There isn't much Jordan Gonzalez can do to his front yard to make it more stereotypically student. It has all of the tell-tale trademarks of an Ann Arbor undergraduate rental -- a still-warm grill on the front porch, bikes chained to the fence, overgrown bushes and the red plastic snow shovel practically melting in the summer heat.
But the coup de grace is the large beer pong table stationed prominently out front. It sits above overgrown grass supported by an end table on one side and a desk on the other. The address of the house is painted on top in maize-and-blue to help protect it from theft.
Four people live in the small three-bedroom bungalow on Sylvan Street, about 1.5 miles southeast from the Diag. It's typical for the street that is close to the edge of what many Ann Arborites call the student ghetto. It's a place crammed full of young people studying and partying almost simultaneously, leaving behind a blight of neglected homes surrounded by three-foot tall grass, used plastic beer cups and old wet couches.
In fairness, Gonzales' abode is pretty tame in comparison to the stereotypical Animal House-style student rental. It serves its purpose as a cheap place to live relatively close to campus.
"I just want my own house with my own room and my own kitchen," says Gonzales, a junior at the University of Michigan. "Having my own parking space is nice, too."
Diana Johnston also just wants her own home. The educational consultant lives in a strikingly beautiful Victorian home on a hill that is practically surrounded by fraternity houses. Johnston's home was the type of run-down frat house that would make John Belushi proud before it was restored in recent years.
A tall, dense wall of cedar trees hides a manicured lawn lined with carefully pruned flowerbeds. It also blocks the view of a frat house across the street that has replaced its front yard with Astroturf. Nearby is a frat house with boarded up windows and another where students take bong hits on the front porch.
The behavior of Johnston's neighbors is almost as reliable as seasonal weather. They live it up loudly in the fall, leaving a trail of litter and noise violation tickets before steadily calming down as the academic year progresses. She knows the students are valuable contributors to Ann Arbor's economy and culture, so she tries to work with them. Some years they cooperate. Other years, not so much.
Johnston worries that the living conditions in these grand-yet-battered, old houses are not suitable for the inhabitants or the neighborhood. She fears another fire will consume one of the frat houses, like a blaze that recently destroyed a nearby historic Albert Kahn home.
"They're poorly kept and maintained," Johnston says. "They're truly a mess. There are two sites that I think are a health risk and the university is hands off. … Would I mind if they moved out of this neighborhood, probably not."
Shrinking the student ghetto
That scenario just might play out for some townies living on edge of the student ghetto. More than half a dozen high-rise rentals targeting mostly students are either planned for or under construction in Ann Arbor's downtown.
All of these buildings promise to add thousands of beds to a rental market where 54 percent of the city's residents are renters but only 43 percent live in multi-unit dwellings. Rental vacancy rates for the city typically hover around 3 percent. The prevailing conventional wisdom is this flood of new housing will cause the student ghetto to do something it hasn't done in decades – contract.
Student housing has progressively sprawled away from the campus, gobbling up single-family homes occupied by families for as long as anyone can remember. Those homes either become year-long boarding houses for the 18-22 crowd or are torn down to make way for bland apartment buildings. Most of those buildings receive lots of tenant turnover, even more wear and tear and little improvement.
Margaret Dewar is also surrounded by the type of student housing that habitually drives townies crazy. The U-M professor of urban and regional planning is hopeful that projects like 601 Forest (formerly University Village) with its 1,100 beds in 342 units in a 26-story tower at South University and Forest streets will shrink the student ghetto while improving housing conditions and neighborhood aesthetics.
"In general that housing is not very well maintained," Dewar says. "The students tell me those types of substandard living conditions aren't a pleasant way to live."
High-rise rental units could very well spell the end of that type of housing thanks to the basic principals of supply and demand, or so thinks Jeff Helminski.
Helminski is the man behind The Madison development, a 14-story high-rise proposed just south of downtown overlooking Madison Street and Fingerle Lumber Co. Although he is targeting young professionals for The Madison's 161 apartments, it's still only a few steps from U-M's Central Campus. Helminski can easily see some students (mostly graduate-level) taking up residence there.
He points out building all of the proposed high-rises could create an apartment commodity. That glut would be magnified in the thousands of units aimed at students with wealthy parents that plan to charge upwards of $1,000 a bed.
"How deep is that market?" Helminski says. "I don't know but I am going to guess that 601 Forest won't tap it out. But at some point there is an equilibrium point. The thing is you don’t know where that is until you hit it."
Once it's reached prices will fall, making luxury high-rise living accessible to more students. Many of them in theory would choose to live closer to campus if the price is competitive. That could cause more of the student-housing slumlords to make decisions they haven't had to make before: find new clientele or sell.
"The value of those old homes goes down and they will have to start putting money into them, which nobody has had to do for 20 years," Helminski says, adding such a situation is a recipe for some of those homes to revert back to single-family houses.
Changes in scenery
Many townies would cheer such a contraction of student housing but such a scenario doesn't come without costs. Many decry the city's changing skyline. They say it takes away from Ann Arbor's small, college-town charm and disrupts its neighborhoods.
Ray Detter, a downtown-area Ann Arbor resident for nearly 50 years, has voiced such opinions. The chair of the city's Downtown Area Citizens Advisory Council points out that there is such a thing as psychology of place and Ann Arbor has one of the most desirable around.
"Ann Arbor has a very unique identity and people want to be a part of it," Detter says. "That's very important."
The fear is that the city's beloved identity is susceptible to change from something as simple as an evolving skyline. It's a fair point. Detter argues that people enjoy places like Kerrytown or the Old West Side because of their unique character. Plunking a high-rise down in the middle of those areas or tearing down historic buildings like the old Anberay Apartments to create Zaragon Place Lofts diminish such perceptions. Many people voiced similar concerns about the initial designs for 601 Forest, which is up for City Council approval soon, because it bumped up next to traditional historic neighborhoods.
However, Detter doesn't see a problem with such things as long as they are near other groups of high-rises and are aesthetically pleasing. He points out that the high-rise kitty corner from 601 Forest is an example of an ugly building that is just out of place. But if 601 Forest is done right he can see it mitigating that building's blunt impact on the area.
"Height is an issue," Detter says. "We're all concerned about it no matter the impact. I'm not disturbed about height as long as it doesn't negatively impact the neighborhoods. They (high-rises) shouldn't be shutting out people's light or creating wind tunnels."
Pros of living it up
The positives to these types of developments hold great promise, especially in a progressive, environmentally conscious city like Ann Arbor that values its downtown.
First off, these buildings will significantly increase the tax base on small parcels without demanding a dramatic increase in services. For instance, building the 342 rental units in 601 Forest in single-family houses would require dozens of acres of cornfields with miles of new sewer pipes, sidewalks and utility lines. The 601 Forest project is building that density on a few city lots utilizing existing infrastructure.
High-rise buildings also help to create density downtown. All of those feet on the sidewalks drive up the demand for more businesses, such as grocery stores and retail outlets. That type of activity also makes for a more vibrant urban area that attracts young people, something Michigan's cities have not particularly excelled at in recent decades.
"A lot of it goes back to the idea that our state needs to do more to attract and retain young professionals," Helminski says. "That market is terribly underserved. … If you don't want sprawl you need cities that are desirable for people to live in."
And then there are the environmental considerations. Most of these buildings are promising to be greener than Kermit the Frog when it comes to environmental awareness and LEED ratings.
These buildings are also much more efficient when it comes to utilizing and sharing resources compared to the older housing stock of student rentals. The high-rises allow more people to live a car-less, or practically car-free lifestyle. They also provide an alternative for luxury living that isn’t named McMansion.
All of this will play a critical part in Tree Town's evolution if it happens. But if done right, won't it be the type of change that notoriously progressive Ann Arborites would want anyways?
"Change is inevitable," Dewar says. "We have a choice between sprawl, destroying natural areas and increasing the amount people drive and pollute. Or we could have people live centrally and prevent a lot of that."
Jon Zemke is the New Editor for Concentrate and Metromode. He is also a former longtime Ann Arbor resident who misses the old Tree Town of his youth but is amazed at how quickly the city is growing up.
Photos:
One of the few existing high-rises in Ann Arbor-Tower Plaza
Jordan Gonzalez sits on his porch on Sylvan Street-Ann Arbor
The ever present beer pong table overlooks Sylvan Street-Ann Arbor
Margaret Dewar-Urban Planning Professor at U-M-(Photo Courtesy U-M)
Jeff Helminski-Developer of The Madison-Ann Arbor
Building up in Ann Arbor
The original South University high-rise-Ann Arbor
All Photos by Dave Lewinski
Dave Lewinski is Concentrate's Managing Photographer. He also shoots for Hour Detroit Magazine and Ambassador Magazine. He got a new camera this week.