Third floor at the back of the house — quiet enough you'll forget there's a college below you, until the train passes through twice a day. Look hard out the front and the Razorback stadium is right there.
A quiet third-floor king with a view of the alley — and the stadium, if you know where to look.
The Balcony is the lock-off suite at the top of a 1929 house in the Putnam District, three flights up from a neighborhood that has somehow stayed quiet despite being on campus. The bed faces the back of the house — alley-side, where the only traffic is the freight train that comes through twice a day, and even that gets folded into the evening once you've heard it once.
Walk to the front of the unit and the windows open onto Hill Avenue. Look past the rooftops and you can see Razorback Stadium — not the whole thing, just enough to know what you're looking at. Game days are a different kind of energy; the rest of the year it's students walking to class and the porch downstairs holding the rest of the social weight.
The room itself is a king with a velvet bedrunner, deep curtains, two reading lamps, and a bench at the foot of the bed. A small writing desk by the bedside has a wireless charger built into it. The en suite bath has a brass-fixture shower with white subway tile. A separate-unit notice by the door reminds you there are other guests in the house — but the lock-off is real; you'll only see them if you go looking.
Tesla charger in the back lot. A code on the door, no key handoff. Coffee setup, a small fridge, hangers in the alcove, towels stacked. We've kept the room sparse on purpose — most of what makes Fayetteville good is outside the door.
What's in the suite
331 S Hill Ave — basically on campus.
Distances are walking unless noted. Putnam District is the residential pocket between Dickson and the stadium; the Razorback Greenway runs a block over.




