Off-campus housing complex still questionable to be ready by fall
800 Block is an off-campus apartment building owned by the Nelson Partners in Logan.
According to their website, it is the newest apartment complex for Utah State University students. The complex is located “just 27 feet from campus” with three, four and five-bedroom floor plans.
However luxurious, new and exciting the website makes the facilities seem, 800 Block is notorious for leaving students high and dry come back-to-school season.
And with the time soon coming to start looking for fall housing, the question many students have is — will 800 Block back out on students for the third consecutive year?
The Statesman was unsuccessful in contacting 800 Block via their phone number, as well as their email contact form through their website by the time of publication.
A previous Statesman article published in August of last year explained some of the issues 800 Block has faced over the last couple of years during their construction period.
The article mentioned how 800 Block informed their tenants about the postponement of the original move-in date roughly a month before school started.
This left many students scrambling for housing at the very last minute.
USU Housing Services stepped in to offer the help they could to students seeking accommodations.
The article said, “What has upset would-be tenants more than the unfinished amenities though, is the money they lost and are now fighting to get back after already signing contracts and paying deposits.”
This stressful housing scramble in the fall of 2022 was a mere déjà vu of what happened the fall prior.
USU sophomore Carson Stewart signed a lease with 800 Block in the fall of 2021.
In a text exchange with the Statesman, Stewart explained the difficulties he faced with the Nelson Partners company.
As the fall 2021 semester approached, Stewart hadn’t received any updates from 800 Block, and he was unsuccessful in contacting them despite exhausting various methods.
Ultimately, Stewart drove to Logan and saw for himself the apartment building was nowhere near completion for the school year.
“They are unresponsive and unreliable in every aspect of their business,” Stewart wrote.
Preston Hatch, a parent of a USU student, faced similar challenges only a year later.
In an email exchange with the Statesman, Hatch wrote, “We were well aware of the fiasco that 800 Block management put students in back in the fall of 2021, but we thought there is no way this could actually happen again, especially a whole year later.”
Hatch then explained the scramble students faced after discovering their contracts were terminated a couple weeks before school started.
Hatch said the marketing efforts put out by 800 Block were misleading to students.
“The infuriating thing with this whole 800 Block situation is that they were actively seeking new tenants on social media all summer long. They should not have been doing that! I even messaged them on Instagram and they assured me everything would be good for the fall semester,” Hatch wrote.
While construction continued during the spring and summer of 2022, 800 Block put out marketing efforts to “promise” future tenants they would be finished by fall of 2022.
Nathan Strain, a USU student, has left various dissatisfied comments on 800 Block’s Facebook page.
In a message exchange with the Statesman, Strain wrote, “Every summer we let any incoming freshmen know about 800 Block’s inability to house them, and tried to warn prospective students online. It kinda hit a point last summer when they went on an advertising blitz with their ‘800 Block Promise’ that they ultimately went back on.”
Strain also wrote he thinks it’s possible for 800 Block to be completed by fall of 2023, although he still discourages any students from signing a lease “with a company that showed no remorse for the hurt they caused to everyone who had to find last minute housing.”
Ben Wheeler, another USU student who had signed with them last fall, said he highly doubts 800 Block will be open in the fall.
“I don’t think anyone should sign a lease with them until they are completely done with construction,” Wheeler said.
-Kate.Stewart@usu.edu
Featured photo by Josh Bengtzen