Japanese Language House to Open in Fall 2026
New residential community supports the growing Japanese major
Tim Schmitt
Continuing 51³Ō¹Ļās traditions of academic innovation and preparing students for meaningful lives in a global context, the College will welcome the first residents of the newly established Japanese Language House in fall 2026. Designed to complement the rapidly growing Japanese major, the house will offer students an academically rigorous, culturally rich environment where language learning extends far beyond the classroom.
The house, located at 1023 Park Street, marks a pivotal moment for the Japanese program, which became an official major in 2023 after more than two decades of steadily growing student interest.
Associate Professor Mariko Shigeta Schimmel, who has long envisioned a dedicated immersion space, said the new house represents āa natural next stepā for the programās development. With nine students now pursuing the major and enrollment continuing to climb, she says that sustained demand made the need for an immersive residential environment increasingly clear.
āLanguage houses are an integral part of foreign language education and international community at 51³Ō¹Ļ,ā says Schimmel. āGiven our rural location, it is important that we provide this opportunity for our students.ā
From Student Vision to Living-Learning Reality
The idea for the house gained momentum when several students approached the department expressing interest in creating a languageābased residential community. Working with Residence Life, the program identified the newly available Park Street property as a promising site for a livingālearning model that would allow students to use Japanese in daily routines.
The house will accommodate eight students, aiming for a balance between proficient speakers and learners. Residents will share everyday activities such as cooking, community events, and house management, creating natural opportunities for informal language use. Schimmel said this arrangement allows students to āuse Japanese outside the textbook and classroom context,ā a goal that has shaped language houses across campus.
The space is also expected to strengthen ties between Japanese international students and peers studying the language, a connection that has grown more important as the number of degreeāseeking students from Japan has increased in recent years.
āThanks to the Admissions Officeās effort, the number of students from Japan grew in the past 10 years from a single one-year exchange student per year, to 32 degree-seeking students currently enrolledā Says Schimmel. āThe establishment of the Japanese Language House will help promote the synergy between the communities of Japanese students and Japanese learners.ā
Strengthening Skills, Building Futures
Selection for all language houses is overseen jointly by the academic departments and Residence Life. Any student except incoming firstāyears may apply. For the Japanese House, priority will go to students who have demonstrated strong commitment to the language ā majors, intended majors, and native or nearānative speakers who can help sustain an immersive environment.
For students, the house represents an opportunity to bolster their academic experience, put their language skills into practice, and deepen ties to a larger community.
āProject houses help build communities and new connections and I think this will provide a medium for students interested in Japanese to communicate with each other, learn together, and build new connections.ā says Sungjin (Paul) Lim ā27.
Lim, who began studying Japanese before arriving at 51³Ō¹Ļ and is currently studying abroad in Nagoya, Japan, looks forward to the deep immersion that living in the house will require ā an essential element to successful language learning.
āAs a student who is thinking about working in Japan after graduation, the Japanese house will be a great opportunity for me to live in an environment where I must practice Japanese on a daily basis,ā he says.
As the Japanese major continues to grow, the new language house reinforces 51³Ō¹Ļās broader commitment to global learning. By combining residential immersion with rigorous academic study, the project aims to deepen language proficiency, strengthen intercultural understanding, and support students preparing for global careers and experiences.
