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Residence Life - Housing
ACP offers three College-owned and operated residence facilities on campus, creating a welcoming, safe environment that more than 600 of our students call home.
Notre Dame Hall, South Hall and Holland/Princeton Suites offer a variety of amenities to help enhance our students' college experience.
Notre Dame features suite-style living with a common area. Each of the building's 28 suites is comprised of five single bedrooms and one corner bedroom, which is double in size and accommodates two residents.
The suites have a common area, including a kitchenette equipped with microwave, refrigerator, sink and kitchen cabinets. Two adjoining suites share a common bathroom. Each bedroom is furnished with a single bed, dresser, desk and desk chair.
Nearby
on the south edge of campus is South Hall.
The rooms in this facility are two-, three-, four- and five-person rooms. The rooms contain their own bathroom, heating and air conditioning. Each room is furnished with a bed, dresser, desk and desk chair for each student. In addition, rooms in South Hall are equipped with a refrigerator and microwave.
While Notre Dame and South Hall provide microwave ovens and refrigerators for convenience, neither facility is considered a "cooking facility." Thus, all residents of Notre Dame and South Hall are required to purchase a meal plan.
Holland/Princeton Suites provides upper-class students with apartment-style living.
Holland/Princeton Suites includes a combination of two-, four- and five-bedroom apartments. These completely furnished apartments offer the safety and security of a residence hall, while providing the independence that upper-class students desire. Included in the amenities at Holland/Princeton Suites are air conditioning and dishwashers.
Notre
Dame, South Hall and Holland/Princeton Suites are College-owned facilities.
Each provides resident assistants (RAs) who live among the students. At least
one RA is scheduled to be "on-duty" every night, monitoring the building,
checking in visitors and assisting in cases of emergency. Additionally, cable
television, broadband Internet and local telephone service are included in
the annual residence fees.
For more information on ACP housing, contact Michael A. Sass, coordinator of residence life, at sassm@acp.edu.
In addition to these facilities, ACP students in years three and above also can choose to live in off-campus apartments or in the University Heights College Suites (UHCS), which is independently operated on the UHA campus and an easy walk to all ACP facilities.
UHCS opened in 2003 and is operated by United Development Corp. Students from neighboring institutions Albany Law School, Albany Medical Center and The Sage Colleges also are eligible to live in this facility.
For more information on UHCS, visit www.uhcollegesuites.com.