The
University of Birmingham (informally
Birmingham University) is a British
'Redbrick' university located in the city of Birmingham
, England
.
Founded in
Edgbaston
in 1900 as a successor to Mason Science College, and with
origins dating back to the 1825 Birmingham
Medical School
, it was the first British university to gain official
royal charter in the 20th
century.
It is a member of the
Russell Group of
research universities and a founding member of
Universitas 21. The student population
includes around 16,500
undergraduate
and 8000
postgraduate students, making
it the largest university in the
West Midlands region. As of 2006-07 it
is the fourth most popular English university by number of
applications. The annual income of the institution for 2007-08 was
£411.6m, with an expenditure of
£393.2m.
Described as "Large, prestigious and rather grand" by
The Guardian newspaper, the university is
ranked nationally between 11th (
ARWU) and 27th
(
The Independent), and
internationally between 66th (
The Times HES) and
94th (
ARWU)
as of 2009/10. Birmingham was ranked 12th in the UK in the 2008
Research Assessment
Exercise, the best result in the
West Midlands region, with 16 per
cent of the university's research regarded as 'world-leading' and a
further 41 per cent as 'internationally excellent', and particular
strengths in the fields of music, physics, computer science,
mechanical engineering, European studies and law. Birmingham's
sport activities have been consistently ranked within the top three
in British Universities competitions for the past 15 years.
Campuses
Main campus
The main
campus of the university occupies a site some south-west of
Birmingham city centre, in Edgbaston
. It is arranged around Joseph
Chamberlain Memorial Clock Tower
(affectionately known as 'Old Joe'), a grand
campanile which commemorates the
university's first chancellor, Joseph
Chamberlain. The university's Great Hall is located in
the domed
Aston Webb Building, which is
named after one of the architects - the other was
Ingress Bell. The initial site was given to the
university in 1900 by Lord Calthorpe.
The grand buildings
were an outcome of the £50,000 given by steel magnate and
philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to
establish a "first class modern scientific college" on the model of
the Ivy League Cornell
University
in the United States
. Funding was also provided by Sir
Charles Holcroft.
The original domed buildings, built in Accrington red brick,
semicircle to form Chancellor's Court. This sits on a drop, so the
architects placed their buildings on two tiers with a drop between
them. The clock tower stands in the centre of the Court.
The
campanile itself draws its inspiration from the Torre del
Mangia
, a medieval clock tower that forms part of the
Town
Hall
in Siena
, Italy
. When
it was built, it was described as 'the intellectual beacon of the
Midlands' by the
Birmingham Post. The clock tower was
Birmingham's tallest building from the date of its construction in
1908 until 1969; it is now the third highest in the city. It is one
of the top 50 tallest buildings in the UK, and the tallest
free-standing clock tower in the world, although there is some
confusion about its actual height, with the university listing it
both as and tall, and other sources stating that it is tall.
The campus has a wide diversity in architectural types and
architects. "What makes Birmingham so exceptional among the Red
Brick universities is the deployment of so many other major
Modernist practices: only Oxford and Cambridge boast greater
selections". The Guild of Students original section facing King
Edward School was designed by Birmingham inter-war architect
Holland Hobbiss who also designed
the King Edward school opposite. It was described as "Redbrick
Tudorish" by
Nikolaus
Pevsner.
The statue
on horseback fronting the entrance to the university and Barber
Institute of Fine Arts
is a 1722 statue of George I rescued from Dublin in
1937. This was saved by Bodkin, a director of the National
Gallery of Ireland and first director of the Barber Institute. The
statue was commissioned by the
Dublin
Corporation from the Flemish sculptor
John van Nost.
Final negotiations for part of what is now the Vale were only
completed in March 1947. By then, properties which would have their
names used for halls of residences such as Wyddrington and Maple
Bank were under discussion and more land was obtained from the
Calthorpe estate in 1948 and 1949 providing the setting for the
Vale. Construction on the Vale started in 1962 with the creation of
a artificial lake and the building of Ridge, High, Wyddrington and
Lake Halls. The first, Ridge Hall, opened for 139 women in January
1964, with its counterpart High Hall (now Chamberlain Hall)
admitting its first male residents the following October.
1960s and modern expansion

The university's Learning Centre and
Faraday sculpture
The university underwent a major expansion in the 1960s due to the
production of a masterplan by Casson, Conder and Partners. The
first of the major buildings to be constructed to a design by the
firm was the Refectory and Staff House which was built in 1961 and
1962. The two buildings are connected by a bridge. The next major
buildings to be constructed were the Wyddrington and Lake Halls and
the Faculty of Commerce and Social Science, all completed in 1965.
The Wyddrington and Lake Halls, on Edgbaston Park Road, were
designed by H. T. Cadbury-Brown and contain three floors of student
dwellings above a single floor of communal facilities.
The Faculty of Commerce and Social Science, now known as the Ashley
Building, was designed by Howell, Killick, Partridge and Amis and
is a long, curving two-storey block linked to a five-storey
whorl. The two-storey block follows the curve
of the road, and has load-bearing brick cross walls. It is faced in
specially-made concrete blocks. The spiral is faced with faceted
pre-cast concrete cladding panels. It was
statutorily listed in 1993 and a
refurbishment by
Berman Guedes
Stretton was completed in 2006.
Chamberlain, Powell and Bon were commissioned to design the
Physical Education Centre which was built in 1966. The main
characteristic of the building is the roof of the changing rooms
and small gymnasium which has hyperbolic paraboloid roof light
shells and is completely paved in quarry tiles. The roof of the
sports hall consists of eight conoidal 2½-inch think sprayed
concrete shells springing from long pre-stressed valley beams. On
the south elevation, the roof is supported on raking pre-cast
columns and reversed shells form a
cantilevered canopy.

Muirhead Tower
Also completed in 1966 was the Mining and Minerals Engineering and
Physical Metallurgy Departments, which was designed by
Philip Dowson of
Arup
Associates. This complex consisted of four similar three-storey
blocks linked at the corners. The frame is of pre-cast reinforced
concrete with columns in groups of four and the whole is planned as
a tartan grid, allowing services to be carried vertically and
horizontally so that at no point in a room are services more than
ten feet away. The building received the 1966
RIBA Architecture
Award for the West Midlands. It was
statutorily listed in 1993. Taking the full
five years from 1962 to 1967, Birmingham erected twelve buildings
which each cost in excess of a quarter of a million pounds.
In 1967 Lucas House, a new hall of residence designed by
The John Madin Design Group, was completed,
providing 150 study bedrooms. It was constructed in the garden of a
large house. The Medical School was extended in 1967 to a design by
Leonard J. Multon and Partners.
The two-storey building was part of a complex
which covers the southside of Metchley Fort
, a Roman fort. In 1968, the Institute for
Education in the Department for Education was opened. This was
another Casson, Conder and Partners-designed building. The complex
consisted of a group of buildings centred around an eight-storey
block, containing study offices, laboratories and teaching rooms.
The building has a reinforced concrete frame which is exposed
internally and the external walls are of silver-grey rustic bricks.
The roofs of the lecture halls, penthouse and Child Study wing are
covered in copper.
Arup Associates returned in the 1960s to design the Arts and
Commerce Building, better known as Muirhead Tower. This was
completed in 1969. A £42 million refurbishment of the 16-storey
tower was completed in 2009 and it now houses the Colleges of
Social Sciences and the Cadbury Research Library as well as
containing office space for Information Services. The podium was
remodelled around the existing Allardyce Nicol studio theatre,
providing additional rehearsal spaces and changing and technical
facilities. The ground floor lobby now incorporates a
Starbucks coffee shop. The name, Muirhead Tower,
came from that of the first philosophy professor of the
University.
Other features
Located
within the Edgbaston site of the university is the Winterbourne
Botanic Garden
, a 24,000 square metre (258,000 square foot)
Edwardian Arts and crafts style garden. There
has been much recent development on the western part of the campus.
There are new academic buildings, including a learning resource
centre and Computer Science department. The massive statue in the
foreground was a gift to the University by its sculptor Sir Edward
Paolozzi - the sculpture is named 'Faraday', and has an excerpt
from the poem 'The Dry Salvages' by
T.
S. Eliot
around its base.
Since November 2007, the university has been holding a
farmers' market on the campus. Birmingham is
the first university in the country to have an accredited farmers'
market.
The
University of Birmingham operates the Lapworth
Museum of Geology
in the Aston Webb Building in Edgbaston
. It is named after
Charles Lapworth, a geologist who worked at
Mason Science College.
The considerable extent of the estate meant that by the end of the
1990s it was valued at £536 million.
Selly Oak campus
The
university's Selly
Oak
campus is a short distance to the south of the main
campus. It was the home of a federation of nine higher
education colleges, mainly focused on theology and education, which
were integrated into the university for teaching in 1999. Among
these was Westhill College (later the University of Birmingham,
Westhill), which merged with the University's School of Education
in 2001. The UK
daytime
television show
Doctors is filmed on this
campus. The University also has buildings at several other sites in
the city.
History
Birmingham Medical School and Mason Science College

A view across Chancellor's Court,
towards the Law building
Although
the earliest beginnings of the University were previously traced
back to the Birmingham Medical School
which is linked to William Sands Cox in his aim of creating a
medical school along strictly Christian lines, unlike the London
medical schools. Further research has now revealed the roots
of the Birmingham
Medical School
in the medical education seminars of Mr John Tomlinson the first surgeon to the
Birmingham Workhouse
Infirmary, and later to the General Hospital. These
classes were the first ever held outside London or south of the
Scottish border in the winter of 1767-68. The first clinical
teaching was undertaken by medical and surgical apprentices at the
General Hospital, opened in 1779. The medical school which grew out
of the
Birmingham
Workhouse Infirmary was founded in 1828 but Cox began teaching
in December 1825. Queen Victoria granted her patronage to the
Clinical Hospital in Birmingham and allowed it to be styled "The
Queen's Hospital". It was the first provincial teaching hospital in
England. In 1843, the medical college became known as Queen's
College.
On February 23, 1875, Sir
Josiah Mason,
the Birmingham
industrialist and
philanthropist, who made his fortune
in making key rings, pens, pen nibs and electroplating, founded
Mason Science College. It was
this institution that would eventually form the nucleus of the
University of Birmingham. In 1882, the Departments of
Chemistry,
Botany and
Physiology were transferred to Mason
Science College, soon followed by the Departments of
Physics and
Comparative Anatomy. The transfer of the
Medical School to Mason Science College gave considerable impetus
to the growing importance of that college and in 1896 a move to
incorporate it as a
university
college was made. As the result of the Mason University College
Act 1897 it became incorporated as Mason University College on
January 1, 1898, with the Right Honourable
Joseph Chamberlain MP becoming the
President of its Court of Governors.
Royal Charter

Ceiling of the Aston Webb
building
It was largely due to Chamberlain's tireless enthusiasm that the
university was granted a
Royal Charter
by
Queen Victoria on
March 24, 1900.
The Calthorpe family offered twenty-five
acres (10 hectares) of land on the Bournbrook
side of their estate in July. The Court of
Governors received the Birmingham University Act 1900, which put
the
Royal Charter into effect, on May
31. Birmingham was therefore arguably the first so-called
red brick university, although
several other universities claim this title.
The transfer of Mason University College to the new University of
Birmingham, with Chamberlain as its first
Chancellor and
Sir Oliver Lodge as the first
Principal, was complete. All that
remained of Josiah Mason's legacy was his Mermaid in the sinister
chief of the university shield and of his college, the
double-headed lion in the dexter. It became the first civic and
campus university in England. The University
Charter of 1900 also included provision for a Faculty of Commerce,
as was appropriate for a university itself founded by
industrialists and based in a city with enormous business wealth,
in effect creating the first Business School in England.
Consequently, the faculty, the first of its kind in Britain, was
founded by Sir
William Ashley in 1901,
who from 1902 until 1923 served as first Professor of Commerce and
Dean of the Faculty. From 1905 to 1908,
Edward Elgar held the position of Peyton
Professor of Music at the university. He was succeeded by his
friend
Granville Bantock.
Expansion
In 1939,
the Barber
Institute of Fine Arts
, designed by Robert
Atkinson, was opened. In 1956, the first MSc programme
in
Geotechnical Engineering
commenced under the title of "Foundation Engineering", and has been
run annually at the University of Birmingham since. It was the
first geotechnical post-graduate school in England. The UK's
longest-running MSc programme in Physics and Technology of Nuclear
Reactors also started at the University of Birmingham in 1956, the
same year that the world's first commercial nuclear power station
was opened at Calder Hall in Cumbria. In 1957, Sir
Hugh Casson and
Neville Conder were asked by the university
to prepare a masterplan on the site of the original 1900 buildings
which were incomplete. The university drafted in other architects
to amend the masterplan produced by the group. During the 1960s,
the university constructed numerous large buildings, expanding the
campus.
In 1963, the University of Birmingham helped
in the establishment of the faculty of medicine at the University
of Rhodesia, now the University of Zimbabwe
(UZ). UZ is now independent; however,
student exchange programs persist.
In 1973, University railway station
, on the Cross-City
Line, was opened to serve the university. The university
is the only university in Britain with its own railway
station.
Birmingham also supported the creation of
Keele
(formerly University College of North
Staffordshire) and Warwick
Universities under the Vice-Chancellorship of Sir
Robert Aitken who acted as 'Godfather to the University of
Warwick'. The initial plan was for a university
college in Coventry
attached to Birmingham but Aitken advised an
independent initiative to the University Grants
Committee.
Achievements
The university has been involved in many important inventions and
developments in science. The
cavity
magnetron was developed at the university in the Physics
Department by
John Randall,
Harry Boot and Jim Sayers. This was vital
to the Allied victory in
World War II.
In 1940, the
Frisch-Peierls
memorandum, a document which demonstrated that the
atomic bomb was more than simply theoretically
possible, was written in the Physics Department. The university
also hosted early work on
Gaseous
diffusion in the Chemistry department when it was located in
the Hills building. Many windows in the Aston Webb building
overlooking the former fume cupboards were opaque from being
attacked by
hydrofluoric acid well
into recent years.
In 1943,
Mark Oliphant made an early
proposal for the construction of a proton-
synchrotron, however he made no assurance that
the machine would work. When phase stability was discovered in
1945, the proposal was resurrected and construction of a machine at
the university that could surpass 1
GeV. The
university was aiming to construct the first machine to do this,
however, funds were short and the machine did not start until 1953.
They were
beaten by the Brookhaven National
Laboratory
, who managed to start their Cosmotron in 1952, and get it fully working in
1953, before the University of Birmingham.
Organisation
Academic departments

View from the Muirhead Tower, showing
(foreground l-r) the Metallurgy and Materials building, IRC Net
Shape Laboratory and Gisbert Kapp building.
The city centre can be seen in the background to the
north.
Being a large university Birmingham has departments covering a wide
range of subjects. On August 1, 2008, the university's system was
restructured into five 'colleges', which are composed of numerous
'schools':
The
university is home to a number of internationally renowned research
centres and schools, including the Birmingham
Business School
, the oldest business school in England (which is
accredited by both AMBA and EQUIS), the University of Birmingham Medical
School
, which produces more medical doctors than any other
university in Britain, the Institute of Local
Government Studies, the Centre of West African
Studies, the European Research Institute, the Centre of Excellence for
Research in Computational Intelligence and Applications and the
Shakespeare
Institute.
Between 1964 and 2002, the University of Birmingham was also home
to the
Centre
for Contemporary Cultural Studies, a leading research centre
whose members' work came to be known as the Birmingham School of
Cultural Studies. Despite being established by one of the key
figures in the founding of Cultural Studies,
Richard Hoggart, and being later directed by
the renowned theorist
Stuart Hall, the department
was controversially closed down.
Libraries and collections

The main library
The university's Library Services department operates 10 libraries
across the Edgbaston campus, Selly Oak campus, Birmingham City
Centre and Stratford-upon-Avon. The University of Birmingham also
contains a number of collections of rare books and manuscripts. The
library has a large number of pre-1850 books dating from 1471 with
approximately 3 million manuscripts. The library also contains the
Chamberlain collection of papers from
Neville Chamberlain,
Joseph Chamberlain and
Austen Chamberlain, the Avon Papers
belonging to
Antony Eden with material
on the
Suez Crisis, the Cadbury Papers
relating to the
Cadbury firm from
1900 to 1960, the Mingana Collection of Middle Eastern Manuscripts,
the
Noel Coward Collection, the papers
of Edward Elgar,
Oswald Mosley, and
David Lodge, and the records of
the English
YMCA and of the
Church Missionary Society.
NHS hospitals

Right
The University of Birmingham's medical school is one of the largest
in Europe with well over 450 medical students being trained in each
of the clinical years and over 1,000 teaching, research, technical
and administrative staff. The school has centres of excellence in
cancer, immunology, cardiovascular disease, neuroscience and
endocrinology and renowned nationally and internationally for its
research and developments in these fields. The medical school has
close links with the
NHS and works closely with
15 teaching hospitals and 50 primary care training practices in the
West Midlands.
The
University
Hospital Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust is the main teaching
hospital in the West Midlands. It is very successful and has been
given three stars for the past four consecutive years.
The trust also hosts
the Royal Centre for Defence Medicine, based at Selly Oak
Hospital
, which provides medical support to military
personnel such as military returned from fighting in the Iraq War.
Off-campus establishments
A number of the university's centres, schools and institutes are
located away from its two campuses in Edgbaston and Selly Oak:
Chancellors
Birmingham has had six
Chancellors since gaining its royal
charter in 1900. The current Vice-Chancellor is Professor
David Eastwood. The first Chancellor of
Birmingham was
Joseph
Chamberlain, he was the first commoner in 240 years to hold the
post of Chancellor of a British university, and the first such
chancellor ever not to have been a member of the
Established Church.
Reputation
Earth Sciences, Aston Webb building and Clocktower.
The university is ranked 22nd in
The
Times 2010
Good University Guide, and 24th in
The Guardian's 2010 rankings.
In October 2009, the University was ranked 66th best in the world
and 12th in the UK by
The Times Higher Education
Supplement.
It is rated equal 91st best university in
the world, 30th in Europe and 11th in the UK in the 2008 Institute
of Higher Education, Shanghai Jiao Tong University
(IHE-SJTU) Academic Ranking of World
Universities, and 85th-87th by Global University
Ranking.
Owing to Birmingham's role as a centre of light engineering, the
University traditionally had a special focus on science,
engineering and commerce, as well as
coal
mining. It now teaches a full range of academic subjects and
has five-star rating for teaching and research in several
departments; additionally, it is widely regarded as making a
prominent contribution to cancer studies, hosting the first
Cancer Research UK Centre.
The University is particularly known for its research. In the 2001
Research Assessment
Exercise, two thirds of The University's departments ranked
nationally or internationally outstanding. Languages, mathematics,
biological sciences, physiotherapy, sociology and electrical and
electronic engineering all recorded maximum points.It was rated
fifth in the UK for research quality, with 32 departments holding a
5 or 5* rating.The Department of Political Science and
International Studies (POLSIS) ranked 4th in the UK and 22nd in the
world in the Hix rankings of political science departments. The
sociology department also ranked 4th by the Guardian University
guide. According to the results of the
Research Assessment Exercise
2008, 90% of the University of Birmingham’s research activity has
international impact. The Research Fortnight’s University Power
Ranking, based on quality and quantity of research activity, put
the University of Birmingham 12th in the UK, leading the way across
a broad range of disciplines including Primary Care, Cancer
Studies, Psychology and Sport and Exercise Sciences.
As is the case with all of the '
redbrick'
civic institutions, the University of Birmingham holds a sizeable
student body and teaches a comparatively broader range of courses
than smaller institutions. After taking up his post as
vice-chancellor in April 2009,
David
Eastwood said:
When I was appointed, people described this
university as a sleeping giant, and there is this feeling that
although this is a great university, we could do even better.
This is a university which can do yet more and I am here to
play my part. That is the challenge, but it's not an easy
challenge as we are competing in a global environment. We
have some terrific, genuinely global leading research at this
university, but we need to build on our research strengths and
increase further the quality of our research and the impact of our
research. Cancer research is as good here as anywhere, we
have one of the best three psychology courses in the country, the
best music departments and best sports science degrees in the
country, and very good engineering. One of the great
attractions of this university is that we have the breadth that
other universities dream of, but it's fundamentally about building
on our strengths.
League table rankings
|
UK
university rankings |
World university rankings |
|
The Times Good
University Guide |
The Guardian
University Guide |
Sunday Times
University Guide |
Independent Complete
University Guide |
Daily Telegraph |
Financial Times |
THES - QS World
University Rankings |
Academic Ranking
of World Universities |
| 2010 |
22nd |
24th |
20th= |
27th |
|
|
|
|
| 2009 |
26th |
30th |
24th= |
24th |
|
|
66th |
94th= |
| 2008 |
26th |
18th |
24th |
31st |
|
|
75th |
91st |
| 2007 |
33rd |
16th |
23rd |
|
31st= |
|
65th= |
92nd |
| 2006 |
23rd |
16th |
28th |
|
|
|
90th |
90th |
| 2005 |
20th |
29th |
23rd |
|
|
|
143rd |
98th |
| 2004 |
15th= |
22nd |
25th |
|
|
|
|
|
| 2003 |
17th |
14th |
20th |
|
18th |
16th |
|
|
| 2002 |
14th |
16th |
20th |
|
|
18th |
|
|
| 2001 |
13th |
|
14th |
|
|
13th |
|
|
| 2000 |
13th |
|
15th |
|
|
15th |
|
|
| 1999 |
16th |
|
14th |
|
|
15th |
|
|
| 1998 |
14th |
|
13th |
|
|
|
|
|
| 1997 |
18th |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 1996 |
17th= |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 1995 |
10th= |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 1994 |
7th |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 1993 |
16th |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Student life
Guild of Students

Right
The University of Birmingham Guild of Students is the university's
student union. Originally the Guild
of Undergraduates, it is unclear when the Guild was formally
established. It is also not certain why it is called the Guild of
Students and not the Union of Students; it is widely thought among
Guild officers and staff that the university imposed this name at
the Guild's genesis to avoid socialist and working class
connotations in favour of more professional ones. Indeed, the Guild
shares its name with
Liverpool Guild of Students.
Both organisations subsequently founded the
National Union
of Students. The Union Building, the Guild's bricks and mortar
presence, was designed by the architect
Holland W. Hobbiss.
The Guild's official purposes are to represent its members and
provide a means of socialising, though societies and general
amenities. The university provides the Guild with the Union
Building effectively rent free, and a block grant. In 2005-6, this
grant amounted to approximately £1.2 million, roughly equivalent to
£50 per student.
The Guild undertakes its representative function through its
officer group, seven of whom are full time, on sabbatical from
their studies. Elections are held yearly, conventionally February,
for the following academic year. These officers have regular
contact with the university's officer-holders and managers. In
theory, the Guild's officers are directed and kept to account over
their year in office by Guild Council, a 500 seat
pseudo-legislature. The Guild also supports the university "student
reps" scheme, which aims to provide an effective channel of
feedback from students on more of a departmental level.
The Guild supports a variety of student societies, roughly around
180 at any one time. The Guild was the UK's first student union
with a film studio, one of the first to broadcast its radio station
BurnFM.com online, and one of the few
still to publish its campus newspaper,
Redbrick, weekly.
Another two of the Guild's long-standing societies are Student
Advice and Nightline (previously Niteline), which both provide
peer-to-peer welfare support.
The Guild complements these societies with
professional staffed services, including its walk-in Advice and
Representation Centre (ARC), Job Zone, Student Mentors in halls,
and Community Wardens around Bournbrook
.
The Guild also runs several bars, eateries, social spaces and
social events.
Housing
The university provides housing for most first-year students,
running a guarantee scheme for all those UK applicants who choose
Birmingham as their firm UCAS choice. 90 per cent of
university-provided housing is inhabited by first-year
students.
The university has spent the last few years re-organising their
accommodation offering. The university maintained gender-segregated
halls until 1999 when Lake and Wyddrington "halls" (treated as two
different halls, despite being physically one building) was reborn
as Shackleton. University House was decommissioned as accommodation
to house the expanding Business School, while Mason Hall has been
demolished and rebuilt, opening in 2008. Shackleton is now the only
hall providing catering, although other students are welcome to
join its meal plan. In the summer of 2006, the university sold
three of its most distant halls (Hunter Court, the Beeches and
Queens Hospital Close) to private operators, while later in the
year and during term, the university was forced urgently to
decommission both Chamberlain Tower and Manor House over fire
safety inspection failures. The university has rebranded its halls
offerings into three villages.
Vale Village
The Vale Village includes Chamberlain Hall, Shackleton, Maple Bank,
Tennis Court, Elgar Court, Aitken and Chelwood residences. A sixth
hall of residence, Mason Hall, re-opened in September 2008
following a complete rebuild. Approximately 1,900 students live in
the village.

The Vale Village, overlooking
Shackleton Hall
Shackleton Hall underwent an £11 million refurbishment and was
re-opened in Autumn 2004. There are 72 flats housing a total of 350
students. The majority of the units consist of six to eight
bedrooms, together with a small number of one, two, three or five
bedroom studio/apartments. The redevelopment was designed by
Birmingham-based archtitect Patrick Nicholls while employed at
Aedas now a director of Glancy Nicholls Architects. Maple Bank was
refurbished and opened in summer 2005. It consists of 87 five
bedroom flats, housing 435 undergraduates. The Elgar Court
residence consists of 40 six bedroom flats, housing a total of 236
students. It is the newest residence to be built, opening in
September 2003. Tennis Court consists of 138 three, four, five and
six bedroom flats and houses 697 students. The Aitken wing is a
small complex consisting of 24 six and eight bedroom flats. It
houses 147 students. Chelwood is situated at the top of the Vale
village overlooking the lake, and comprises 50 en-suite
bedrooms.
Construction of Mason Hall commenced in June 2006. It has been
designed by Aedas Architects who submitted the design in August
2005. Norwest Holst Ltd are the
contractor, and Couch Perry Wilkes are
the services engineers, DTA are the
structural engineers, Faithful &
Gould are the
quantity surveyors
and CDM Project Safety are the planning supervisors. The entire
project is expected to cost £36.75 million.
The largest student-run event at the university, and indeed
possibly in the UK, is also held on the Vale. The
Vale Festival is a large annual music
festival, attracting crowds of over 5,000 and boasting over forty
bands across five stages and a multitude of other activities and
events. It raises over £30,000 a year for charities.
Pritchatts Park Village
The Pritchatts Park Village houses over 700 students both
undergraduate and postgraduate students. Halls include 'Ashcroft',
'The Spinney' and 'Oakley Court', as well as 'Pritchatts House' and
the 'Pritchatts Road Houses' The Spinney is a small complex of six
houses and twelve smaller flats, housing 104 students in total.
Ashcroft consists of four purpose built blocks of flats and houses
198 students. The four-storey Pritchatts House consists of 24
duplex units and houses 159 students. Oakley Court consists of 21
individual purpose-built flats, ranging in size from five to
thirteen bedrooms. Also included are 36 duplex units. A total of
213 students are housed in Oakley Court, made up of undergraduates.
Oakley Court was completed in 1993 at a cost of £2.9 million. It
was designed by Birmingham-based
Associated Architects. Pritchatts Road
is a group of four private houses that were converted into student
residences. There is a maximum of 16 bedrooms per house.
Accommodation at Five Ways
Other Self-catering student accommodation include The Beeches,
which is small with 48 flats housing 240 undergraduate students on
the outskirts of the village. Hunter Court, also located on the
outskirts of the village, consists of 64 flats with five and some
seven study bedrooms and houses 332 undergraduate students.
Queens Hospital Close, located on the
outskirts of the village near Broad Street
, consists of 52 units of mainly six study bedrooms
and some eight and ten bedroom flats. It houses 330
students.
Selly Oak Village
Selly Oak Village consists of three residences; Jarratt Hall,
Douper Hall and Victoria Hall.
The term ‘Selly Oak Village’ is rather
misleading here, for despite its name the halls themselves are
actually located in Bournbrook
rather than in Selly Oak
. The village has 637 bed spaces for
students. Douper Hall consists of 28 flats accommodating from two
to six persons for 117 undergraduate and postgraduate students.
Jarratt Hall is a large complex designed around a central courtyard
and three landscaped areas. It houses a mixture of 620
undergraduate and postgraduate students.
Non-university accommodation
Until recently, the university had not been served by many private
halls; a sole Victoria Halls was built in 2001. However, alongside
the former university halls of Hunter Court, the Beeches and
Queens Hospital Close, a
number of other private halls aimed at the University of Birmingham
market opened for business in 2007, such as Opal 1 on Bristol Road
and IQFive on Bath Row near Five Ways.
A large
number of students cohabit in rented houses, mainly in the Bournbrook
area. However an increasingly large number
of students are thought to be local, continuing to live in the
family home.
University Sport

One of the many university athletics
fields
The university has many successful sports teams and has been
consistently ranked in the top three of the
British Universities
& Colleges Sport (BUCS) league table. The university's
reputation for sport is a long-standing one; in 1954 it became the
first UK university to offer a sports degree, and until 1968
exercise was compulsory for all students. In 2004 six graduates and
one current student competed in the Athens olympic games.
University Sport Birmingham (USB) offers a wide range of
competitive and participation sports, which is utilised by the
student and local population of Birmingham. Alongside fitness
classes such as yoga and aerobics, USB offers over 40 different
sport teams, including
rowing,
cricket,
football,
rugby
union,
field hockey,
American football (Birmingham Lions),
ice hockey (Birmingham Eagles),
triathlon and many more. The wide selection has
ensured the university has remained one of the country's most
active and colourful campuses with over 2000 students participating
in sport.
USB offers over 40 scholarships and bursaries to national and
international students of exceptional athletic ability.
The university sports centre was originally designed to have the
swimming pool on stilts. The design had to be revised once it was
realised that the structure would be unable to support the weight
of water. The model of the university in the Great Hall shows the
original design.
In popular culture
David Lodge's novel Changing Places tells the story of
exchange of professors between the universities of Rummidge and Euphoric State, Plotinus, thinly
disguised fictional versions of Birmingham and UC
Berkeley
, which in the book both have replicas of the
Leaning
Tower of Pisa
on campus.
The
university campus has been used as a filming location for a number
of film and television productions, particularly those of the
BBC which has a presence at the university's
Selly
Oak
campus, the BBC Drama Village
. Scenes from the
John
Cleese film
Clockwise
were filmed at the campus' east entrance, while several episodes of
the BBC detective series
Dalziel and Pascoe,
daytime soap
Doctors and
CBBC series
Brum have been filmed in and around
campus. Interior and exterior scenes for a BBC adaptation of
Birmingham alumnus
David Lodge's novel
Nice Work and BBC comedy drama
A Very Peculiar
Practice were also shot in and around the University
campus and halls of residence with a number of students appearing
as extras. A trailer for the BBC's
Red Nose Day 2007, featuring
Lou and Andy from
Little Britain, was filmed near the
School of Biosciences.
Post punk band
Joy
Division played their final gig at the University High Hall on
May 2, 1980 (now known as Chamberlain Hall), 16 days before the
suicide of singer/songwriter,
Ian Curtis.
A recording of the performance accompanies the
Still compilation album. It
includes one of only two available recordings of the song "
Ceremony" (the other being a demo
rehearsal), which would later become a single for
New Order. Fairport Convention recorded much of
the live album "Farewell, Farewell" at Lake Hall during the May
Ball on 11 May 1979, using the Island Records mobile studio.
Branding

The University's logo from the 1980s
until 2005
The original coat of arms was designed in 1900. It features a
double headed lion (on the left) and a mermaid holding a mirror and
comb (to the right). These symbols owe to the coat of arms of the
institutions predecessor, Mason College.
In 2005 the university began rebranding itself. A simplified
edition of the shield which had been introduced in the 1980s
reverted to a detailed version based on how it appears on the
university's original Royal Charter. After a research project into
the image of the university, it was decided that a separate logo
was required to redefine the institution as modern and
contemporary. A new 'word marque', using the "U and B" letters and
the
Baskerville font (in honour of the
Birmingham printer
John
Baskerville) is used as the primary logo when trying to attract
both prospective investors and students. It is also found on campus
vehicles. The traditional coat of arms, by contrast, appears on
degree certificates and academic documents. The introduction of new
signage throughout the campus, featuring the shield rather than the
"U and B" logo, was completed at the end of 2006.
Notable alumni
Birmingham's alumni include the British
Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain, the
politicians Baroness Amos, MP
Ann Widdecombe, former Singapore Minister of
Finance
Hu Tsu Tau Richard and
China's
Chen Liangyu, General Sir
Mike Jackson, formerly the
most senior officer in the
British
Army, TV personality
Chris
Tarrant, director
Fielder Cook,
actors
Tamsin Greig,
Norman Painting,
Victoria Wood,
Matthew Goode and
Jane
Wymark, the actor and musician
Tim
Curry, musician - lead singer of Duran Duran
Simon Le Bon, sailor
Lisa Clayton, athlete
Allison Curbishley, triathlete
Chrissie Wellington, zoologist
Desmond Morris, theologian
Robert Beckford, Chief Medical officer for
England Sir
Liam Donaldson, UN
weapons inspector
David
Kelly,
Manchester United
Chief Executive
David Gill,
and
Williams Formula One team co-founder
Patrick Head.
8
Nobel Prize Laureates are Birmingham alumni,
including
Francis Aston, Professor
Maurice Wilkins, Sir
John Vane, Sir
Paul
Nurse, Sir
Norman Haworth and
Professor Peter
Bullock.
Notes
- University of Birmingham: The Medical School
- University of Birmingham, The Guardian, 1 May
2007, accessed 19 May 2007
-
http://www.arwu.org/Country2009Main.jsp?param=United%20Kingdom
-
http://www.thecompleteuniversityguide.co.uk/single.htm?ipg=8726
- http://www.arwu.org/ARWU2009.jsp
- http://www.research.bham.ac.uk/rae/2008/
- RAE 2008
- The Carnegie Committee, Cornell Alumni
News, II(10), 29 November 1899, p. 6
- Ray Smallman, A hundred years of distinction, BUMS centenary
lecture, p. 5
- Foster, 2005, p.242-3.
- Braithwaite, 1987, p.20.
- Ives, 2000, p.230; Rupert Gunnis, Dictionary of British
Sculptors 1660-1851 (1968 revised edition), p.281 identifies
it as a 1717 work for Essex Bridge, Dublin.
- Ives, 2000, p.304
- Ives, 2000, p.338
- Signalling the Sixties: 1960s Architecture in
Birmingham
- Ives, 2000, p.336
- Muirhead Tower of the University of Birmingham
- Associated Architects: Muirhead Tower
- Ives, E. (2000). The First Civic University: Birmingham,
1880–1980 – An Introductory History. Birmingham: University of
Birmingham Press
-
http://www.medicine.bham.ac.uk/histmed/history.shtml#TheBeginning
- Keith Anderton, slevenotes, Bantock: Hebridean
Symphony, Naxos 8.555473, 1989
- Ives, 2000, p.342.
- Ives, 2000, p.343.
- University of Birmingham: Special Collections
- A collection-level description for the papers of
Edward Elgar, Archives Hub, accessed 6 January 2008
-
http://www.globaluniversitiesranking.org/images/banners/top-100(eng).pdf
- Profile: University of Birmingham, The
Times, 15 August 2007, accessed 27 August 2007
- Simon Hix, A
global ranking of political science departments, Political
Studies Review 2(3), pp. 293-313
- "University of Birmingham website - RAE 2008"
- "University of Birmingham website - Research
Fortnight"
- http://extras.timesonline.co.uk/stug/universityguide.php
-
http://www.thecompleteuniversityguide.co.uk/single.htm?ipg=8726
-
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/education/good_university_guide/article2099551.ece
- http://www.arwu.org/ARWU2009.jsp
- BUGS: Community Wardens
- The BUSA Championship Results 2005/2006, BUSA, 6 July
2006
- Red Nose Day: Video
- http://www.alumni.bham.ac.uk/your/ouralumni.shtml
References
External links
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