Please read through these responses to frequently asked questions that address common concerns of families and parents of Tulane students.
Had an experience in one of our dining locations that you’d like to share? Contact us with the details, date, time, and location. Feel free to include a picture!
Having problems with lighting, electricity, plumbing, walls, water, locks/card readers, air conditioning, or doors? Submit a ticket to servicewave.tulane.edu.
Furniture broken or in need of repair? Microfridge problems? Submit a ticket to servicewave.tulane.edu.
Locked out of your room? See the front desk of your residence hall for assistance.
Are the washers or dryers in your residence hall giving you problems? Submit a ticket at cscsw.com/request-service.
Is Eduroam wifi cutting out again? Need to repair a data jack? Contact Technology Services at help@tulane.edu.
HAVE AN EMERGENCY? Overflowing toilet or sink? Bodily fluids in your room or hall? Trouble with alarms? Call Campus Services immediately at 504-865-5441
Students can also submit Service Wave requests for common spaces, including communal bathrooms and study spaces in the residence halls. If your student sees something wrong in a building or wants us to know of an issue they are experiencing, encourage them to put it into servicewave.tulane.edu. This will provide them with a record that a ticket was put in and they will receive information about the request—when it was completed, what was done or if there’s a delay due to a required part.
Service Wave is our work ticket management system that allows us to track and manage maintenance and repairs in our buildings and facilities. Students are encouraged to input their own requests as a tulane.edu email address is required, and they receive a confirmation email of their request and are assigned a ticket number. Tickets are received and reviewed by staff in customer engagement and assigned to the appropriate technician or area. If a request is unclear, customer engagement staff will follow up with the student to get more information. Please visit our Service Wave Guide for more details.
While we consider all requests for service to be important, not all requests are emergencies. Overflowing toilets or sinks, bodily fluids such as blood or urine, water leaking from the ceiling, someone trapped in an elevator or locked in their room because the door knob fell off are all emergencies and should be called in immediately to 504-865-5441. All non-emergency requests should be entered into Service Wave.
If no one is present when the technician arrives to perform work in a residence hall room, a note will be left on the door stating the date and time, technician’s name, name of service requestor, work ticket number, reason for visit, and whether or not the work was able to be completed. If your student has any further problems, they may contact Campus Services through the Let's Talk tab on the right-hand side of this page and reference the Service Wave work ticket number. Trouble viewing the tab? Contact us.
Ensure your student has put in a service request to servicewave.tulane.edu. This is the first step to getting the problem fixed. Depending upon the severity of the issue and the number of other tickets we have in the system, we prioritize all of our work. If your student feels an issue is lingering too long or not being addressed, please have them contact us through the Let's Talk tab on the right-hand side of this page, or contact us, with the ticket number (it’s a 6 digit number preceded by "TU-") so that we may contact technicians for additional information.
The humid climate in New Orleans makes our residence halls susceptible to the growth of mildew and mold. However, your student can take precautions in their room to reduce moisture and the threat of mold and mildew growth. For more information about preventing mold and mildew, please visit: campusservices.tulane.edu/resources/environmental_challenges
DIY mold test kits serve to demonstrate the obvious – mold is pervasive in the environment. There is no natural environment that is free of fungal organisms.
Every fall, many students will experience some physical symptoms associated with their overall transition to life on campus (academic, social, environmental, et al). These symptoms may be related to the building, but each individual student’s routines, social life, sleeping habits, distance from home and proximity to a lot of new people are also factors to consider. If a student has concerns about their room, they should submit a Service Wave request and a technician will be assigned to address the issue.
For information on ADA accessibility and accommodations for students, please visit accessibility.tulane.edu/current-students.
Visit our housing construction FAQs for more information on the deconstruction of Bruff Commons and the new residential housing complex being built in its place.