College students begin move into Hatfield center’s new $16.5 million apartment complex in South Beach

Shayla Escudero / Lincoln Chronicle Hatfield Marine Science Center resident director Makenzie Morales loads boxes onto a cart this week as she and about 10 others move into Hatfield’s newly constructed apartment complex in the Wilder neighborhood in South Beach.

 

By SHAYLA ESCUDERO/Lincoln Chronicle 

NEWPORT – Makenzie Morales carefully moves boxes out of the trunk of her car as light rain falls in the parking lot. She pushes a cart full of her things through the new apartment building and up the elevator, through the hallway to her room with the other unpacked boxes.

It’s a series of steps Morales has repeated every day the past 1½ weeks as she slowly moved out of Hatfield Marine Science Center’s old housing complex along Yaquina Bay to the new $16.5 million apartment building next to the Wilder neighborhood in South Beach.

In just three years, the number of students at Oregon State University’s center quintupled from 100 to 500 students. When OSU asked to expand its Hatfield campus, it vowed to develop housing for the influx of students, faculty and researchers to help relieve pressure elsewhere in Newport.

Shayla Escudero / Lincoln Chronicle Less than a mile south of the Hatfield Marine Science Center’s campus, the apartment building is three stories tall and built by O’Brien & Lucas Ventures, a partnership of O’Brien Design + Build of Newport/Astoria and Lucas Design-Build of Portland. 

The university is living up  to its promise as OSU and Oregon Coast Community College students and university staff begin moving into the 34,000-square-foot 77-unit building.

Less than a mile from the Hatfield campus, the building at 4030 S.E. Harborton St. is three stories tall with corrugated walls and a wood paneled entrance at its center.

“It’s kind of a mix of modern and natural,” said Sidney Noble, Hatfield’s manager for student and campus services In the two weeks since the apartment opened, about 11 people have moved in – a mix of community college and OSU students.

Inside, the hallways still hold the scent of fresh paint, and everything is new. Each room is fully furnished including dishes, cooking utensils, an oven and a full-size refrigerator. Most of the rooms are studio style with twin bunk beds. The building has a handful of other configurations too – larger deluxe studios, two-bedroom family units, and lofts. Some of the windows show a view of the neighboring forest trail and even the Yaquina Bay bridge.

There are shared spaces too – a lounge with large televisions and long tables for gatherings and a community kitchen.

“It’s nice that we provide that experience for the people that are staying here, especially because right now we have a lot of students who go to the community college and who can have that sense of residential community they maybe wouldn’t normally get from community college,” Noble said.

Shayla Escudero / Lincoln Chronicle Each room is fully furnished including dishes, cooking utensils, an oven and a full-size refrigerator. There are studio style rooms with twin bunk beds, larger deluxe studios, two-bedroom family units, and lofts.

In with the new

Before the new housing development, students, researchers and faculty stayed at the campus’ legacy housing, a series of bunkhouses built in 1972. The bunkhouses were originally intended to be one-bedroom spaces but as the student and staff population grew the rooms often held four students or researchers.

“It’s pretty tight quarters,” said Morales, who is Hatfield’s resident director. Morales lived there as a staff member with their own room and oversaw the other residents.

“It’s kind of like a sleep away camp and I think it has a certain charm, ” Morales said. “I think no matter what you thought going into it most people come out of it with some really great memories they made by the coast and it’s part of the experience.”

Shayla Escudero / Lincoln Chronicle Sidney Noble, left, and Makenzie Morales stand in the lounge, a shared space with televisions, tables and a community kitchen. The space is meant to be similar to a college dormitory experience.

The legacy housing can fit about 80 people and during the busy summer months when Hatfield classes are in full swing, there’s often a waitlist, said Mark Farley, Hatfield’s director of business operations.

Hatfield has expanded in a short time with a marine studies degree which explores the intersection of science and humanities to look at social, cultural and political issues marine systems face. In the three years since adding that degree, Hatfield has grown from 100 students to more than 500 students.

“With new courses there’s new students and new faculty,” Farley said.

Farley

The historic housing wasn’t just used by Hatfield students and staff. Oregon Coast Community College students also have programs that use the Hatfield campus. Its aquarium sciences program teaches students how to work with different species of fish and other sea animals so that they can work in aquariums, fish hatcheries and aquaculture facilities.

The bunk houses also house people from various internship programs and federal and researchers in need of a place to stay in between research expeditions at sea.

At times people  who couldn’t get a space at the campus housing stayed in hotels, at friends’ houses or somewhere in the mid-Willamette Valley.

Shayla Escudero / Lincoln Chronicle Makenzie Morales, left, and Sidney Noble look at the trail connecting OSU’s new housing that will eventually lead to the Wilder neighborhood to encourage a more walkable community.

Initially, draft plans called for a $47 million housing project, but it had to be scaled back, Farley said. The project is being financed with $10 million in OSU-paid bonds and $6.5 million from the Oregon Legislature. The project broke ground last summer as a commitment to provide more housing.

The older housing on the Hatfield campus will still be used for more temporary stays – research crews in between voyages and OSU students fulfilling one credit labs that require a weekend at the coast, Farley said.

Even though the completion of the project is an occasion to celebrate, there’s more that will need to be done to keep up with the growing demand. Soon, officials will have to think of what phase two looks like, Farley said.

“The goal is to get our students off market housing, and we know 150 beds is not enough,” he said.

  • Shayla Escudero covers Lincoln County government, education, Newport, housing and social services for Lincoln Chronicle and can be reached at Shayla@LincolnChronicle.org
Pioneer Connect Premium Wi-Fi Mobile Phone Home Business Lincoln County Oregon Coast
ACE Hardware Walport Oregon Coast
Lincoln City Local Government Working for You We Want Your Feedback Lincoln County Oregon Coast
Oregon State University Hatfield Marine Science Visitor Center Newport Oregon
Sweet homes vacation rentals Help Wanted Oregon coast
Dahl Disposal Better Bark and More Waldport Oregon Coast
Newport Recreation and Aquatic Center Annual Pass Membership Special Newport Parks and Rec Newport Oregon
Lincoln City Cultural Center Turkish Rugs Show and Sale Lincoln County Oregon Coast
Astound WiFi Mobile TV Lincoln County Oregon Coast
Waldport Artist Festival Fall Show Waldport Community Center Hemlock Street Waldport Oregon
Literary Arts The Moth Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall Portland Oregon
Oregon Coast Aquarium Puffin Plate Newport Oregon
Samaritan Health Services Samaritan Orthopedics Program Lincoln County Oregon Coast
David Gomberg State Representative Oregon
Tanner Insurance Devoted Health Plans Medicare Advantage Lincoln County Oregon Coast
Yachats Lions Club Thrift Store Yachats Oregon Coast
Yachats Chamber of Commerce Visit Yachats Oregon Coast
Charlotte Lehto Insurance Agency Medicare Lincoln County Oregon

Obituaries

Civic Calendar