Waterloo Co‑operative Residence Inc.

Waterloo Co-operative Residence Inc. (WCRI) is a non-profit student housing cooperative located in Waterloo, Ontario, Canada. It is owned by its residents, also known as members, who attend the University of Waterloo, Wilfrid Laurier University, and Conestoga College. The co-op is governed by the Rochdale Principles.
WCRI is significant in the history of the North American co-operative movement as it would expand to become, for a duration, the largest student housing cooperative on the continent. Today, the co-op can accommodate over 1300 residents in its dormitories and apartments, currently making it the second-largest organization of its kind in North America.
WCRI was a founding member of the Ontario Student Co-operative Association and the North American Students of Cooperation.
History
WCRI was founded in July 1964 as the Waterloo division of Toronto's Campus Co-operative Residence Inc (CCRI). Initially, two separate houses on University Avenue in Waterloo accommodated twenty-seven male and nine female students, though meals were taken together at the men's house. One cook was hired, but all other work was done by the members. WCRI also added a house at 59 Albert Street.
Initially, the adjacent University of Waterloo was not in favour of the co-operative. Wilfrid Laurier University held a similar view, refusing to host posters advertising its existence. However, the success of the Waterloo model would help to inspire a wave of Canadian student co-ops, funded under the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation’s student housing program (then named the "Central Mortgage and Housing Corporation). The WCRI loan was contingent upon the Quebec students also securing a mortgage from a local caisse populaire, and a mortgate guaranteed from the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp.
In 2003, the City of Waterloo reclassified the WCRI lands at 280 Phillip Street as Residential (from Industrial).
During the Covid-19 pandemic, WCRI rented the 105-bed Dag Hammarskjold residence to the Region of Waterloo as short-term accommodations for people experiencing homelessness. The site was funded by the region and allowed people to keep physically distant from others while also offering food, harm reduction supplies and support to find permanent housing.
External Sources and Media
Introduction to WCRI, circa 1993 promitional video copied from VHS. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C4R6xP0TW-8
 
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