The location of a university campus can generate a virtuous circle of economic effects on the territory, often not limited to the nearby neighborhoods. A frequent phenomenon associated with the construction of a University and which is widely studied in the scientific reference literature, is represented by studentification, namely, the process through which specific residential neighborhoods become dominated by student occupation. Even if studentification often produces beneficial effects on the dynamics of the local real estate market, it may happen that, when the starting point already has consolidated dynamics, the replacement of residents in neighborhoods close to the University with the new social class of students, can determine nega...