Champlain and Burlington Celebrate Collaboration on Downtown Eagles Landing Student Apartment Project

Groundbreaking ceremony at Eagles Landing

BURLINGTON, Vt. - Champlain College and the City of Burlington today celebrated their collaboration to bring the Eagles Landing student housing project to the city. Speaking against a backdrop of work on the foundation for the new $36 million project, Champlain College President Donald J. Laackman and Burlington Mayor Miro Weinberger highlighted the community benefits of the project.

As Laackman relayed, the project will convert a parking lot and former Eagles Club site along St. Paul Street between Maple and King Streets into a vibrant, mixed-use block of street-front retail with student apartment housing above. The upper floors will house 105 apartments containing 314 beds dedicated to Champlain College students. In addition, there will be approximately 4,500 square feet of ground-floor commercial space along St. Paul Street as well as 66 parking spaces available to lease to the public.

"We know Burlington is one of the major factors in why our students choose to attend Champlain," Laackman said, " and this location in downtown Burlington provides access to all that the city has to offer, including local employers, culture and entertainment, and the great outdoors." 

"Eagles Landing has many other benefits for both Champlain College and the City of Burlington," said Laackman. "This project supports Champlain's long-term goal, as outlined in our 2007 Master Plan developed with the community, to house all of our students on campus or in College-managed facilities. The Eagles Landing project helps to relieve some pressure on the tight Burlington housing market and will decrease the number of students living in non-College-affiliated apartments in neighborhoods adjacent to the campus." Champlain will retain property management responsibility for the facility, enabling the College to maintain standards consistent with other projects on campus. 

Mayor Miro Weinberger noted that "For too long, the way in which we have housed our students in this community has put undue pressure on the housing market and contributed to quality of life concerns in the historic neighborhoods near Champlain College and the University of Vermont. This project breaking ground represents progress on addressing these longstanding issues and the start of a new strategy that could lead to further gains. I welcome Champlain College's partnership in this effort in addition to our many other collaborations."Laackman emphasized: "Champlain would also like to thank the City of Burlington and, in particular, the administration of Mayor Weinberger, for recognizing the important role of higher education in our community, and the need to work creatively and collaboratively to achieve goals of mutual, long-term interest. We value our partnership with the City and, thanks to this collaboration, we are able to celebrate this milestone today."

Laackman emphasized: "Champlain would also like to thank the City of Burlington and, in particular, the administration of Mayor Weinberger, for recognizing the important role of higher education in our community, and the need to work creatively and collaboratively to achieve goals of mutual, long-term interest. We value our partnership with the City and, thanks to this collaboration, we are able to celebrate this milestone today."

The process began almost 10 years ago, when Champlain College acquired the Eagles Club in 2008, and culminated in early December of 2016 when the purchase of the Browns Court parking lot from the City of Burlington was finalized. The anticipated completion is August 2018 in order to accommodate student occupancy for the beginning of Fall semester classes. Since the project was first proposed, City and community input and agreements have led to design improvements, a size reduction of the building, and exterior material changes compatible with the character of the neighborhood. "

"A project like this only happens with the dedication and persistence of many team members, including the Champlain College Board of Trustees, Champlain's Finance and Campus Planning teams, H.P. Cummings Construction, and Gardner Kilcoyne Architects of Williston," Laackman said. "And we offer a special thank you to the surrounding neighbors for their input in the planning process and their patience during the construction." 

Ongoing information and updates on the project will be available on the College's website.


Founded in 1878, Champlain College is a small, not-for-profit, private college in Burlington, Vermont, with additional campuses in Montreal, Canada, and Dublin, Ireland. Champlain offers a traditional undergraduate experience from its beautiful campus overlooking Lake Champlain and over 90 residential undergraduate and online undergraduate and graduate degree programs and certificates. Champlain's distinctive career-driven approach to higher education embodies the notion that true learning occurs when information and experience come together to create knowledge. Champlain College is included in the Princeton Review's The Best 384 Colleges: 2019 Edition. For the fourth year in a row, Champlain was named a "Most Innovative School" in the North by U.S. News & World Report's 2019 "America's Best Colleges,” and a “Best Value School” and is ranked in the top 100 “Regional Universities of the North” and in the top 25 for “Best Undergraduate Teaching.” Champlain is also featured in the Fiske Guide to Colleges for 2019 as one of the "best and most interesting schools" in the United States, Canada and Great Britain and is a 2019 College of Distinction. For more information, visit champlain.edu.