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Duke’s Hollows Quad residence halls provide housing for 700 upperclassmen

University Buildings

Duke’s Hollows Quad residence halls provide housing for 700 upperclassmen

William Rawn Architects designed the project.


By David Malone, Associate Editor | October 10, 2019
Exterior of Hollows Quad

Photos: Jonathan Black

Hollows Quad residence halls, two adjacent buildings of six and seven stories connected by a portal, have completed construction (courtesy of Skanska) on Duke University’s West Campus in Durham, N.C. The dormitories offer suite-style accommodations for 703 students.

The $91 million project features 147 suites organized into 18 smaller groupings of 30 to 60 beds called houses. Each house includes multiple one- to five-bedroom suites. The suites are all equipped with one or two bathrooms, a living room, and a kitchenette. There are single and double room options and some of the rooms are accessible in compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, with space for a student’s attendant.

 

See Also: Temple University’s Charles Library includes a ‘BookBot’ storage and retrieval system

 

Both buildings also feature common lounges with full kitchens, dedicates study rooms, lights with vacancy sensors, windows coated with a clear film to reduce heat, and climate controlled elevator shafts to avoid temperature loss.

 

Hollows Quad lounge space

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