We use 80,000,000,000 aluminum soda cans a year.
This new residence opened its doors to students in August 2025. With 170,000 gross square feet and 272 beds across a mix of unit types, prioritizing private studios, this building is WCM's first all-electric construction and is pursuing Gold LEED certification.
The residence is conceived as a healthy, sustainable academic living environment. It fosters a strong sense of community through shared spaces while maintaining privacy within individual units.
Located at York Avenue and 74th Street, the building sits within a dense residential neighborhood. The design balances a clear institutional presence with sensitivity to its surroundings, engaging York Avenue’s active streetscape while responding to the smaller scale of 74th Street. Strategic massing and setbacks enable visual connections toward the core WCM campus.


Energy Efficinecy:
- A 29% reduction in energy use compared to a typical baseline building was achieved by high-performance glazing, an optimized façade, efficient lighting, and advanced HVAC systems. Smart controls and carefully balanced ventilation improve air quality while minimizing energy waste.
- The building uses high efficiency air cooled heat pump chillers located on the roof. These systems can provide heating, cooling, or both at the same time. Two main loops distribute energy as part of this shared water-based system:
- Residential water loop serves dorm rooms through two pipe valence units.
- Commercial glycol loop supports shared spaces and helps generate domestic hot water.
- The landscape design achieves a 58% reduction in potable water use compared to the baseline through a combination of drought-tolerant and climate-appropriate plant species, limited irrigated area, and high-efficiency irrigation design. This strategy significantly lowers long-term water demand, reduces operational costs, and lessens the burden on municipal water and wastewater infrastructure while supporting responsible water stewardship in a dense urban environment.
- Indoor potable water use is reduced by 38% thanks to ultra-low flow faucets.