$5 Million Gift for Residential Commons

looks like the long ago announced sophomore living requirement is closer to reality...
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Elisabeth Martin Armstrong and William D. Armstrong of Denver have committed $5 million toward construction of SMU’s residential commons complex, which will have five commons buildings and a dining hall.
In addition to student housing, each commons building will include classrooms, seminar space and faculty accommodations. Each will also include expanded opportunities for learning, informal interactions and mentoring, said Paul Ludden, SMU provost and vice president for academic affairs.
The residential commons model represents a new direction in SMU student housing. The five facilities will enable SMU to implement its new requirement that sophomores, in addition to first-year students, live on campus.
Construction will begin in early 2012 north of Mockingbird Lane near the Dedman Center for Lifetime Sports and Gerald J. Ford Stadium on the main campus. The project, expected to open in fall 2014, will provide housing for 1,250 students. Existing residence halls will be renovated to achieve the residential commons model by 2014.