Campuses of the University of Nottingham

Campuses of the University of Nottingham

The University of Nottingham operates from four campuses in Nottinghamshire and from two overseas campuses, one in Ningbo, China and the other in Semenyih, Malaysia. University Park Campus and Jubilee Campus are situated a few miles from the centre of Nottingham, with the small, King's Meadow Campus nearby. Sutton Bonington Campus is situated 12 miles (19 km) south of the central campuses, near the village of Sutton Bonington. [cite web|url = http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/about/campuses/maps.php|title = Maps & Directions|accessdate = 2007-08-01|publisher = University of Nottingham]

University Park Campus

University Park Campus is the main campus of the University. A few miles from the centre of Nottingham, the 330 acres (1.3 km²) site is one of the largest university campuses in the United Kingdom, and home to the majority of the University's 27,000 students. The campus contains 12 Halls of Residence, of which the oldest and largest is Hugh Stewart Hall, as well as academic and administrative buildings. The campus contains 13 listed buildings.

Gardens

The campus is widely regarded for the extent of its greenery, [Currently a winner of the [http://www.greenflagaward.org.uk/winners/winners_detail.asp?sectionId=22&parentId=23&pageId=23&awardId=GF&gsId=GF00255 Green Flag Award] ] and regularly wins awards for its landscaping. [For example, the [http://www.rhs.org.uk/britaininbloom/winners2005.asp Britain in Bloom Public Park Award 2005] ] [ [http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/estate/awards.htm Nottingham University Estate Office, Awards and Accolades] ] Of particular note are the formal Jekyll Garden, allegedly designed by Gertrude Jekyll, next to Lenton and Wortley Hall; the walled Highfield Garden near the Trent Building, which is home to the national collection of "Canna"; and the new Millennium Garden, formally opened in 2000, which has won several awards.Fact|date=February 2007 In addition there is extensive planting elsewhere on campus, particularly in lakeside Highfields Park.

Halls of Residence on University Park Campus

* Ancaster Hall
* Cavendish Hall
* Cripps Hall
* Derby Hall
* Florence Boot Hall
* Hugh Stewart Hall
* Lenton and Wortley Hall
* Lincoln Hall
* Nightingale Hall
* Rutland Hall
* Sherwood Hall
* Willoughby Hall

Notable buildings on University Park Campus

The Trent Building serves as one of the main administrative buildings of the University of Nottingham, England. It also contains academic facilities, principally for the Arts and Social Sciences.

London architect Morley Horder created the Trent Building in the classical architectural style. The building is topped by a campanile (clock tower), is built of Portland stone and is protected as a grade II listed building. King George V and Queen Mary presided at the building's opening in 1928, and the building's Great Hall has hosted many distinguished visitors, including Albert Einstein, Mahatma Gandhi and Queen Elizabeth II.

The writer D. H. Lawrence described the building as looking like an 'iced cake'. [ [http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/estate/docs/gardens_guide.pdf University Park Gardens Guide and Tree Walk] ]

The main buildings of the University’s campuses in China and Malaysia are both modelled on University Park’s iconic Trent building. In the case of the China campus this includes an exact replica of the clock tower.The Hallward Library is the principal library of the University of Nottingham, England located on the University Park Campus. The award winning library, was opened in 1972. It was designed by the architect H Faulkner-Brown and won a RIBA prize. It is named after Dr Bertrand Hallward, first Vice-Chancellor of the University.

It houses the University's Arts, Humanities, Law and Social Sciences collections and a European Documentation Centre. The University's department of Manuscripts and Special Collections is now housed at the King's Meadow Campus.

The Portland Building is faced with Portland stone, but is actually named after William Arthur Henry Cavendish-Bentinck, 7th Duke of Portland who was the University's second Chancellor.It houses the University of Nottingham Students' Union and URN - Student Radio for Nottingham.

Other notable buildings:

*East Midlands Conference Centre

Jubilee Campus

Jubilee Campus primarily houses the Computer science and Nottingham University Business School. The campus is also the location of the National College for School Leadership.

The campus opened in 1999, and is located about a mile away from the main University Park Campus. It was designed by the architects Michael Hopkins and Partners and won the 2000 BCIA award for "Building of the Year" and the 2001 RIBA Journal Sustainability Award. The campus name derives from the fact that 1998 was the Golden Jubilee of the granting of the Royal Charter that made the University an independent degree-granting organisation.

Like the University Park Campus, Jubilee Campus has been constructed around a lake (artificial) on the River Leen and contains plenty of greenery. The campus also contains many innovative environmental elements such as grass roofs and solar panels. Particularly striking is the library, the Sir Harry and Lady Djanogly Learning Resource Centre, a circular building situated in the middle of the lake with only one, spiraling, floor.

The campus hosts Aspire, the country's tallest piece of freestanding art.

Halls of Residence on the Jubilee Campus

The campus has three Halls of Residence.
* Newark Hall - undergraduate, 400 students
* Southwell Hall - undergraduate, 200 students
* Melton Hall - postgraduate

Each of the above halls are ensuite and Southwell and Newark are catered. Many students studying on the main campus live in halls on Jubilee. Transport between campuses is provided by a university-funded hopper bus which is free to use.

Future development

The Jubilee Campus has extensive enlargement plans, which will see gradual implementation towards 2015.Fact|date=August 2007 Nottingham City Council has safeguarded the adjacent land for University use, in order to allow the campus to grow to over 100 acres (0.4 km²). Phase 2, which began in 2006, will see the development of a "Research and Innovation Park" for University spin-out companies. The UK's tallest piece of freestanding art, Aspire has also been erected on the site. [ [http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/public-affairs/press-releases/index.phtml?menu=pressreleases&code=UNVE-14/08&create_date=18-jan-2008 Press Release: Unveiled: design for Britain's tallest free-standing work of public art. January 18th 2008] ] Future developments will see further academic buildings, and new halls of residence added to the campus.Fact|date=August 2007

King's Meadow Campus

King's Meadow Campus The 16 acres (64,750 m²) campus was formerly the site of the Carlton Television studios. The University's department of Manuscripts and Special Collections is now housed at the King's Meadow Campus. Information Services and much of the Finance Department are now also housed at this site.

utton Bonington Campus

Sutton Bonington Campus is a site of the University of Nottingham, and houses the School of Biosciences and the School of Veterinary Medicine and Science. The campus is a 420 Hectare (4.2 sqkm) site situated in a rural location near Sutton Bonington village, 12 miles (19 km) south of the main, University Park Campus, and 1 mile (2 km) from Junction 24 of the M1 motorway. The campus has its own crest and motto: Aras . Seris . Metis. The campus contains research buildings and teaching facilities, a large library and is also home to Bonington Hall, the University's largest hall of residence, which accommodates around 650 students (in reality it is a series of small halls rather than one big hall). A 400 ha (4 km²) commercial farm, University Farm, and a dairy are also part of the site.

The Campus has a refectory, a small private function room (Oak Room) for 10-20 people; a student bar and linked JCR, and a room linked to the bar (The Octagon - often used for external meetings), a small sub-branch of Natwest bank, a Londis and a Blackwells bookshop. The campus also has a single cashpoint.

Sports facilities include a gym, a sports hall, and an astro-turf pitch. External sports facilities run alongside the University between the main road and the railway line.

Travel into Nottingham is facilitated by a free shuttle bus between the distant and more central campuses, which leaves approximately once an hour and takes 25 minutes. There is no train station nearby, Sutton Bonington Station having closed in the 1960s, the closest are at Loughborough or Nottingham (20-30 mins by taxi). The East Midlands Airport is very close with some flight paths being over the campus itself.

The campus was formerly the "Midlands Agricultural and Dairy College" before merging with the university of Nottingham in 1947. The College was originally located in Kingston on Soar, about a two minute walk down the road from the current campus, but relocated to its current location after the First World War. The site (which had been built but not yet occupied prior to the war) was used as a prisoner-of-war camp during the First World War. [cite book| last = Cluett| first = Douglas| title = Discovering Sutton Bonington Past and Present| date = 1982| year = October| publisher = Sutton Bonington Local History Society| isbn = 0-9508309-0-9] It was from there that a group of 21 German officers, led by Captain Karl von Müller, escaped through an underground tunnel dug from one of the huts. 15 tons of soil are said to have been removed and hidden under the tiers of a lecture room. All but one of the prisoners were recaptured.

The University of Nottingham opened the doors of its School of Veterinary Medicine and Science in September 2006, the first vet school to open in the UK in over fifty years.In its first year, there are currently 96 students attending the faculty on its 5 year course.From 2007, there will be multiple courses, including a 6 year programme and a "year 0" programme.

tudent organisations

The Sutton Bonington Campus is the home of the "Sutton Bonington Student Guild", an association of the University of Nottingham Students' Union. All officers of the 'SB Guild' are non-sabbatical and elected annually by an anonymous ballot, which follows the Students' Union procedure of using STV. The Guild used to be separate from the union, and still has a degree of independence. The Guild runs its own clubs and societies (including the rugby team SBRFC, who play as the universities fourth team in the BUSA league, and SBLRFC, who play as th universities 2nd team). In addition it also has its own international students organisation (ISSB), and student run sound, lighting and projection unit (SB-TEC). Bonington Hall also has a student run JCR committee, however this works closely with the Guild, to such an extent that in practical terms the JCR acts as the social section of the guild.

The old students association for both the campus, and the hall of residence is known as OKA (the "Old Kingstonian Association", the name pre-dating the move to Sutton Bonington), and its members include both students from the Midlands Agricultural and Dairy College, and from the University. OKA produces a publication known as Agrimag annually (and has done so since at least the 1920s). OKA organises a reunion weekend on the third weekend in November every year for recently graduated students to return (this is also known as OKA).

Bonington Hall

Bonington Hall is the name given by the university to the University's halls of residence at Sutton Bonington. It is a mixed sex hall holding both undergraduates and postgraduates, and in reality it is not really a single Hall, but a number of small separate "Halls" of varying age and design holding between eight and sixty people. Bonington Hall holds approximately 650 students and is managed by Opal Property Group. The Halls at Sutton Bonington are named after local villages and are as follows:
* Kingston
* Normanton
* Wymeswold
* Ratcliffe
* Rempstone
* Kegworth
* Dishley
* Hathern
* Lockington
* Zouch
* Stanford
* Barton

chool of Veterinary Medicine and Science

Nottingham Vet School was the first brand new, purpose-built veterinary school in the UK for over 50 years. The academic staff of the School work within 5 strategic research areas: Infection and Immunity; Population Health and Welfare; Comparative Medicine; Reproductive Biology and Veterinary Educational Research. Research is closely aligned with that in the School of Biosciences with whom some research facilities and equipment are shared. The involvement of Clinical Associates and other organisations within the research programs enables the identification of clinical problems in the field and the rapid application of investigational science to these problems in both production and companion animal species.

The School of Biosciences

The School of Biosciences has 65 academic staff, 700 undergraduate students and 270 post-graduate students, The school houses five divisions:

* Division of Plant Sciences (incorporating NASC -Nottingham Arabidopsis Stock Centre and CPIB -The Centre for Plant Integrative Biology)
* Division of Nutritional Science
* Division of Food Science (incorporating NCMH -The National Centre for Macromolecular Hydrodynamics)
* Division of Animal Physiology (incorporating the Multi-disciplinary Centre for Integrative Biology and the Centre for Applied Bioethics)
*Division of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences

The division of agricultural and environmental sciences is further split into four departments, and also contains the “rural business research unit” and supervises the university farm
* Animal Production
* Crop Science (incorporating the TCRU -tropical crop research unit and UNACRA -University of Nottingham/ADAS Centre for Research in Agronomy
* Environmental Science
* Management and Economics

University Farm

The farm exists to provide high quality facilities, resources and opportunities for research with crops and animals. It also has a key educational role by providing an environment for effective tuition of students in Biosciences, and Veterinary science. The farm is run commercially to be self-financing whilst still fulfilling its role as a teaching and research resource. The farm manager is currently William Donger. The farm is a 400 hectare mixed farm, with an emphasis on dairy and arable production.

The dairy herd consists of 180 cows, which are milked using a robot milking system (part of a recent 2 million-pound investment in the dairy). The farm also has 350 breeding ewes, and maintains beef, pig and poultry research units.

320 Hectares are devoted to arable crops including cereals, oilseed, and sugar beet, 20 Hectares of which have been converted to organic production. The further 80 hectares of land is used for an intensively managed rotation of grass, fodder crops and maize for silage.

History

The first foundations of the current site at Sutton Bonington date back to the founding of the Midland Dairy Institute in the mid 1800’s. The institute gave lectures and short coursers in such subjects as butter and cheese production, the institute had no fixed home but instead toured the various agricultural shows in the area. University College Nottingham was founded in 1877, and in 1892 co-operated with Nottingham County Council in establishing an Agricultural Department. Then in 1895 the Midland Dairy Institute in conjunction with the five County Councils of Nottingham, Derby, Leicester, Kesteven and Lindsey, agreed to join forces, in an effort to provide both theoretical and practical instruction in Agriculture, and especially Dairying. Lord Belper leased, to the united body his Fields Farm at Kingston, consisting of 176 acres of land, half being in permanent grass, and half arable, to act as a permanent base for the institute. In 1900 the agricultural department of Nottingham University College was combined with the Dairy institute at Kingston, and additional buildings were erected shortly afterwards. In 1905 the Institute changed its name to the Midland Agricultural and Dairy College.

In 1912 another farm of 85 acres, situated in Sutton Bonington parish, but near to the Kegworth Station, was acquired. Initially intended for an experimental station. It however became apparent that the institute was rapidly running out of space, and construction of a brand new purpose built site at Sutton Bonington began. The construction of the new site had not been completed before the outbreak of the First World War, and the new buildings were appropriated by the government to house German prisoners of war. The college didn’t regain the site at Sutton Bonington until 1919 and didn’t fully transfer to the new site until 1928’s. During the 1930’s the college started to offer degree level courses in association with University College Nottingham and London University. As the Second World War started the college was once again appropriated, this time to be used as a training centre for the “Woman’s Land Army” (WLA). After a year however, it was decided that it was unnecessary to provide this level of training, and the college was returned to its original purpose.

In 1947 / 48 the college merged with Nottingham University College, to form the new Nottingham University (which was granted its charter in 1948), Sutton Bonington was initially home to two of the university’s six faculties (Agriculture and Horticulture). This move was part of a major shift in the teaching of agricultural sciences in the region. Each of the original local authorities set up their own agricultural college to teach practical agriculture:
* Brackenhurst College, Nottinghamshire (now part of Nottingham Trent University)
* Broomfield College, Derbyshire (now part of Derby College)
* Brooksby College, Leicestershire (now part of Brooksby-Melton College)
* Caythorpe College, Kesteven (closed 2001)
* Riseholme College, Lindsey (now part of Lincoln University),In the meantime the new faculties at Sutton Bonington quickly fazed out practical courses and instead focused on academic research and graduate and post-graduate teaching. It was initially intended that the new colleges would feed their brightest and most able students into the new University.

The site at Sutton Bonington continued to grow during the latter part of the 20th century, during this period the two initial faculties were merged into one: the faculty of “Argricultural and Food Sciences”. The end of the 20th century saw the faculty initially merged with the faculty of Biology to form the School of Biology. At the time this was seen as a move to transfer the biology department from University Park to Sutton Bonington, in a move designed to free up much needed building land, the university however denied that this was their motive. Shortly after the purchase of the new Jubilee Campus, the school was split in to the department of life sciences (based at university park) and the department of biological sciences (based at Sutton Bonington). This period also saw the construction of new Plant and Food science buildings at Sutton Bonington.

2006 saw the opening of the School of Veterinary Medicine and Science on the campus, in brand new purpose built buildings. This was the first new vet school in the UK for over 50 years, and was seen to be part of the governments response to the 2001 foot and mouth epidemic. Controversially the building of the new school was partly funded by leasing out the halls of residence, and catering facilities, bar and shop to private companies (Opal & Sodexo).

Climate

The warmest month is July, with an average temperature range of 11.4 °C to 21.3 °C, and the coolest month is January, with a range of 1.2 °C to 6.9 °C. Maximum and minimum temperatures throughout the year are around the England average,cite web | year = 2001 | url = http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/climate/uk/averages/19712000/areal/england.html | title = England 1971-2000 averages | publisher = Met Office | accessdate = 2007-07-10] and as with most of England, Sutton Bonington is in AHS Heat zone 2. [ Areas in American Horticultural Society Heat zone 2 experience one to seven days per year with maximum temperatures above 30 °C.] The average annual rainfall is about convert|606|mm|in|0, with October to January being the wettest period but July being the wettest month, compared with the national average of convert|838|mm|in|0.

These are average temperature and rainfall figures taken between 1971 and 2000 at the Met Office weather station on Sutton Bonington campus. Sutton Bonington weather station opened in 1908 [cite web
url=http://badc.nerc.ac.uk/data/surface/station_lists/midas_stations.html
title=UK Surface Data - Detailed List of Met Office stations
publisher=badc.nerc.ac.uk
accessdate=2008-05-11
last=
first=
] .

Gallery

References

"see also University of Nottingham Medical School at Derby and University of Nottingham Medical School"
* [http://www.thisisnottingham.co.uk/displayNode.jsp?nodeId=133965&command=displayContent&sourceNode=133948&contentPK=13039938&moduleName=InternalSearch&formname=sidebarsearch Nottingham Evening Post article on Jubilee Campus Development]
* [http://www.nottingham21.co.uk/build_jubilee_campus_thumbnail.htm Photographs of The Jubilee Campus, including the Aspire Tower from Nottingham21]
* [http://www.nottinghamcity.gov.uk/cdpl_jubilee.pdf Nottingham City Council Jubilee Campus Development Brief]


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