France In
France, student accommodation is provided by the state in "university residences" managed by the
centres régional des œuvres universitaires et scolaires (regional centres for university and school works) for holders of government scholarships. For other students, accommodation is provided through private "student residences" or through private rental. In Paris, the
Cité Internationale Universitaire de Paris provides accommodation for around 6,000 postgraduate students from around the world.
Germany In Germany, student accommodation is called
Studentenwohnheim (plural:
Studentenwohnheime). Many of these are run by
Studentenwerke (student services organisations), which have around 195,000 spaces across the country in over 1,700 halls, or by
Studierendenwerke (students' unions). Some
Studentenwohnheime are run by social organisations or by Catholic or Protestant churches; many of these take students of any denomination or religion. These facilities are sometimes single-sex. At either church or social organisation residences students may be required to participate in service activities. Private halls normally cost more than church or social organisation halls, or students' union halls.
India In India, student accommodation is called "student
hostels". Many colleges and universities have hostels on-campus, but this is frequently insufficient for the number of students enrolled. Most students prefer to stay off-campus in private "paying guest" (PG) accommodation and private hostels as these usually have better amenities and services. For example, in 2015 an estimated 180,000 students enrolled with
Delhi University, there are only about 9,000 beds available in its hostels for both undergraduate and postgraduate students. The university admits an average of 54,000 students every year. This leaves a majority of students having to find accommodation off-campus. This has led to a lot of student hostel or student PG chains being established near Delhi University.
United Kingdom Historical development at
Cardiff University, built in 1895, one of the few remaining single-sex halls of residence in the UK 's 'ziggurats' (1968),
University of East Anglia Until the mid 19th century, students at residential universities in England lived in
colleges, where they rented a set of unfurnished rooms, paid their own servants, and bought their own meals. The first change from this came with the foundation of Bishop Hatfield's Hall (now
Hatfield College) by
David Melville at
Durham University in 1846. This introduced three key concepts: rooms would be let furnished, all meals would be taken communally, and all expenses would be reasonable and fixed in advance, which combined to make the cost of accommodation in the hall much lower than in colleges. Melville also introduced single room study-bedrooms and, in 1849, opened the first purpose-built hall of residence in the country at Hatfield. The 19th century London colleges were originally non-residential.
King's College London established a hall for theological students in a house adjacent to the college in 1847, although this only lasted until 1858.
University Hall was opened in 1849 by a group of mainly
Unitarian Dissenters for students at
University College London. This also struggled until taken over by
Manchester New College in 1881, after which it flourished for a period but was subsequently closed when that college moved to Oxford in 1890.
Bedford College, London, at the time the only women's college in Britain, opened a residence in 1860.
College Hall, London was established in 1882 for women students at University College London (which had become mixed a few years earlier) and the
London School of Medicine for Women. Like the other London halls (with the exception of the Bedford College residence) this was initially private, but was taken over by the
University of London in 1910. The provincial university colleges that became the
redbrick universities were established as non-residential institutions in the 19th century, but later became the universities most closely associated with the development of halls of residence (as distinct from the residential colleges of the older universities).
William Whyte identifies four main drivers for the building of halls of residence in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. These were: firstly, for philanthropic reasons (often linked to religion), such as the Anglican
St Anselm Hall (1872/1907) and the Quaker
Dalton Hall (1881), both at
Owens College (now the
University of Manchester); secondly, to provide safe accommodation for female undergraduates, who it was felt at that time could not live in lodgings; thirdly, to attract students from more distant parts of the country, particularly for university colleges in smaller urban areas such as
Reading,
Exeter and
Leicester; and fourthly, because residential provision was becoming seen as an essential element of university life, allowing for the development of community. A report for the
Committee of Vice Chancellors and Principals in 1948 found that, in 1937–38, the highest percentages of students in colleges and halls of residence (outside of Oxford and Cambridge) were at Exeter (79 per cent), Reading (76 per ent), Southampton (65 per cent), Nottingham (42 per cent), Bristol (36 per cent) and Durham (32 per cent across both Durham and Newcastle divisions); all other universities were below 25 per cent. Funding in the post-war period led to the construction of many new halls, with 67 built between 1944 and 1957. Yet the expansion of higher education in this same period meant that the proportion of students in halls hardly increased: while between 1943 and 1963 the number of students living at home fell from 42 per cent to 20 per cent, the number in private lodgings increased from 33 per cent to 52 per cent, leading to the
Robbins Report identifying a need for "a very great increase in the housing provided by universities". Notable architects involved in designing halls of residence in this period included
Basil Spence, who designed the University of Southampton's
Highfield Campus and the
University of Sussex,
Denys Lasdun's "five minute university" at the
University of East Anglia, including its 'ziggurat' halls of residence, and
James Stirling's
Andrew Melville Hall at the
University of St Andrews, "one of the most significant post-war buildings in Scotland" according to
Historic Environment Scotland.
Current halls of residence , a private hall of residence in
London, England, was the tallest student accommodation building in the world when completed in 2010 Most UK universities provide accommodation in halls for first year students who make a firm acceptance of their offer, although this may not extend to students who enter via
clearing. Halls accommodation most commonly consists of shared flats, but rooms may also be arranged 'dorm-style' along corridors. Rooms may be en suite or there may be a shared bathroom for the flat or corridor. Halls may be catered, part-catered or self-catered. Most universities offer single-sex flats within halls and there are a few halls (such as
Aberdare Hall at
Cardiff University) that are entirely single-sex, but others (such as University College London) offer only mixed accommodation. Most university or college-managed halls of residence are covered by
Universities UK and
Guild HE's accommodation code of practice. , a
University of London hall of residence Private halls of residence, also known as purpose-built student accommodation (PBSA), are available in many university towns and cities. Many are covered by the Accreditation Network UK Code of Standards for Larger Developments, and housing services at some universities (such as the University of London) will only list accredited PBSAs. Many halls are delivered in partnership between educational establishments and private developers, and both codes include the same methodology for defining whether a hall counts as "managed and controlled by an educational establishment", making it a university hall, or is a private hall. Private halls may include facilities such as common rooms, gyms and study spaces. Private halls are often the most expensive accommodation option available in university towns. Some of the companies which have developed such accommodation are based
offshore, which has led to concerns about tax avoidance and evasion of sanctions on Russian owners. In the 2021/22 academic year, 347,680 (16 per cent) of the UK's 2,185,665 students were living in accommodation maintained by their higher education provider (either halls or colleges) and 200,895 (nine per cent) were in private-sector halls. Within London, the
London Plan that was adopted in 2021 specified that PBSAs had to have a minimum of 35 per cent of rooms rented at 55 per cent or less of the maximum student loan for London. However, this has had the effect of making PBSAs not financially viable in more expensive areas of London, so development of new PBSAs has been primarily in outer London. A majority of rooms, including all of the affordable rooms, also had to be linked to a university via a contractual nomination agreement. As this puts financial risks on the institutions, particularly with uncertainties over international student recruitment, this has led to the four richest institutions (
Imperial College London,
King's College London,
London School of Economics and
University College London) dominating the supply of new halls. Analysis of student numbers in London has shown that, as of 2024, 111,000 students are guaranteed a place in halls (including contracted private halls) by their universities but that there were only around 100,000 beds in university halls and private PBSAs. This has led University College London to remove their housing guarantee for incoming students and replace it with a system of priority groups. Studies in Australia, New Zealand and the UK have shown that international students prefer to live in PBSAs while domestic students prefer
houses in multiple occupation, raising concerns that PBSAs drive geographies of exclusion, with international and domestic students becoming segregated.
United States In the early
colonial colleges, residence was often provided for students within the main college building, such as the
Wren Building at the
William & Mary (1705) and
Nassau Hall at
Princeton (1756); these went on to inspire other "
Old Main" buildings, combining academic functions with accommodation. The first primarily residential building was the
Harvard Indian College (1650), which also contained a printing press, while the first exclusively residential building was Stoughton Hall (1698), also at
Harvard. housing 4,400
midshipmen in 1,700 multiple occupancy rooms. Many colleges and universities no longer use the word "dormitory" and staff are now using the term
residence hall (analogous to the United Kingdom "hall of residence") or simply "hall" instead. Outside academia however, the word "dorm" or "dormitory" is commonly used without negative connotations. Indeed, the words are used regularly in the marketplace as well as routinely in advertising. A United States residence hall room that holds two students is usually referred to as a "double". Certain residence halls have communal bathroom facilities, with no toilet facilities in the rooms themselves. In the United States, residence halls are sometimes
segregated by sex, with men living in one group of rooms, and women in another. Some dormitory complexes are single-sex with varying limits on visits by persons of each sex. For example, the
University of Notre Dame in
Indiana has a long history of
parietals, or mixed visiting hours. Most colleges and universities offer coeducational dorms, where either men or women reside on separate floors but in the same building or where both sexes share a floor but with individual rooms being single-
sex. In the early 2000s, dorms that allowed people of opposite sexes to share a room became available in some public universities. Some colleges and university coeducational dormitories also feature coeducational bathrooms. Many newer residence halls offer single rooms as well as private bathrooms, or suite-style rooms. Most residence halls are much closer to campus than comparable private housing such as apartment buildings. This convenience is a major factor in the choice of where to live since living physically closer to classrooms is often preferred, particularly for first-year students who may not be permitted to park vehicles on campus. Universities may therefore provide priority to first-year students when allocating this accommodation.
Hall councils Halls may have student representative organisations, often connected to the
residence life department, known as
hall councils,
area councils (for multiple halls in an area) or
hall governments. At the campus level, there may be a
residence hall association or an
inter-hall council. These organise events and provide advocacy for resident students as opposed to the wider student body. ==See also==