First erected in 1931, the 25,000-square-foot brick home was built in the English Tudor style, complete with a series of ivy-enshrouded arches and a blood-red front door. It sits, expansive and imposing, at the end of a long walkway lined with stone that bursts into color each spring when the tulips bloom.

Despite its remarkable size and stately bearings, this isn’t a celebrity’s mega mansion or the manor of an English royal. Instead, this palatial estate is home to the Kappa Sigma fraternity brothers at the University of Arkansas. Like many students who participate in Greek life and also live in fraternity or sorority housing, the men of Kappa Sigma certainly enjoy nicer digs than the average undergraduate.

With more than 6,100 Greek chapters on 800 US college campuses, nearly 10% of male students and more than 12% of female students participated in fraternity and sorority organizations, respectively, in 2015. College students join Greek organizations for a number of reasons, from the social opportunities to the lifestyle, but it’s probably safe to say that the unique housing—which often boasts interior design frills and amenities not typically associated with the under-thirty set—is part of the appeal.

To learn more about the housing and lifestyle enjoyed by students in these social chapters, we researched more than 1,300 fraternity and sorority properties that are home to active Greek organizations on 50 college campuses—from those steeped in tradition as old as the schools themselves to newly built houses and the land they sit on are worth millions of dollars today.