The first of the Gen Z students are now freshman and sophomores in college. Soon, they will replace Millennials on campus completely. When it comes to Gen Z, no website, brochure, or campus tour can compete with the power of social media; they have never known a world without it—it’s where they live, learn, promote, slam, etc.
When it comes to the design and space planning of your residence life program, the quality of the space you create will be reflected—good or bad—in the social media feeds of your students. Gen Zs may show up for a campus tour, but their opinion will be shaped by searching the #nameofyourhall to see what their digital peers are saying about it. Inspiring positive posts starts with creating positive spaces for these students to Gather, Bond, Play, Rejuvenate, and simply, Be. It starts with providing spaces that enhance the college experience and empower your students’ personal growth and success.
Sharing IRL/In Real Life (Bond/Be)
Private space for Gen Z often fits within the dimensions of whatever screen they’re using. Even within social groups, this generation will retreat into their phones for a little private down time before rejoining the conversation going on around them. Social media for them is both public (in the way it amplifies their ideas and connects them to peers) and intensely private (every parent of a teen has experienced the way the phone gets turned down or the laptop lid quickly closed when we walk into a teen’s space). Zs may be having an intensely personal text conversation in the most public of spaces; they’re blurring the lines of what happens in public/private.
Video (Gather/Be/Play)
When Zs want to learn how to do something (make slime, write cover letters, create Insta Stories, or use Excel), they turn to video platforms like YouTube or Twitch. If designed correctly, space can accommodate video for group activity (gaming vs. ‘the big game’); group learning (beaming in a subject matter expert for a small group session or watching past lectures) and quiet, focused learning. Designers and Residence Life Programmers need to recognize this key difference between Millennials and Gen Z and start incorporating spaces to support these activities.
Entrepreneurial spirit (Bond/Play)
What if the prior generations’ tech leaders didn’t have to leave their universities to create their start-ups? Colleges and universities should consider providing spaces that empower students to play with their ideas, taking them from inspiration to prototype to digital marketplace quickly. Gen Zs (and ahem, their Gen X parents) have watched the cost of college continue to rise. Luxury amenities in new and renovated residence halls do not resonate with Zs or their parents, but given Z’s entrepreneurial spirit, a makerspace will (incubator spaces or pop-up business spaces might as well). Well-designed student housing can provide Gen Z with space for both living and launching.
Smart Sleep (Rejuvenate/Be)
While Gen Zs are clocking more zzz’s than previous generations they are also facing a growing burnout epidemic across industries. Space must address their needs to tune-out and turn-off. Sleeping rooms must be designed to foster a quiet place to promote relaxation and sleep. This could be as simple as blackout shades or as complex as increased noise insulation and higher NRC windows on urban campuses. These elements must be considered and custom-tailored to your university’s unique situation.
Conclusion
Just when you thought you had Millennials figured out, Gen Z shows up on your campus. Are you monitoring hashtags related to your university and residence halls? Does your next student tour have a potential social media influencer on it? It would be a mistake to consider the physical space of your residence life program as mere backdrop for selfie scrolling Gen Zs. Updating those 70s era halls requires more than surface polish—it requires understanding Gen Z’s unique preferences, expectations, and ways of communicating. The impact is great and long lasting: the real-life connections forged in your campus housing will become the digital connections that last a lifetime. Providing space for students to Gather, Bond, Play, Be, and Rejuvenate empowers them to positively connect their peers IRL and online.
Related Stories
| Aug 11, 2010
CityCenter Takes Experience Design To New Heights
It's early June, in Las Vegas, which means it's very hot, and I am coming to the end of a hardhat tour of the $9.2 billion CityCenter development, a tour that began in the air-conditioned comfort of the project's immense sales center just off the famed Las Vegas Strip and ended on a rooftop overlooking the largest privately funded development in the U.
| Aug 11, 2010
Giants 300 Multifamily Report
Multifamily housing starts dropped to 100,000 in April—the lowest level in several decades—due to still-worsening conditions in the apartment market. Nonetheless, the April total is below trend, so starts will move progressively back to a still-depressed 150,000-unit pace by late next year.
| Aug 11, 2010
The softer side of Sears
Built in 1928 as a shining Art Deco beacon for the upper Midwest, the Sears building in Minneapolis—with its 16-story central tower, department store, catalog center, and warehouse—served customers throughout the Twin Cities area for more than 65 years. But as nearby neighborhoods deteriorated and the catalog operation was shut down, by 1994 the once-grand structure was reduced to ...
| Aug 11, 2010
Gold Award: Westin Book Cadillac Hotel & Condominiums Detroit, Mich.
“From eyesore to icon.” That's how Reconstruction Awards judge K. Nam Shiu so concisely described the restoration effort that turned the decimated Book Cadillac Hotel into a modern hotel and condo development. The tallest hotel in the world when it opened in 1924, the 32-story Renaissance Revival structure was revered as a jewel in the then-bustling Motor City.