<p>I’m pretty sure the University wouldn’t be sinking this kind of money into such a facility unless they were quite certain, based on careful market research, that there will be demand for it. As my D2 pointed out, a non-trivial number of grad students are coming from foreign countries. For them it’s got to be a daunting task to figure out the Ann Arbor housing market and to find roommates–the only way to make private housing affordable–without ever having set foot in the U.S., much less Ann Arbor. I expect foreign grad students alone will be enough to gobble up most of the relatively small number of places at this facility.</p>
<p>It’s also just flatly not the case that Michigan will be an outlier in providing residence hall housing for graduate students. Michigan already houses some law students in the Law Quad, but Harvard and Yale Law Schools also have similar facilities. Harvard’s Graduate School of Arts and Sciences (GSAS) has a 411-room graduate residence hall for first-year grad students, designed for singles (no family units), which I believe fills up every year. They could probably get a lot of second-year-and-beyond grad students to take those spaces if needed, but there’s apparently enough demand among first-year grad students that they fill most of it with first-years. </p>
<p>[Eligibility</a> for GSAS Housing - The Graduate School of Arts and Sciences](<a href=“http://www.gsas.harvard.edu/current_students/eligibility_for_housing_in_the_gsas_residence_halls.php]Eligibility”>http://www.gsas.harvard.edu/current_students/eligibility_for_housing_in_the_gsas_residence_halls.php)</p>
<p>Yale also has long had residence hall-style graduate student housing:</p>
<p>[All</a> Buildings (Apartments and Dormitories) | Yale Graduate Housing](<a href=“Welcome | Yale Housing”>Welcome | Yale Housing)</p>
<p>And Princeton has long had a graduate student residence hall known as the Graduate College (and known to undergrads a the Goon Castle):</p>
<p>[Graduate</a> College/Annex Residential Living Policies Guide](<a href=“http://www.princeton.edu/us/housing/graduate_info/graduate-collegeannex-res/]Graduate”>http://www.princeton.edu/us/housing/graduate_info/graduate-collegeannex-res/)</p>
<p>As far as I know, none of these schools has ever had difficulty filling up these graduate residence facilities.</p>
<p>What’s innovative about the Michigan plan is not residence hall housing for grad students, but rather the configuration, with single-occupancy units with private bathrooms conjoined with communal cooking, dining, and living space. As a former grad student, that strikes me as singularly appealing: you’re not just cramped into a dorm room like an undergrad, you’re not relegated to eating dining hall food, you have freedom to prepare your own meals or heat up last night’s leftovers as you please, but the configuration also encourages and practically forces interaction with other grad students, many or most of whom will be from other disciplines. I actually think the concept is quite brilliant, but we’ll see how it works out in practice.</p>