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Owens Park

Coordinates:53°26′42″N2°13′02″W / 53.44500°N 2.21722°W /53.44500; -2.21722
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(April 2009) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Building in Fallowfield, Manchester
Owens Park
Owens Park Tower Block in 1985
General information
Location293 Wilmslow Road,Fallowfield,Manchester
Coordinates53°26′42″N2°13′02″W / 53.44500°N 2.21722°W /53.44500; -2.21722
Construction started1964
Completed1966
Closed2021
Demolished2025
OwnerUniversity of Manchester
Height61 metres (200 ft)
Technical details
Floor count19
Design and construction
ArchitectBuilding Design Partnership
References
[1][2]

Owens Park was a largehall of residence located in theFallowfield district of the city ofManchester,England. The site is owned by theUniversity of Manchester and housed 1,056 students. Owens Park is a significant part of theFallowfield Campus of the University of Manchester. The terms 'Owens Park' and 'Fallowfield Campus' are sometimes used interchangeably. The first phase was completed in 1964 and the second in 1965.

The tower was vacated in 2021 and demolition completed in 2025.[3][4]

History

[edit]

The hall, designed byBuilding Design Partnership,[1] and built in 1964–66, is most notable for its 61-metre-high (200 ft) tower,[5] which is a local landmark. It has a fibreglass relief,Cosmos I, byMitzi Cunliffe, at the base.[1]

A 2001 plan by the University of Manchester to demolish the tower in 2004[6] was subsequently abandoned as a result of protests by current and past residents. In 2005 a refurbishment programme was planned. It was announced in 2014 that Owens Park is due to be demolished as part of the plans to redevelop the Fallowfield Campus with brand new student accommodation.[7]

In 2021, the halls closed as part of a wider ongoing regeneration of the Fallowfield Campus, with the halls delisted for incoming students beginning that year.[8] In early 2024, planning permission for the £400m redevelopment was given the green light, and it was confirmed that Owens Park would be demolished.[9][10]

Organisation

[edit]
Owens Park in 1975

Owens Park comprised five main residential blocks (Tower, Tree Court, Green Court, Little Court, and the Mall), an entertainment block (referred to as "The OP"), where the weeklyOwens Park BOP ('Big Old Party') used to take place, and an administration/library block. It also contained a computer cluster available to all students of the University.

The residential blocks were internally sub-divided into 'houses', each housing approximately 30-40 students. In the past, Tree Court was exclusively female, whilst the other blocks housed only male students. All block were of mixed sex, though any given floor in a house was single sex with exception to the tower. Each house had a supervising tutor and a common room. Each floor in a house had its own bathroom and kitchen. The halls were catered during the week.

There were generally rivalries between adjacent houses and other halls of residence, these were contested in sporting events such as football as each halls of residence generally have a team. Football matches are held each Wednesday and the occasional Saturday (for cup matches).

Owens Park Students' Association (OPSA) organised leisure and sporting activities, and was run by a committee formed of students who lived the hall.

Notable residents

[edit]

Radiohead guitaristEd O'Brien was a resident during his time at university in Manchester, as wasRik Mayall.[11] TheChemical Brothers played their first gig at the Owens Park BOP. The comedianJack Whitehall also lived in the Tower, where also the actorBenedict Cumberbatch stayed. Other residents includedPeter Hammill andChris Judge Smith who formedVan der Graaf Generator in 1967 while living there.[12]

The BOP

[edit]

Prior to September 2009 Owens Park BOP (Big Old Party) was a night held in Owens Park every Friday in the Owens Park tower's ballroom for students of theUniversity of Manchester. The BOP generally had a theme and from September 2008 charged £1 entry to residents, which had caused some outrage amongst residents as previously it had been free. It had a charge of £3.50 for all other entrants. Only students were allowed to enter the BOP and a student card must have been presented upon entry.

The BOP was a popular student night out due to its low cost of drinks and transport as most of the BOP's customers were residents of local student halls of residence. However, Owens Park residents had been known to have become disgruntled both at the terrible music often played by the DJs and the students from other halls of residence coming to the event with the large queues this created to gain access.

The BOP usually had a theme each week such as a western theme or a dead celebrity theme causing large numbers of students to dress up for the occasion.

The BOP was set out very much like a classic school disco except with the inclusion of the sale of alcohol. As a customer entered they were greeted with the main tower bar with its own DJ and a vast amount of seating; however, the main draw of the BOP lay in the large hall upstairs. Upstairs there was a second bar and a foyer-like drinking area, and next door there was a large conference hall. The large hall had a disco-like atmosphere and professional DJ on the stage, with small amounts of seating at the sides. The BOP was generally open from 8 pm till around 2 am; however, times had been known to vary.

The BOP was run by the Owens Park Student's Association Executive Committee (OPSA). The Committee is also in charge of running all other hall activities such as the pub quiz, karaoke, sports, and hall pub and club outings.

The BOP is known on a larger scale for being the venue of theChemical Brothers' first gig.

After its 2009 move to a pub outside Fallowfield, the Jabez Clegg, attendances steadily declined. Following many rumours, the last BOP took place on 25 January 2013, bringing an end to its 25-year run.

References

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toOwens Park.
  1. ^abcClare Hartwell, Matthew Hyde and Nicholas Pevsner (2004) [1969].Pevsner Architectural Guides - Lancashire: Manchester and the South-East.ISBN 0-300-10583-5.
  2. ^Accommodation Office - Owens Park, University of Manchester, archived fromthe original on 23 July 2007, retrieved27 October 2012
  3. ^"Demolition work starts on Rik Mayall student tower".BBC News. 16 June 2024. Retrieved30 June 2024.
  4. ^"An emotional goodbye to Owens Park Tower".LinkedIn. University of Manchester. 3 July 2025. Retrieved20 July 2025.
  5. ^Owens Park Tower - SkyscraperPage.com
  6. ^"Student homes face the bulldozer",Manchester Evening News, 2 February 2001, archived fromthe original on 21 April 2013, retrieved27 October 2012
  7. ^"Contract out for Owens Park construction partner".Place North West. 5 June 2015. Retrieved29 May 2022.
  8. ^"Fallowfield (The University of Manchester)".www.accommodation.manchester.ac.uk. Retrieved29 May 2022.
  9. ^"£400m Manchester Uni 3,300-bed campus go-ahead".constructionenquirier.com. Retrieved30 April 2024.
  10. ^"Green light for Fallowfield campus redevelopment".studentnews.manchester.ac.uk. Retrieved30 April 2024.
  11. ^"Young, gifted and punk: my mad days with Rik Mayall".
  12. ^Christopulos, J., & Smart, P. (2005).Van der Graaf Generator, The Book: A History of the Band Van der Graaf Generator 1967 to 1978, page 1. Phil and Jim Publishers.ISBN 978-0-9551337-0-1

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