Class of 2022 Become Official Wahoos With Move-In Weekend

Group of students stand together holding their belongings as they prepare to move into their rooms

Changes to move-in this year were meant to streamline the process and make things as easy as possible for parents and students. (Photos by Dan Addison, University Communications)

The weather gods looked down on Charlottesville with favor Friday and Saturday as members of the Class of 2022 moved into their dorms at the University of Virginia.

Clear skies and uncharacteristically cool and dry weather greeted students and their families, who pulled up to dorms across Grounds, lifting hatchbacks and unloading refrigerators, mattress toppers, oodles of clothing and tchotchkes to adorn dorm rooms for the year.

Teja Suvarna, a native of Chantilly, arrived bright and early Friday morning as the sun slowly cut a swath of daylight across the sidewalk in front of Kellogg House on Observatory Hill. He said he was looking forward to meeting new people. “I feel like the transition from high school to college is going to be a little bit tough, so I hope to get more comfortable and get involved,” he added. “That really is my goal.”

Teja Suvarna stands with his parents and sister as they stand next to a stack of his belongings

Teja Suvarna, second from right, stands outside Kellogg House with mother Pavani, younger sister Sriya and father Radha.

Suvarna was accompanied by his sister, mother and father, who were all hoisting dorm room furnishings to his third-floor room. Thankfully, Kellogg has an elevator.

His mother, Pavani, said it was a bittersweet time. “I’m happy, but at the same time, we just have to get used to it at home,” she said.

Father Radha said he was excited, anxious and nervous, all at the same time. “The house is going to be empty and we are going to miss him,” he said.

Teja is one of more than 3,000 students admitted to the Class of 2022.

It is a distinguished group. More than 37,000 people applied for a spot at UVA, breaking the school record for most applications. Accepted students had a mean SAT score of 1,431, with 93 percent ranking in the top 10 percent of their graduating high school class.

The lobby of Kellogg was bustling with activity, with resident advisers and UVA’s popular “Greeters” available to help with move-in, ferrying luggage to waiting elevators as music pumped.

Greeter in a bright orange shirt helps move a box of students belongings up a sidewalk

Second-year student Vinny Thota said he volunteered to be a Greeter at Kellogg because last year a Greeter helped him move there. The welcome made him feel at home and at peace and he wanted to return the favor, he said.

Soleil Reid, the senior resident, stood amid all the hubbub, excitedly welcoming the 192 students who will fill Kellogg’s halls this year. Petite and full of energy, Reid said she was determined to learn everyone’s name.

“I am super-duper-excited. And I know the RAs are super-pumped to interact with their kids for the coming year,” she said. “One of my goals this year is to have every hall into my apartment for a brunch and we can make waffles or pancakes, which will help with my goal to get their names right.”

The festive atmosphere and pulsing music also prevailed down the hill at Courtenay House, where enthusiastic RAs sat and stood at a tented welcome table, directing new students to their rooms.

Sahil Parikh of New Jersey, who was just settling in to his third-floor room, said he is looking forward to being independent “and figuring everything out.” He and his roommate, Rhode Island native Patrick Morris, kept in touch over the summer by texting and SnapChatting.

Sahil Parikh and Patrick Morris stand in their room for a picture

Friday was the first day Sahil Parikh and Patrick Morris met face-to-face. They both agreed that things were “going great.”

Down the street at Gibbons House, Gay Perez, assistant vice president of student affairs and executive director of UVA Housing and Residence Life, and Andy Petters, assistant dean of students, were monitoring move-in. Crowds were thin Friday morning because of a new system.

“This year, we created move-in times, so we have our first two-hour block now, and then another rotation at 11 a.m.,” Petters said. “So the crowd inherently is smaller now than it will be as we move through the day.”

Petters was right. As 11 a.m. came and went, more cars packed to the roofs with boxes and pillows began pulling into the McCormick Road area, where UVA’s “old dorms” are located.

As families funneled down narrow sidewalks carrying their students’ belongings, community members stood by offering to register voters.

Calvert Moore, a member of the Class of 1990 and her husband were moving their son George into his room in Bonnycastle House. Calvert raved about the Greeters. “This is so nice! I wish we had them in New York,” she said.

President James E. Ryan stands at a podium giving a speech to the first year parents

President James E. Ryan addressed parents during move-in weekend on Saturday.

As part of the first-year activities, President James E. Ryan delivered a welcome address on Saturday afternoon to parents in the auditorium of Old Cabell Hall. Ryan, who’d dropped his own son off for college the previous day, shared his aspirations for his own child’s college experience in the context of what UVA has to offer for its newest students.  

“The same hopes I have for my son, I have for all of your children,” he said. “When I see your children, our students, I see my own kids. And my hope and my expectation is that we at UVA will do all we can to enable your children to have the most rewarding and life-shaping experience possible.”

Here’s an additional look at move-in weekend through the posts that students and parents made over the weekend.

Media Contact

Jane Kelly

Office of University Communications