The structure at 909 E. University Avenue was built in 1905 as a three-story single family home. In 1939, the house was rented by former members of Rochdale Cooperative House, another Ann Arbor cooperative, and opened under the name Congress House. In 1940, Congress House was relocated and the building was renamed the Muriel Lester Cooperative House, after British peace activist
Muriel Lester. Lester Cooperative offered interracial and interfaith women's housing until 1943, when it too was relocated and the building at 909 E. University was sold. During a period of expansive growth beginning in the early 1960s, the Inter-Cooperative Council looked into re-acquiring the building from its owners, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard F. Field. After a lengthy process of negotiations, the house was purchased on May 1, 1967, for a price of $49,500 (approx. $358,000 in 2016 inflation-adjusted dollars) and was opened as the Eugene V. Debs Cooperative House. It originally operated as an all-boys' cooperative house, with two apartment rooms available for married students. By the mid-1970s, this was changed to allow students of any gender, and it remains a mixed-gender house today. Screenwriter and director
Lawrence Kasdan lived at Debs Cooperative in the late 1960s, and his experiences at the co-op served as a basis for the 1983 film
The Big Chill. Many of the characters were based on his housemates, and the ways in which they cook communal meals and share their house echo the culture of Ann Arbor cooperatives. ==Structure==