A grade for the housing students can't grade.
Imagine you're eighteen. It's February, and you've got about a week to sign a lease — twelve months, $15,000 or more — for an apartment you won't move into until August, and might never have seen. The company across the table has done this thousands of times. You're doing it once.
You're not unusual: more than four in five UT students live off campus, most of them in the West Campus towers. The trouble is that almost nothing you'd use to pick a good one holds up. The best reviews come from people who only toured. The tour shows a model unit you won't be assigned. No agency grades the building. About the only thing a landlord can't quietly rewrite is the city's code-complaint file — and it logs roughly 1,800 complaints a year across West Campus.
So here's the idea: put one grade on every building, by the same public rule, backed by records anyone can check, and rebuild it automatically so it doesn't vanish when this year's students graduate. Below: the problem, why the usual signals fail, how the grading works, and the method run on one real building — Rise at West Campus.
1 There is a problem, and it is on the public record.
Every code complaint in West Campus is logged by the City of Austin and published as open data.1 A landlord can hide a bad review, or decline to renew a tenant who keeps complaining, but cannot pull a case out of the city's file. Figure 1 is that file, counted month by month since the data begins.
These are not paperwork complaints. They are about building conditions: property-abatement and structure-condition cases lead the list, which the Appendix breaks down in full. A separate city dataset, 311 service requests, shows the same pattern. The problem is already written down. The rest of this paper is about why a student cannot see it at the one moment that matters, which is before they sign.
2 Why the problem persists: a market that hides quality.
Economists have a name for a market where the seller knows the quality and the buyer does not: a market for lemons. George Akerlof's 1970 result is that when buyers cannot tell good from bad, they will only pay the average price, so good sellers leave and quality drifts down.2 West Campus fits that description, and three local conditions make it worse.
Experience is one-sided
The landlord writes the lease and has signed thousands of them. The student signs one, usually at eighteen, sometimes without seeing the unit. One side has done this many times. The other side has not done it at all.
The buyers rotate out
Students move through in about two years. What one class learns about a building leaves with them when they graduate, so the next class starts over and pays for the same lessons again. The landlord is the only party that remembers.
Demand is captive
More than four in five UT undergraduates live off campus,3 because the university houses only a small share. Freshmen and transfers who do not get on-campus housing have to sign an off-campus lease quickly, inside a tight fall leasing window. Supply is not catching up: a 2024 city effort to add student housing produced 911 income-restricted beds, against more than 24,000 UT students on financial aid.4 A buyer who has to sign, and has to sign now, has little room to walk away.
3 Why every signal a student has today fails.
Students do try to check before they sign. The problem is that every signal available to them is either controlled by the landlord or does not exist. There are four of them, and each fails a different way.
Google reviews: highest from people who never lived there
A star rating looks like the one honest signal. We read all 132 Google reviews for Rise at West Campus and sorted each one by who wrote it: a person who had toured, or a person who had actually lived there.5 The two groups describe different buildings.
tour review, 5★I had an amazing time touring with . She was so kind and energetic. It definitely made the apartment environment more friendly and makes you want to sign immediately because of her great energy!
resident review, 1★I'd give this place 0 stars if I could. This place promises "luxury living" and I've received the complete opposite. The office staff was great only in the very beginning and after that I have received attitude and little help from them after my two years of living here. One of the building managers even acted in a very unprofessional…
resident review, 1★Rise? More like Fall into Abyss. Genuinely. The title speaks volumes. The management at this place is absolutely unreliable in any way. Regardless if the issue is communicated in person, call, or email, trust you will never receive an answer. Out of all things, my apartment complex ghosting me should be the least of my worries. Needless…
We are not claiming any review is fake. We are showing a pattern: the positive reviews come from people at the tour or move-in stage, and the negative ones come from residents. Students describe the same mechanics in their own words. One heavily upvoted r/UTAustin post walks through how West Campus buildings ask you to leave a good review naming your leasing agent right after a tour, and how the angriest negative reviews are the easiest for management to flag and get removed, leaving mostly the formal, photo-backed ones.6 The footnote links the FTC rule on solicited and deceptive reviews.7 We redact employee names in resident reviews because we grade buildings, not people.
Touring the building: you see a showroom, not your unit
You tour in the spring, for a lease that starts in August. A leasing agent, whose job is to close, walks you through a staged model unit or a cleaned-up vacant one. You will not be assigned that unit. You see the gym, the lobby, and the rooftop. You do not see how long a work order sat open last winter, whether the elevator runs in month nine, or what your actual floor sounds like at 2 a.m. The tour is the in-person version of the tour reviews in Figure 2, and it scores high for the same reason.
Official UT resources: a listings site with no quality record
Say you applied for on-campus housing and got waitlisted. The office that sent you that decision, University Housing and Dining, is the obvious place to ask what to do next, and its site says nothing about off-campus housing: no waitlist guidance, no link out. So you search "UT Austin off campus housing." The top result is the Dean of Students' Off-Campus Living page, and its main tool is an "Apartment Finder" that opens the UT Off-Campus Housing Marketplace. Despite the UT branding and the utexas.edu address, UT does not run it. The Marketplace is a white-labeled site operated by a private company, Rent College Pads, which markets itself as UT's "official off-campus housing partner."8 It lists what landlords submit (address, rent, photos, amenities) and tags some listings "Sponsored," meaning paid placement. It carries no ratings, no reviews, no complaint history, and no inspection or code data of any kind. UT's own page adds that "the university does not endorse any of the third-party service providers referenced in or linked to from this website." The same site has a "Tips for Renters" page; it tells you to read your lease and to be wary of a landlord who won't show the unit in person, but it never says to check the city's code-complaint record, which is public and free. UT does offer free lease review through Student Legal Services, but that reads the contract you were handed; it does not tell you whether the building is run well.
Word of mouth: real, but thin and short-lived
The signal that actually works is an older student who lived in the building. But you may not know one, and if you do, they lived in a different unit, maybe on a different floor, maybe under the management company that ran the building before this one. Their experience tells you about their lease, not the unit you will be assigned. In two years they graduate and that knowledge is gone. Word of mouth is real, but it is thin, luck-dependent, and it resets with every class.
4 The proposal: grade the buildings, publish the rule.
If buyers cannot tell buildings apart, publish a grade that lets them. Put one grade on every building, computed by the same published rule, with the underlying records linked so anyone can check them. This has been done before. In 2010 New York City required restaurants to post a letter grade in the window, scored by a public rule.9 In the years after, the share of restaurants earning an A rose from 31% to 46%, and in a city survey 88% of New Yorkers said the grade affected where they ate. Diners did not start inspecting kitchens. They read the letter in the window. A student signing a lease has no equivalent — nothing in any window to read before they sign.
In one line: grade the operator behind each building, by the same public rule, so a student can read the record they otherwise can't get to.
5 How the method works.
Three rules do the work, and none of them ask you to trust us.
Every fact traces to a primary source
Complaint counts come from the city's open data. Ownership comes from the county appraisal district and the Texas Comptroller. We publish nothing about a specific building until its full record is verified against those sources. City records are reproduced with links to the originals, and our own scoring is labeled as analysis and kept separate from the facts.
We trace ownership to the operator, not the sign out front
Buildings get renamed and restyled, but the operator stays the same. So we trace each building from its parcel, to the owner of record, to the legal entity, to the operator that runs it (Figure 3). Because the grade attaches to the operator, renaming a building does not erase its record.
The scoring is asymmetric, on purpose
A high complaint count is strong evidence of a problem. A low count is weak evidence of quality, because tenants underreport when the landlord controls their lease renewal. So a clean record reads as "no adverse public record found," which is not the same as an endorsement.
6 Worked example: Rise at West Campus.
Now the same method, run on a single building. Rise, at 2206 NUECES ST, is operated by Article Student Living, and the ownership chain in Figure 3 is verified against primary records. Its public file:
In late November 2025 a burst pipe and a days-long water outage left Rise residents without working toilets or hot water — by residents' account, the second such failure that month — and local news covered it.12 An event like that shows up in resident reviews and in the city file. It does not show up on a tour. None of this is a grade. It is the public record for one building, in one place, which a student cannot currently assemble on their own.
We are not printing a letter grade here, on purpose. The scoring weights are not published yet, and our rule is that no grade ships until the weights are public and applied the same way to every building. The records above stand on their own until then.
A Appendix: the supporting public record.
The totals behind §1, shown in full so the argument can be checked, not just asserted.
What the complaints are actually about (study area)
| Complaint type | Count | |
|---|---|---|
| Property Abatement | 2,132 | |
| Structure Condition Violation(S) | 1,543 | |
| Land Use Violation(S) | 1,103 | |
| Work Without Permit | 197 | |
| Structure Condition Violations | 1 |
A second city dataset shows the same thing: 311 service requests
| Request type | Count | |
|---|---|---|
| Austin Code - Request Code Officer | 5,148 | |
| AE Street Light Issue - Address | 1,036 | |
| ACD - Request Code Officer | 934 | |
| AW - Water Conservation Violation | 601 | |
| Street Light Issue- Address | 578 | |
| Austin Code - Coronavirus | 503 |
Full building- and operator-level files, each backed by its own receipts, are published at /buildings and /operators. Method detail lives at /methodology.
§ References
- City of Austin — Code Complaint Cases (Socrata dataset 6wtj-zbtb). Austin Open Data Portal. Study-area extract captured July 8, 2026. data.austintexas.gov/d/6wtj-zbtb
- Akerlof, G. A. (1970). "The Market for 'Lemons': Quality Uncertainty and the Market Mechanism." Quarterly Journal of Economics, 84(3), 488–500. doi.org/10.2307/1879431
- UT Austin off-campus share. No single UT-official figure is published; sources converge on the low-to-mid 80s%. Fall 2025 enrollment ~55,000 (utexas.edu/about/facts-and-figures) against roughly 7,400 residence-hall beds implies ~87% off campus; local reporting cites ~83%. KVUE / Austin American-Statesman.
- Swiatecki, C. (2024). "City eyes code amendments to increase affordable housing
for UT students." Austin Monitor, Apr. 16, 2024.
austinmonitor.com
— the University Neighborhood Overlay produced 911 income-restricted beds against 24,000+ students on aid;
West Campus rents cited up to ~
- ,500/mo.
- Google Maps reviews — Rise at West Campus. Manual capture of all 132 reviews, star ratings reconciled from saved page source; classified by reviewer perspective. Showcase/forensic sample, not a scraped feed.
- DereChen (2026). "To all students looking at Wampus (West Campus) college apartments on Google Maps: Take the reviews with a grain of salt, the star ratings are artificially inflated." r/UTAustin, Jun. 22, 2026 (107 upvotes as of access). reddit.com — a resident's account of leasing offices soliciting good reviews that name the touring agent, and of blunt negative reviews being reported and removed; independent corroboration of the pattern in Figure 2, cited as a public statement, not used as a data source.
- Federal Trade Commission (2024). "Trade Regulation Rule on the Use of Consumer Reviews and Testimonials," 16 CFR Part 465; 89 Fed. Reg. 68034 (Aug. 22, 2024), effective Oct. 21, 2024. No private right of action. ftc.gov
- UT Austin off-campus housing resources. "Off-Campus Living Resources," Office of the Dean of Students (offcampus.utexas.edu). The site's "Apartment Finder" opens the UT Off-Campus Housing Marketplace at housing.offcampus.utexas.edu, a white-labeled listings platform operated by Rent College Pads, Inc., which markets itself as UT's "official off-campus housing partner" (rentcollegepads.com). Listings are landlord-submitted, include paid "Sponsored" placement, and carry no ratings, reviews, or code-complaint data; the Dean of Students page states that "the university does not endorse any of the third-party service providers referenced in or linked to from this website." The Dean of Students' "Tips for Renters" page (offcampus.utexas.edu/tips-for-renters) gives lease-reading and in-person-showing advice but points to no public code, complaint, or inspection record. University Housing and Dining (housing.utexas.edu) surfaces no off-campus content. All pages accessed 2026-07-07.
- NYC restaurant letter grades. NYC Dept. of Health & Mental Hygiene, "Letter Grading for Restaurants" (program since July 2010), nyc.gov. Effect study: Wong, M. R., et al. (2015). "Impact of a Letter-Grade Program on Restaurant Sanitary Conditions and Diner Behavior in New York City." American Journal of Public Health, 105(3), e81–e87. doi.org/10.2105/AJPH.2014.302404. Classic precedent: Jin, G. Z., & Leslie, P. (2003). "The Effect of Information on Product Quality." QJE, 118(2), 409–451.
- Travis Central Appraisal District — owner of record, parcel 0212010347 (CA STUDENT LIVING AUSTIN III, LLC). TCAD appraisal roll.
- Texas Secretary of State (SOSDirect) — entity filing 0804016830, name change to ARTICLE STUDENT LIVING AUSTIN III, LLC.
- FOX 7 Austin — "Rise at West Campus student residents say they're living in unsafe, unsanitary conditions," Dec. 1, 2025: a multi-day water outage and a burst pipe that sent dirty water and ceiling debris into the parking garage; residents describe a second failure the same month and lower floors without hot water for the semester. The property manager is named as Article Student Living. fox7austin.com. Corroborated by The Daily Texan, "Rise at West Campus apartment experiences widespread water outages," Dec. 3, 2025, thedailytexan.com.