The Collegian
Saturday, September 21, 2024

Gray Court students drenched in water and citations after first and second floors flood

Students on the first floor of Gray Court emptied out their dorms after the hall was severely damaged by water on Friday night.
Students on the first floor of Gray Court emptied out their dorms after the hall was severely damaged by water on Friday night.

Students at the University of Richmond were left in Gray Court with water-damaged rooms, parking tickets and alcohol citations after the first and second floor flooded on late Friday evening.

Gray’s common rooms were filled with student belongings as residents frantically tried to empty their rooms while water poured from their ceilings and into the halls. Students said that emergency personnel were “unhelpful,” citing students for alcohol violations and giving out parking tickets to those trying to relocate for the night.

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A Miller Lite beer can left in the hallways by students in Gray Court.

Outside of Gray, a car was parked on the curb with a parking ticket given out at 10:45pm. At that time, flooding was still happening inside the building.

Students inside said that first responders did not help, with three students on the first floor claiming that some laughed at them while they tried to pile their belongings into the hallways. 

“They were not helpful at all,” said Mia Theermann, a sophomore student living on the first floor of Gray. “They stood there and watched.”

The UR Police Department did not comment about these claims on Friday night and early Saturday morning.

On the first floor of Gray, rooms had caved in ceilings with debris scattered across the hallways and the waterlogged carpet floors. There was a distinct dank smell throughout the hall. 

“I drank [sewage],” said sophomore Arantza Pereira, whose ceiling tiles fell through from the water damage. “It’s in my hair.”

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A bed inside sophomore Arantza Pereira's room, which ceiling tiles fell on as water came down from the floor above.


Inside Pereira’s room, the floors were covered in water with electrical cords lying around. Her bed was drenched and what items she was able to salvage had been dumped into the common room, like many others had done.  

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The university has not announced the cause of the flood at this time. 

Multiple students alleged that the flood was caused by a pipe burst by a student colliding with the ceiling while bouncing on a miniature indoor trampoline on the second floor. A video obtained by The Collegian shows water pouring out of a ceiling tile with a trampoline directly underneath it.


Video obtained by The Collegian showing water pouring through the ceiling of a dorm on the second floor of Gray Court.


The water damage to the second floor was primarily on the floor. The water from the second floor leaked through to the first, causing ceiling tiles to collapse and flood the rooms below.

Resident assistants asked students if their rooms were okay, if they had a place to stay, and instructed them to take pictures to document damaged belongings.

“The most important thing is getting people out tonight,” one of the RAs told students on the first floor.

Students, like sophomore Carter House, had to find a place to stay for the night, as they awaited future instructions from the university. 

“We all have places to stay,” House said. “I think they’re working on it for people who don’t.”

Sophomore Whit Russell is a North Court resident hosting some of his friends whose dorms in Gray were damaged.

“The dorm they’ll fix. But it’s more about how, like about people’s phones, computers, watches, whatever.” Russell said. “The valuable things.”


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Belongings were brought to Gray's common rooms as students hectically removed items from their drenched dorm rooms.


As of 12:20 a.m., some students who did not have a place to stay were assigned to new rooms in Keller Hall, according to Russell.

Parents on the UR Parents Facebook page posted about Gray’s flooding on Friday night. One parent wrote that in the past “UR does and will reimburse.”

At around 12:50 a.m., the university sent an email to Gray students saying that contractors are on-site starting the “restoration process” of the building, according to Chief of Police Dave McCoy, and all impacted students have been assigned temporary housing.

In the message, students were asked to catalog damaged items. Gray residents can expect “detailed instructions” on how to report damage to personal items tomorrow, according to McCoy.

This is a developing story. 

Contact city and state editor Nick Mossman at nick.mossman@richmond.edu and executive editor Caitlin McCormack at caitlin.mccormack@richmond.edu.

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