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UBC's South Campus

A residential neighborhood is springing up in the heart of the UBC campus
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A residential neighborhood is springing up in the heart of the UBC campus

IF YOU HAVEN’T toured the UBC campus lately, you may want to take a map; its 1,000 acres have undergone massive changes in recent years. Indeed, the rapid emergence of “U-Town”—a collection of eight distinct villages that will more than double the campus population—has raised the hackles of conservationists who don’t want trees felled for condos. But how else, mid recession, does an administration pay for the 17 new academic buildings also springing up? Trek south down Wesbrook Mall, past Keats Hall, Chaucer Hall, and Panhellenic House until you hit the phalanx of billboards advertising shingle-and-brick complexes. Like most suburban developments, Wesbrook (the largest U-Town hood) feels sweetly manicured but a little lonely. Eventually, more than 5,000 residents (in 2,500 units) will live in this village. By 2030, when all eight villages are completed, more than 25,000 people will call the campus home.

 

 

YOU ARE HERE 

THE BUYERS | Bayan & Roya Bennett | Students  

Siblings Bayan, 21, and Roya, 18, grew up in Qatar, Thailand, Venezuela, and Canada. The nomads have alighted at UBC to continue their post-secondary education—Bayan, his third year of biomedical engineering; Roya, her second year of an arts degree. Uninterested in cramped (mono-sex) student residences, they opted for a condo in the campus’s new village.

THE REALTOR | Jessica Smith of RE/MAX Crest Realty Westside.

 

THE SEARCH

The Bennetts looked at 10 other places around town, including a spot kitty-corner to the fraternity houses, before settling on an 856-square-foot condo in the Pacific Spirit development.

 
 
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