areas, and the Deseret
Towers and Helaman Halls swimming pools.
These apartments do not have washer/dryer hookups, but the
areas have self-service laundry facilities. A dairy products outlet is
located at both Wymount Terrace and Wyview Park. The Housing
Office at Wymount Terrace also has a computer lab available.
Wymount Terrace has 898 one-, two-, or three-bedroom
apartments and is located on the northeast side of campus.
Wyview Park has 426 two- or three-bedroom apartments and is
located northwest of campus on University Avenue.
Foreign Language Student Residence
The College of Humanities sponsors the Foreign Language
Student Residence, located near the Missionary Training Center.
Students pledge to speak only the foreign language in their
apartment while they live and study together under the
supervision of a faculty advisor and a native speaker.
All rooms are double rooms, and male and female students
eat together, with the cost of some meals included in the fees.
For details contact the coordinator of the Foreign
Language Student Residence Program at 1102 JKHB,
flsr_dept@email.byu.edu, or 801-422-3765.
Applications for Campus Housing
Students who plan to enroll at BYU and live in a university
residence hall are advised to contact the Campus
Accommodations Office (100 SASB) about a year in advance. As
soon as the housing agreement is received, students should
complete it, enclose the $50 housing application fee and $100
security deposit, and mail it back. The application fee is
nonrefundable unless the student is not admitted to the university
or campus housing. The security deposit is refundable (1) if the
student is not admitted to the university or campus housing, (2) if
cancellation is received before the deadline shown on the
agreement, or (3) at the end of the agreement if there is no debt
owing the university.
Agreements are processed according to the date they are
received by the Campus Accommodations Office. Students should
be prepared to live by the terms of the agreement once they have
acquainted themselves with its terms, signed it, and returned it to
the Campus Accomodations Office; this will avoid any possible
misunderstanding or financial loss. Agreements are made for the
academic school year.
For student family housing, the completed application must be
returned with a nonrefundable $25 application fee. Placement into
on-campus housing is made according to the date the application
or agreement is received by the Campus Accommodations Office.
Acceptance to the University: Validation of any campus housing
reservation is contingent on the students official acceptance and
admission to the university.
Time of Arrival: Residence halls are not open to students before
the announced opening date, which is usually the day before
Orientation begins. The university does not advise students who
are going to live on campus to arrive before that date.
Off-Campus Housing
2170 WSC
(801) 378-5066
Internet: http://www.byu.edu/offcampushousing
Brigham Young University is committed to creating an
atmosphere conducive to intellectual and spiritual development
for all of its students, including those who live off campus. The
BYU Off-Campus Housing Office was established to assist in this
task by:
- Aiding students in locating off-campus housing.
- Encouraging landlords to maintain and improve rental
facilities.
- Advising and giving counsel to students and landlords in their
relationships with one another.
- Attempting to ensure that BYU living standards are
maintained off campus.
To help achieve these ends, single BYU students are required
to live in university-approved housing (see below). At present,
more than 22,000 rental spaces have been approved by the
university for single students living off campus. For further
information concerning off-campus rentals and BYU regulations,
contact the Off-Campus Housing Office between 8:00 a.m. and
5:00 p.m. Monday through Friday or visit their Web site.
BYU Housing Referral Service
The BYU Off-Campus Housing Office maintains a complete
referral service for all university-approved rental facilities.
Thousands of rental units of all types are available, including
large apartment complexes, condominiums, duplexes, houses,
basement apartments, and sleeping rooms. Some housing for
families is also listed, although student family housing is not
subject to university approval.
Detailed lists of current vacancies are available at the Off-Campus
Housing Office from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through
Friday. Listings are also available at our Web site (listed above). A
guide with housing tips and essential rental data on the large
apartment complexes will be mailed on request and may also be
found at our Web site. Officials are also available to help students
who have problems finding suitable off-campus housing.
University-Approved Housing
All BYU students are required to provide the local address where they
reside (not a post office box) as part of the registration process. Unless
specifically excused by the Off-Campus Housing Office, all single BYU
students are required to live in university-approved housing either on or
off campus. The requirement may be waived by the Off-Campus
Housing Office for the following students:
- Single parents with children.
- Single students living with parents.
- Single students who are in graduate school or 25 years of age
or older.
- Under certain conditions, as determined by the Off-Campus
Housing Office, the university housing requirement may be
waived for other students who have a special circumstance or
hardship.
Hotels, motels, and studio apartments are not approved
housing for single students. A studio apartment is a living unit
that does not provide a separate bedroom but combines the living
and sleeping area.
Students who do not provide their local address or who live in
housing not approved by the university and who are not excused
by the BYU Off-Campus Housing Office are subject to the
following sanctions:
- Future registration may be stopped, current registration may
be discontinued, and activity card privileges may be withheld
until the student verifies that he or she is living in or will be
living in university-approved housing.
- Students falsifying their addresses will be subject to the above
consequences as well as disciplinary action by the university
for Honor Code violations.
When a student has contracted to live in a facility not
approved by the university and has not been excused from the
university housing requirement, these sanctions will be applied
even though the students tenancy extends beyond the current
semester or term in which the student is enrolled. A student in
this situation will have to either move from the unapproved
housing unit, regardless of the consequences, or forego
registration and other privileges at the university until complying
with this policy.
The university approves off-campus living units whose
owners have agreed to:
- Adequately separate single men and women.
- Exercise reasonable efforts to maintain the BYU Residential
Living Standards.
- Maintain the facilities in good repair.
- Not abuse basic tenant rights.
The university cannot guarantee that owners and managers are
employing their best efforts to maintain our standards, that all residents
are complying with BYU standards, or that approved living units always
meet our physical criteria. Thus, students are individually responsible to
carefully choose an acceptable apartment and compatible roommates.
Students should first inform their area management if they suspect that
the standards and the physical criteria are not being maintained.
Students may also contact the BYU Off-Campus Housing Office and/or
the BYU Honor Code Office with concerns.
Because a students living environment has a profound
influence on academic performance and spiritual growth, BYU
promotes an environment in approved off-campus housing
facilities that is consistent with its mission and with the moral
virtues taught by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Specifically, the BYU off-campus housing program sets guidelines
for landlords and students, which, if followed, will cultivate that
desired moral climate. BYU off-campus housing personnel
attempt to rectify any deviations from these standards and policy
guidelines.
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