La Casa Student Housing stands at the corner of 18th Street and Paulina, a six-story building that seems even taller next to the short tiendas and houses nearby. Here, at the edge of Pilsenâs zĂłcalo, across from the old St. Vitusâ Catholic Church, this building supports a carefully formed community.
La Casa is home to about eighty-five students who study at over twenty-five different universities in Chicago, according to Angela Crawford, the projectâs Outreach Representative. La Casaâs diverse student population, in combination with its affordable price and extensive resource center, make this student housing project unique, possibly the only one of its kind in America.
âLa Casa is a community of students from different universities all across Chicago, and all of the students come from different places, come from different types of families, are studying different things and going to different schools, but they all have one goalâto get their first bachelorâs degree,â Crawford said. âAnd thatâs what unites everybody here, and what keeps all these students on the path to graduation.â
La Casa is an extension of The Resurrection Project (TRP), a Pilsen-based organization that promotes community development in Pilsen, Little Village, and Back of The Yards through housing, health, and education programs. The student housing center, which opened in 2012, was conceptualized over ten years ago, Crawford said, when founding members of TRP realized the demand for education resources in the community.
âWe realized that there was a need in Pilsen for students to know how to go to college. Students just didnât know, students werenât going or they were starting and not completing the process,â Crawford said. âSo college knowledge was necessary.â
There was also a need for students to live in an environment that supports their academics. âOne of the founders of the organization was talking to students and said, âWell, whatâs your average day like? Where do you study when you get home from school, how do you study?ââ Crawford remembered. âAnd this studentâs response was âWell, I study in the bathroom at 2am once everybodyâs gone to sleep.ââ
Even in the best of situations, Crawford said, students who lived at home with their families werenât afforded the same opportunities as students in college housing. Particularly, they missed out on the chance to live and work with their peers.
âIt was really the realization that what was happening a generation ago was still happening now,â Crawford explained. âStudents are still commuting to one of the colleges downtown and not necessarily networking and living with people.â
Two years ago, Claudia Martinez, a senior at UIC and resident of La Casa, found herself in just that situation, riding the train for over an hour and a half every morning and evening as she commuted between school and her home in the suburb of Carpentersville. Between her classes and her extracurriculars, the schedule was exhausting. Living in UICâs dorms wasnât an option either, though she had done so for her first two years of college.
âThe one reason I stopped living at the dorms was because it was way too expensive. I found myself having to take out too many loansânot only myself, my parents also had to take out loansâto cover the living expenses on campus,â Martinez explained. âLa Casa was just way more affordable.â
At La Casa, Martinez gets her room for free, in exchange for her work as TRPâs Marketing Intern. The established rate is just under $700 a month for housing in a double room and utilities, though many students with financial needs receive scholarships. This price, Crawford conceded, may be more or less expensive than apartments in the area, depending on how comfortable they areâthe monthly rent for a 2-bedroom apartment in Pilsen can range from $1,000 to $2,600. However, La Casa is generally more affordable than most university dorm ratesâfor example, UICâs price hovers around $1,000 a month for room and board.
But now that she lives here, Martinezâs favorite thing about La Casa isnât the priceâitâs the people.
âLa Casa does not only serve as a place to live,â Martinez said, âItâs not just a college dorm, itâs more like a community of students who are all here for the same reason.â
La Casa builds community among its students through its ten-person apartment-style suites, equipped with communal kitchens and living areas. The design of the suites has a modern industrial feel, both functional and comfortable, mixing exposed ceilings and bare concrete walls with swaths of vibrant pastel and neon colors. Here, students live and work together, with the support of a graduate student RA on each floor.
The resource center next door also provides support and counsel for students through a host of programs and activities, from movie nights and study breaks to FAFSA workshops and âskill-builderâ nights, where students learn career skills like rĂ©sumĂ©-writing. Another program brings in professionals from the Pilsen community to talk to students about their different fields.
âThe goal here is to get our students thinking about certain topics, but itâs also to introduce them to people in the community to build their network, [to ask] âHow did you do it? How did you get to where you are?ââ Crawford said.
La Casa also hosts programs for non-residents, such as college information sessions for local high school students and their families. Most of these programs are held in both English and Spanish. Eventually, Crawford hopes that La Casa and its resource center will be a âone-stop shopâ for all things college, available to both students and the entire surrounding community.
For now, Crawford said, the primary objective of their program is to help graduate their students, many of whom, like Martinez, are the first in their families to attend college.
âAs a recent college grad and as a first-generation college student, from my own family background, Iâm helping students who are similar to myself,â Crawford said. âI love being around the students and supporting the students in ways that I thought I needed support in when I was working toward my degree.â
Martinez is set to graduate from UIC this year with a degree in marketing. She agrees with Crawford that living at La Casa has changed her life, from the people sheâs met to the real-life experience sheâs gained through her internship.
âIn the dorms where I was living before, you just go there to sleep,â Martinez said. âBut La Casa is like the whole experience. They help you so much.â