Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Major projects are set to transform uni’s campus

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includes an entire floor and facilities designed to enable A-level and BTEC students to get access to advanced equipment and stimulate their passion for science.

The most ambitious of the current projects is the £30m Barbara Hepworth Building, the new home of the university’s School of Art, Design and Architectu­re. The foundation stone was laid earlier this year by university chancellor the Duke of York and contractor­s Morgan Sindall are on target for the July 2019 completion date.

The Barbara Hepworth Building will stand on a site once occupied by the foundry belonging to engineerin­g firm Thomas Broadbent.

Still standing is the 1955 workers’ bath house, which was designed by long-establishe­d Huddersfie­ld practice Abbey Hanson Rowe – now global architectu­re firm AHR.

The company will take on the sensitive task of turning the bath house – which has features influenced by legendary US architect Frank Lloyd Wright – into an art café to provide a new hub and meeting place for the town.

Already completed by contractor Bardsley Constructi­on is an £8.3m refurbishm­ent of the Joseph Priestley Building, home to the university’s School of Applied Sciences.

Work now begins on an adjacent £18.2m science block with labs dedicated to the study of biology, chemistry and optometry – an allnew course.

The building will be ready by July 2019 and includes the important innovation of an outreach floor. Architects for the science block are ADP – their first project for the university. The contractor is BAM, whose past assignment­s include the Business School, the Creative Arts Building and the Harold Wilson Building.

Other projects include a new £2m electricit­y substation that will ensure the university’s campus can meet an increased demand for power. The contractor for this is Britcon.

There are also £400,000 of improvemen­ts at the Charles Sikes Building, home to the Huddersfie­ld Business School, including the creation of a business developmen­t area. Carrying out the work is rfm Constructi­on Management, its first collaborat­ion with the university.

Others include £500,000 of improvemen­ts to the university’s library, undertaken by Milnsbridg­e-based contractor Illingwort­h and Gregory. Contractor Jackson Lifts is carrying £500,000 of upgrades to lifts in three of the university’s main buildings.

A car park at Wakefield Road next to the Schwann and Oastler buildings will be brought back into use with a £100,000 scheme designed by architects Jefferson Sheard that will include a number of electric vehicle charging points.

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