Single Rooms - Standard Ensuite
17-40 Weeks
Tenancy Length
10 Sep
Move in from
£175.84
From (Per week)
The best place to feel home I had unforgettable memories which made me cry while I left my room💔
Castle Hill | #1 |
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The Railyard | #4 |
Anglia House | #5 |
Swinhoe House Hall | #6 |
Peter Taylor House | #7 |
CB1 | #8 |
Chelmsford Student Village | #9 |
Sedley Court | #10 |
*Minimum 10 reviews required to be ranked.
The best place to feel home I had unforgettable memories which made me cry while I left my room💔
Price from | £175.84 per week (subject to availability) |
Catering | Self-catered |
Postcode | CB1 1PT |
17-40 Weeks
Tenancy Length
10 Sep
Move in from
£175.84
From (Per week)
17-40 Weeks
Tenancy Length
10 Sep
Move in from
£180.81
From (Per week)
17-40 Weeks
Tenancy Length
10 Sep
Move in from
£202.72
From (Per week)
Some students choose to stay during the academic year, whilst others – particularly international students – require a tenancy that covers the entire year. You can also find student accommodation that is available for one or two terms, classified as a “short stay” on our search filters.
This is totally up to you! Catered accommodation means you will be served meals at set times in a dining hall, and you’ll likely have access to fewer kitchen facilities than if you were to stay in self-catered accommodation.
A guarantor is a person who signs a contract to agree to pay your rent if you are unable to. Most university accommodation requires a guarantor, and this applies to both domestic and international students.
Most likely, yes, you’ll need to pay a deposit. This will be refunded at the end of your stay as long as there is no damage to the room or property.
If you are staying in university-run accommodation or private halls, your rent should include any utilities such as electricity, gas, water, and internet. Students are not required to pay council tax, however you may need to fill in an exemption form so make sure you check with your local council.
Purpose-built student accommodation (PBSA) are residential buildings designed for students. They are often located close to campus, boast modern facilities, include all bills, and often have staff on site to assist residents.
Student accommodation is typically fully furnished. Your room should include at least a bed, clothes storage, desk and chair. You’ll likely need to bring things such as bedding and kitchen utensils, but we have a full list here of everything you’ll need.
The best place to feel home I had unforgettable memories which made me cry while I left my room💔
The rooms are small, the showers are broken. The space is tiny and the ventilation is very bad the window opens slightly. In Mr room, there were stains by previous tenants o the floor which were not cleaned. Charging over 600 pounds per month and they can't even provide a heater which keeps the room warm, summers the room is like an oven, the lift doesn't work for most o the time have to climb four floors every Sunday with heavy groceries. the few good things about the place are the location as all your classes will be within 3 minutes of walking your kitchen bins are cleaned every three days and so is the area around. it is a decent place to stay for 9 months but personally, I would suggest this place is not worth the money I'm paying
As an international students I paid more than others but overall happy experience
Avoid if at all possible. Upon moving in, I was greeted by a tiny room, with little ventilation, black mould everywhere, a carpet that had hair ingrained in it (presumably from the previous tenant) and what looked like coffee stains on the wall. When entering the bathroom I found the toilet to be completely black (took two weeks of thorough cleaning to become somewhat presentable), no shower curtain, and a shower which overflows due to the layout of the bathroom. Kitchen was large and clean though and neighbours were lovely. Residential assistants were also fab and quick to respond. The residential service itself is poor. Had an insect problem and was told that it was probably my fault and I needed to hoover. (My room was always tidy and the hoover provided was blocked and unusable upon moving in and was told it was my problem). Apart from that it was great.
I've been staying at Peter Taylor House for the last 5 months and i can confidently say that my initial expectations were quite low however the place doesn't seem bad at all! excluding the whole paying almost a grand a month for a small room and a space in the kitchen thing. Price is definitely way too high for what you get, especially with all the maintenance issues that come up every other week. The walls aren't thin and i sleep well considering im a very light sleeper, the ensuite bathrooms can be quite a mess because of mold, non existant shower heads and other issues but otherwise they're okay. I wish there was a living room or some sort of communal space that isn't the kitchen and the bins get changed 3 times a week by staff but that's as far as the cleaning aspect of it goes. Its right in the middle of town so location aspect is amazing, there's plenty of events and shops around and i definitely feel safe walking around the area. I'd give it a solid 6.8/10
Horrendous, having dropped my daughter here expected her to rough it but was shocked how rough it was. Rooms need a total overhaul wouldn’t put my dog in the room being offered and the room did not reflect the room we were shown on the open day. There was a hoover in the kitchen with no hose or brush (how are students expected to keep their rooms/kitchen tidy?? The bathroom had black staining throughout where mould had been wiped away but not painted. Black mould around the window. Filthy shower panelling, filthy black stained bathroom floor. There was also a large hole in the wall through to insulation. She has been put in temporary accommodation in another block away from Peter Taylor House until they’ve done the remedial work. This is not a good start to my daughters first year at university as she is not in the block where her fellow students are, this has made it very difficult to for her to be able mix, settle in & socialise with her fellow students. DISAPPOINTED
My friends and I recently stayed in Peter Taylor House for a few days for an event which was hosted at ARU, and honestly we couldn't wait to get back to my own homes. The beds were very uncomfortable, and whatever they wash the sheets in triggered allergies in me and several of my friends (stinging eyes, blocked noses, a couple of us even had a little bit of blood in our snot.) The walls and carpets also had stains on them. One of my friends tried to open her cupboard door and it just fell off. Some of the bathrooms had mould on the floor and inside of the door, and there was nothing keeping the shower area separate, so the entire bathroom floor got wet every time we showered. The shared kitchen smelled quite bad, and one of the fridges hadn't been de-iced properly before being switched off, so there was a massive water puddle in the middle of the kitchen floor. If we wanted to stay for longer, it would have cost £49 per night, which we feel was honestly not worth it at all.
My kitchen was relatively clean because I had amazing people who shared my kitchen with me. They are all respectful and if ever there was a clash, we would talk it out and everything would be fine. I got on way more with my friends from Halls than in my course!
WiFi wasn’t bad buildings disgusting tho
If you can avoid it, don't stay in university accommodation. The accommodation service do not care about anything. At one point we had mould in our kitchen and I had to get the local government involved before they would do anything about it. If there's anything broken in your room and you can live without it, expect a 6 month waiting period. Also their "emergency" repairs take like 2 weeks.
Quite grotty tbh, but way better than the otger campus on site as at least you have ensuite bathrooms! Plus nothing beats rolling out of bed at 8:50 to get to a 9am lecture on time... think about the sleep guys!
locations are perfect but the dirtiest places ive ever seen. and too expensive for what they offer
Don’t stay during summer school. I stayed there while attending summer school and it was worse than terrible. The windows can’t open, the ventilation in the bathroom don’t worke, so the room gets overheated and humid and you can’t sleep properly . On top of that everything is dirty and sticky. the place is really not fit to stay in.
Do NOT stay here in summer or whenever the temperature goes above 20c. The windows hardly open and there are heating pipes running through the rooms that cannot be switched off, so you need to add another 10c to the outside temperature. Ruined my stay for the summer school, even though it's on campus and the other facilities are ok.
Facilities is standard. I cant stand with the noise from a group of International students from certain country hanging out in the kitchen since afternoon till evening around 08:45pm shout and scream. Can we respect time. Some need quite moment to rest and study.
Good location and overall living areas. This accommodation has no social spaces as of yet, but I hear they are building one now (2017). What I liked about this accommodation was that the cleaning in the kitchen floors are done by a cleaning service a couple of times a week, while also taking out the trash, which makes it one less thing to worry about. If you report any issues, they are usually very quick and helpful but be aware that they operate according to urgency. What I found the worst about this accommodation was that there is literally no ventilation, so if there are more than 20 degrees outside you will die (the windows don't open very far). A lot of spiders and bugs. The post office in the building is only open one hour a day, and even sometimes the residential services forget to even do that. The lift also broke down A LOT. So if you are going to live here, choose a room that has a low number to avoid having to walk from the Ground floor to the 4th (like me).
You kinda expect that, once a new year hits, the rooms will be cleaned thoroughly for the new students that will arrive there. Dated (but functional) furniture, and the shower doesn't have a hose or anything just a head on the wall, but at least it's an en-suit bathroom. Good by "student accommodation standards", bad by "Room to live in" standards.
The halls are above a nursery and have no common room with dated and damaged rooms and small cramped kitchens. Windows do not open so are stupidly hot. maintenance takes for ever. my room used to flood and another had its heating permanently on. Parties are not aloud even though there is no su bar.
The only good thing was location. Overpriced, they get around giving you your deposit back by dy describing it as "advanced rent" ie rent for months you can't live there. Maintenance is poor, cock roaches and maggots but we were told it's not their problem
Its ok, having your own shower is awesome but the screaming internationals at 3 in the morning sometimes gets tiresome but everyone is quite friendly
A review of Osborne House, University of Bath
Situated at the peak of Bathwick Hill, where it joins with Claverton Down Rd. so easy access to town. Just a stone's throw from the South buildings for which, as a chemist, I am grateful. Away from the centre of campus/the SU, so relatively quiet. Easy access for delivery vans etc. once they've come here enough to know where to go, since this technically off-campus accommodation is at an end of The Avenue, a side road to Clav. Dn. Rd. Bike shed available.
Cons?
It takes longer to walk to lectures than some of the on-campus accommodations. Being next to Clav. Dn. Rd. which is a frequent bus route, the road noise can be quite loud. On the subject of noise, the part of the building where I live has a piece of guttering which taps loudly in the rain. Also, since Osborne was converted from a normal house which did not have the multitude of rooms necessary for housing students, some rooms including mine, are separated from the room next door by a partition wall with very little noise reduction. The windows are not very well insulated so draughts come in as well as noise. Only letters and small packages are delivered to the house, anything larger goes to the campus parcel office which is in the northeast of campus (Osborne is southwest).