The Scotsman

Anonymous donor gives £10m towards university upgrade

- By SHÂN ROSS

informatic­s can tackle inequality. The donation will help give it a permanent home. A wing of the Category A-listed former Royal Infirmary, which is now part of the Quartermil­e developmen­t, will be sensitivel­y renovated.

The restored building which has lain empty since 2003 will be open to the public when it is completed in 2021.

The institute will play an important part in ambitious plans to make Edinburgh and its surroundin­g area Europe’s data capital.

When it moves into the former Royal Infirmary in 2021, it will be one of the largest centres for interdisci­plinary learning and research in Europe.

It will showcase the university’s world-renowned expertise in the humanities, social sciences and arts, alongside its sector-leading work in data science – the collecting, organising and interpreti­ng of large sets of digital informatio­n. The Institute will also be looking at public policy, finance, and the arts.

Welcoming the donation, Professor Sir Timothy O’shea, university vice-chancellor, said: “We are deeply grateful for this visionary gift to the university, which will help us to create a truly exceptiona­l teaching and research environmen­t within the Edinburgh Futures Institute.

“The institute will challenge us to think differentl­y about how we can affect change, both locally and globally.”

Professor Dorothy Miell, vice-principal and head of the college of arts, humanities and social sciences, said:“the world is experienci­ng major changes. This presents big challenges. We need different ways of thinking about these issues and of devising new solutions.

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