UHV
to pursue purchasing hotel for student housing
The University of Houston-Victoria is a step closer to having a residence hall
where the university’s first freshmen and sophomores will eat, sleep, study and
socialize in the fall.
The University of Houston System Board of Regents gave UHV the go-ahead to
proceed with purchasing and renovating the Inn Place Hotel into UHV’s new
"Jaguar Hall” at a special called board meeting on Wednesday. The action is
pending approval from the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board, which next
meets on Dec. 15.
"This is another important benchmark on our road to becoming a destination
university,” UHV President Tim Hudson said. "We’ve already received more than
100 applications since we started taking them on Nov. 16. These students and
new citizens will now have a fine place to live.”
After Coordinating Board approval, UHV administrators hope that the purchase of
the former Holiday Inn, located at 2705 Houston Highway, will take place Dec.
18. It is expected to cost $9 million to purchase the building and make the
needed repairs, furniture purchases and renovations to prepare it for students.
Jaguar Hall will feature double-occupancy rooms each with their own bathroom
and Internet and cable access. UHV administrators are looking at the possibility
of providing a television, microwave and small refrigerator in each room. The
residential hall also will house a welcome and information center, academic
tutoring and advising, a computer lab with technical support, group and
individual study areas, and social and networking opportunities. A fitness
facility, 400-seat ballroom, indoor and outdoor swimming pools and full dining
services also may be available.
"This will be a topnotch facility that will give our new students a safe and
secure environment where they can live and build a supportive campus
community,” said Wayne Beran, UHV vice president for administration and
finance.
Although UHV administrators
considered housing students in apartments, renovation of the hotel was a better
choice because studies have shown that students living in campus housing feel
more involved with their university and graduate at a higher rate, Beran said.
Jaguar Hall also is located less than a half-mile from the UHV campus and is
only a 10-minute walk, making it convenient for underclassmen who may not have
cars.
In addition, apartment occupancy
rates are 90 percent in Victoria, making it difficult to find housing, Beran
said. Apartment availability is expected to be further limited when
construction workers start moving to Victoria in July to build a second unit at
Coleto Creek Power Plant.
Jaguar Hall renovations and repairs
are expected to start in February on Building A, the east building on the site,
in order to be completed by August when the university’s FIRST 200
underclassmen start classes. Building A can house a maximum of 250 students
living in 125 double-occupancy rooms. The extensive renovation process will put
more than $5 million into the local economy, Beran said.
The second stage of renovation and
repairs will be from March to December in Building B, the west building on the
site. It will be ready in the spring semester of 2011 and can house 166
students in double-occupancy rooms.
"This renovation will help the
local economy and will transform this struggling property into a bustling
residence hall with young people who will spend money in Victoria and become
our future leaders,” said Randy Vivian, president of the Victoria Chamber of
Commerce.
Renderings of what Jaguar Hall will
look like, including individual dorm rooms, will be posted on the UHV Web site
this spring so that potential students can get a better idea of what will be
available to them in the fall.
Students also will have a choice of
meal plans to purchase while living at Jaguar Hall, Beran said. The cost is
being worked out because both dining and residential housing operations will be
outsourced to companies with experience working on college campuses. The number
of employees these companies will need has not been determined, but UHV also
will be hiring additional staff, Hudson said.
The new students will have the
benefit of living in the same location as part of UHV’s Student Success and
Enrollment Management offices, which will transition to Jaguar Hall from the main
campus. SSEM employees provide services such as financial aid and academic and
career services to help students succeed in college.
"We want these students to be
successful, and this will free up some space on our campus to make way for the
new faculty members we’re hiring to teach these students,” Hudson said.
Incoming underclassmen will
pay $4,000 to live in Jaguar Hall for the academic year or about $8,200 for
residential housing plus 24 credit hours of tuition. Meals, books and
incidentals will be an additional cost. This cost structure is one of the
lowest at Texas public universities, according to UHV research.
"These students have the chance to
make history as our first freshmen and sophomores at UHV,” Hudson said. "I
can’t wait for them to come to campus, see all we have to offer and be part of
this wonderful community.”
Interested students can apply
online at www.uhv.edu. Applicants with
questions can contact Denee Thomas, director of Letting Education Achieve
Dreams (LEAD) and Student Recruitment at 361-570-4149, toll free at
877-970-4848, ext. 149, or by e-mail at recruitment@uhv.edu.
# # #
UHV Highlights
The University of Houston-Victoria has achieved numerous milestones during the
past several years. These include:
Adding underclassmen – On June 19, Texas Gov. Rick Perry signed House
Bill 1056, paving the way for UHV to add its FIRST 200 freshmen and sophomores
in the fall of 2010. UHV announced shortly after that it would be offering the
first three-year bachelor’s degree at a Texas public university beginning in
the fall. Gov. Perry visited UHV on Aug. 6 for a ceremonial signing of HB 1056.
UHV received its first freshman application for admission on Nov. 17.
Starting the School of Nursing – After surveying area healthcare
agencies and nurses and determining there was a need for an advanced nursing
program, UHV started one in the fall of 2006 and began offering a Registered
Nurse to Bachelor of Science in Nursing degree. In December of 2007, the Texas
Higher Education Coordinating Board approved a proposal to create an official
School of Nursing, which allowed the university to begin offering other nursing
programs. The school now offers both bachelor’s and master’s degrees in
Victoria, Sugar Land and Katy. In October, the Commission on Collegiate Nursing
Education fully accredited the school’s undergraduate and graduate programs for
the next five years.
Creating a haven for the humanities – The American Book Review literary
publication moved its editorial operations to UHV in 2006 and its layout and
production in 2007. The Society for Critical Exchange, a scholarly society
devoted to theory, found a home at UHV in 2008, along with the independent,
alternative press Fiction Collective Two. Cuneiform Press, a fine arts press,
joined UHV’s growing number of literary organizations and publications in the
fall of 2009. The first master’s degree in publishing offered in the South also
was added in the fall.
Increasing enrollment – Student enrollment increased significantly
during the last five years. In fact, UHV’s growth rate of 15 percent from fall
of 2008 to fall of 2009 was the highest of any school in Texas, according to
preliminary enrollment figures provided by the Texas Higher Education
Coordinating Board. The university grew from 2,491 students in the fall of 2005
to 3,655 students in the fall of 2009. That’s an increase of 47 percent.
Becoming a nationally ranked business school – The Princeton Review,
Entrepreneur Magazine, Fortune Small Business Magazine and GetEducated.com all
have rated the School of Business Administration as outstanding. The school
recently was named the No. 1 Greatest Opportunity for Minority Students in The
Princeton Review’s 2010 edition of "The Best 301 Business Schools.” In 2009,
The Princeton Review rated the school No. 10 on its Most Family Friendly list,
and GetEducated.com rated the school’s Bachelor of Business Administration as
the No. 7 Online Bachelor’s Degree in Business Best Buy. The Global MBA and the
Strategic MBA were ranked in 2009 by GetEducated.com as the No. 2 and No. 11
Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business-accredited Distance MBA
Best Buys, respectively. In addition, Fortune Small Business Magazine rated the
school one of the top-five Best Online Entrepreneurial Schools in 2007.
Starting an athletics program – UHV started an athletics program in 2007
and fielded baseball and softball teams its first year. The Jaguars
strongly compete in the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics. Both
teams won their respective Association of Independent Institutions championships
in 2009 and produced All-American athletes. The athletics program will expand
in the fall of 2010 with the addition of men’s and women’s golf and soccer.
Growing donations – Generous donors continued to give significantly to
UHV each year. Faculty, staff, community members, organizations and alumni gave
$769,252 to UHV in fiscal year 2009. This was up 38 percent, from the $558,109
given in fiscal year 2005.
Adding the first endowed professorships – The M.G. and Lillie A. Johnson
Foundation established UHV’s first endowed professorship in 2005. The Johnson
Foundation Endowed Professorship in Nursing is held by a faculty member in the
School of Nursing. Award-winning journalist Macarena Hernández was announced on
June 25 as the first Victoria Advocate Endowed Professor of the Humanities.
Increasing research – Research and sponsored program funding has more
than doubled at UHV from $669,211 in fiscal year 2006 to $2.3 million in fiscal
year 2009.
Working with China – The university established agreements with several
Chinese universities in 2008 to allow their students to take business classes
at UHV. Chinese graduate students and professors took classes last school year
at the University of Houston System at Sugar Land and UHS at Cinco Ranch, where
UHV offers programs. Six Chinese students are taking graduate computer science
classes in Victoria this school year.
# # #
The University of
Houston-Victoria, located in the heart of the Coastal Bend region, is an
upper-level institution that offers approximately 50 bachelor's and master's
degree programs and concentrations in the schools of Arts & Sciences,
Business Administration, Education & Human Development, and Nursing.
Legislation signed into law on June 19, 2009, will allow UHV to admit
underclassmen in the fall of 2010. UHV also offers face-to-face classes
at two University of Houston teaching centers in Fort Bend County, in addition
to its home campus in Victoria, and online classes that students can take from
anywhere. Since its founding in 1973, UHV has provided students with a quality
university education from world-class faculty at an exceptional value.