Skip to main content

Here We Have Idaho | Spring 2015

Page 16

This rendering shows what the Delta Zeta house will look like when construction is completed in August. Opposite page, top: Sigma Alpha Epsilon gutted its house and rebuilt from the studs up, as part of a $2.5 million remodel. Bottom: Delta Delta Delta’s remodel included updates to give the house a newer feel.

GREEK ROW GETS FACELIFT

Alumni Gifts Support House Renovations

BY SAVANNAH TRANCHELL

G

reek life at the University of Idaho dates back almost to the foundation of the university itself: Kappa Sigma, UI’s first Greek organization, arrived on campus in 1905. The university recently celebrated its 125th anniversary, and the Greek houses are reaching milestones of their own, with many of them at or near 100 years on campus. With that history comes aging infrastructure that’s no longer keeping up with the demands of today’s hightech students. That’s why nearly a dozen of Idaho’s Greek organizations have spent the past decade in a construction boom that’s brought more than $15 million in renovations and new construction to campus, nearly all of which was funded by alumni donations. One of the most visible efforts is the construction of the new Delta Zeta house, located on the corner 14

of Seventh and Elm Streets. That $4.5 million building is set to be completed in August, giving the fairly new organization, which formed at UI in 2012, a permanent home. The cascade of construction began a decade ago, when the Sigma Nu fraternity decided it was time to update its house at 718 Elm St. The renovation — which cost $2.3 million — started the domino effect of improvements among the Greek organizations, said Carl Berry ’76. Last summer, Delta Delta Delta completed a $1.2 million renovation to modernize the sorority and continue to be an attractive option for students. “We had a reunion and you just had this sense that our living room was a little bit like going to a nursing home,” said Nancy Baskin ’83. “It was extremely dated.” Beta Theta Pi hopes to complete its $2.4 million renovation this summer. Like many houses, the fraternity,

originally built in 1925, did its construction over several summers to avoid having to shut the house down completely. In addition to cosmetic updates and fresh paint, the houses focused on improving safety, such as installing sprinkler and alarm systems, widening hallways, replacing wiring, modernizing kitchens and updating electrical infrastructure and Internet capabilities. The renovations are a boon for the Greek system and for students, who now enjoy safer, more modern living environments in the houses. Updating the houses helps bring in new members. It also has had an energizing effect on the alumni, who gave generously to support the construction for their house. “The loyalty that members of the Greek living group feel toward the organization, to make sure that it doesn’t fail and it doesn’t stall, is amazing,” said Sigma Nu’s Berry. I


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook