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University of Southampton

Coordinates:50°56′05″N1°23′45″W / 50.93463°N 1.39595°W /50.93463; -1.39595
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Research university in Southampton, England

Not to be confused withSouthampton Solent University.

University of Southampton
MottoLatin:Strenuis Ardua Cedunt
Motto in English
The Heights Yield to Endeavour[1]
TypePublicresearch university
Established
Endowment£12.4 million (2024)[2]
Budget£742.4 million (2023/24)[2]
Chancellorjointly:Justine Greening andKamlesh Lord Patel of Bradford[3]
Vice-ChancellorMark E. Smith
VisitorLucy Powell(asLord President of the Councilex officio)
Academic staff
2,800 (2023/24)[4]
Administrative staff
4,015 (2023/24)[4]
Students25,995 (2023/24)[5]
24,445FTE (2023/24)[5]
Undergraduates16,530 (2023/24)[5]
Postgraduates9,470 (2023/24)[5]
Location
50°56′05″N1°23′45″W / 50.93463°N 1.39595°W /50.93463; -1.39595
CampusCity Campus
Colours  Marine Blue
Affiliations
Websitesouthampton.ac.ukEdit this at Wikidata

TheUniversity of Southampton (abbreviated asSoton inpost-nominal letters[6]) is apublicresearch university inSouthampton, England. Southampton is a founding member of theRussell Group of research-intensive universities in theUnited Kingdom.

The university has seven campuses. Themain campus is located in theHighfield area of Southampton and is supplemented by four other campuses within the city:Avenue Campus housing the School of Humanities, theNational Oceanography Centre housing courses in Ocean and Earth Sciences,Southampton General Hospital offering courses in Medicine and Health Sciences, andBoldrewood Campus housing an engineering and maritime technology campus andLloyd's Register. In addition, the university operates aSchool of Art based in nearbyWinchester and an international branch inMalaysia offering courses in Engineering. In 2024, the university was the first in the UK to awarded a licence to establish a campus inIndia.[7][8] Each campus is equipped with its own library facilities. The annual income of the institution for 2023–24 was £742.4 million of which £136.5 million was from research grants and contracts, with an expenditure of £522.3 million.[2]

The University of Southampton currently has 16,530 undergraduate and 9,470 postgraduate students, making it thelargest university by higher education students in theSouth East region. TheUniversity of Southampton Students' Union, provides support, representation and social activities for the students ranging from involvement in the Union's four media outlets, to any of the 200 affiliated societies and 80 sports.[9] The university owns and operates a sports ground for use by students and also operates a sports centre on the main campus.[10]

History

[edit]

Hartley Institution

[edit]
The arrival of Prime MinisterLord Palmerston for the opening of the Hartley Institute on 15 October 1862

The University of Southampton has its origin as the Hartley Institution which was formed in 1862 from a benefaction by Henry Robinson Hartley (1777–1850). Hartley had inherited a fortune from two generations of successful wine merchants.[11] At his death in 1850, he left a bequest of £103,000 to the Southampton Corporation for the study and advancement of the sciences in his property on Southampton's High Street, in the city centre.

...employ the interest, dividends and annual proceeds in such a manner as best promote the study and advancement of the sciences of Natural History, Astronomy, Antiquities, Classical and Oriental Literature in the town, such as by forming a Public Library, Botanic Gardens, Observatory, and collections of objects with the above sciences.[12]

— Bequest to the Corporation of Southampton of Henry Robertson Hartley estate.

Hartley was an eccentric straggler, who had little liking of the new age docks and railways in Southampton.[13] He did not desire to create a college for many (as formed at similar time in other English industrial towns and commercial ports) but a cultural centre for Southampton's intellectual elite.[13] After lengthy legal challenges to the Bequest, and a public debate as to how best interpret the language of his Will, the Southampton Corporation choose to create the Institute (rather than a more widely accessible college, that some public figures had lobbied for).

On 15 October 1862, the Hartley Institute was opened by the Prime MinisterLord Palmerston in a major civic occasion which exceeded in splendor anything that anyone in the town could remember.[14] After initial years of financial struggle, the Hartley Institute became the Hartley College in 1883. This move was followed by increasing numbers of students, teaching staff, an expansion of the facilities and registered lodgings for students.

University College

[edit]
Front of the Hartley Library, constructed in the 1930s after the move to Highfield Campus, with the support of private donors.

In 1902, the Hartley College became the HartleyUniversity College, a degree awarding branch of theUniversity of London.[15] This was after inspection of the teaching and finances by the University College Grants Committee,[16] and donations from Council members (includingWilliam Darwin the then Treasurer). An increase in student numbers in the following years motivated fund raising efforts to move the college togreenfield land around Back Lane (now University Road) in theHighfield area of Southampton. On 20 June 1914,Viscount Haldane opened the new site of the renamed Southampton University College. However, the outbreak of the First World War six weeks later meant no lectures could take place there, as the buildings were handed over by the college authorities for use as a military hospital. To cope with the volume of casualties, wooden huts were erected at the rear of the building. These were donated to the university by theWar Office after the end of fighting, in time for the transfer from the high street premises in 1920. At this time, Highfield Hall, a former country house and overlookingSouthampton Common,[17] for which a lease had earlier been secured, commenced use as ahall of residence for female students. South Hill, on what is now the Glen Eyre Halls Complex was also acquired, along withSouth Stoneham House to house male students.

Further expansion through the 1920s and 1930s was made possible through private donors, such as Edward Turner Sims's two daughters Mary and Margaret for the construction of the university library, to fulfil a request in his will, and from the people of Southampton, enabling new buildings on both sides of University Road. During World War II the university suffered damage in theSouthampton Blitz with bombs landing on the campus and its halls of residence.[18] The college decided against evacuation, instead expanding its Engineering Department, School of Navigation and developing a new School of Radio Telegraphy.[18] The university hosted theSupermarine plans and design team for a period but in December 1940 further bomb hits resulted in it being relocated toHursley House.[19]

Halls of residence were used to house Polish, French and American troops.[18] After the war, departments such as Electronics grew under the influence of professorErich Zepler and theInstitute of Sound and Vibration was established.

University

[edit]
Toastrack, a 1929 Dennis G that has been owned by the University of Southampton Engineering Society since 1958.
United Kingdom legislation
University of Southampton Act 1953
Act of Parliament
Long titleAn Act to dissolve the Hartley University College at Southampton founded 1850 registered 1902 and to transfer all the rights property and liabilities of that college to the University of Southampton and for other purposes.
Citation1 & 2 Eliz. 2. c. iv
Dates
Royal assent6 May 1953
Text of statute as originally enacted

On 29 April 1952,Queen Elizabeth II granted the University of Southampton aroyal charter, the first to be given to a university during her reign, which enabled it to award degrees.[20] Six faculties were created: Arts, Science, Engineering, Economics, Education and Law. The first University of Southampton degrees were awarded on 4 July 1953, following the appointment of theDuke of Wellington as Chancellor of the university. Student and staff numbers grew throughout the next couple of decades as a response to theRobbins Report. The campus also grew significantly, when in July 1961 the university was given the approval to acquire some 200 houses on or near the campus by the Borough Council.[21] In addition, more faculties and departments were founded, including Medicine and Oceanography (despite the discouragement of SirJohn Wolfenden, the chairman of the University Grants Committee).[21] Student accommodation was expanded throughout the 1960s and 1970s with the acquisition of Chilworth manor and new buildings at the Glen Eyre and Montefiore complexes.

In 1987, a crisis developed when theUniversity Grants Committee announced, as part of nationwide cutbacks, a series of reductions in the funding of the university.[22] To eliminate the expected losses, the budgets and deficits subcommittee proposed reducing staff numbers. This proposal was met with demonstrations on campus and was later reworked (to reduce the redundancies and reallocate the reductions in faculties funding) after being rejected by the universitySenate.[22]

By the mid-1980s through to the 1990s, the university looked to expand with new buildings on the Highfield campus, developing the Chilworth Manor site into a science park and conference venue, opening the National Oceanography Centre at a dockside location and purchasing new land from the City Council for the Arts Faculty and sports fields (at Avenue Campus and Wide Lane, respectively).[23]

Research university

[edit]
The Gardens on the west half of Highfield Campus were landscaped byBasil Spence and feature artwork byBarbara Hepworth.

Under the leadership of then Vice-Chancellor, SirHoward Newby the university became more focused in encouraging and investment in more and better quality research.[24] In the mid-1990s, the university gained two new campuses, as theWinchester School of Art andLa Sainte Union College became part of the university.[23] A new school for Nursing and Midwifery was also created and went on to provide training forNHS professionals in central-southern England. This involved a huge increase in student numbers and the establishment of sub-campuses inBasingstoke,Winchester,Portsmouth andNewport, Isle of Wight.[24]

In the autumn of 1997, the university experienced Britain's worst outbreak ofmeningitis, with the death of three students.[25] The university responded to the crisis by organising a mass vaccination programme, and later took the ground-breaking decision to offer all new students vaccinations.[24]

The university celebrated its Golden Jubilee on 22 January 2002. By this time, Southampton had research income that represented over half of the total income.[24] In recent years a number of new landmark buildings have been added as part of the estates development. New constructions on the main campus include the Jubilee Sports Complex in 2004,[26][27] the EEE (ECS, Education and Entrance) building in 2007,[28][29][30] the new Mountbatten building in 2008 housing theSchool of Electronics and Computer Science[31][32] following a fire[33][34] and the Life Sciences building in 2010.[35][36][37] In addition, the Hartley Library and Student Services Centre were both extended and redesigned in 2005[38][39][40] and the Students' Union was also extended in 2002.[41][42] Other constructions include the Archaeology building on Avenue Campus in 2006[43][44] and the Institute of Development Sciences building atSouthampton General Hospital in 2007.[45] The university has also significantly redeveloped its Boldrewood Campus which is home to part of the engineering faculty and to Lloyd's Register's Global Technology Centre.[46]

The university joined theScience and Engineering South Consortium (SES) on 9 May 2013. The SES was created to pool the collective insights and resources of theUniversity of Oxford,University of Cambridge,Imperial College London andUniversity College London to innovate and explore new ideas through collaboration whilst providing efficiencies of scale and shared utilisation of facilities. This is the most powerful cluster of research intensive universities in the UK and the new consortium is to become one of the world's leading hubs for science and engineering research.[47]

In 2015, the university started a fundraising campaign to build the Centre for Cancer Immunology based atSouthampton General Hospital. At the beginning of 2018, the target amount of £25 million was raised, allowing 150 scientists to move into the building in March 2018. The Centre for Cancer Immunology is the first of its kind in the UK and contains facilities that will hosts clinical trial units and laboratories that will explore the relationship between cancer and the immune system.[48][49]

Campuses

[edit]

The university has eight educational campuses – five inSouthampton, one inWinchester, and two international branches in Malaysia and India.[50] The university operates a science park inChilworth. The university also owns sports facilities andhalls of residences on a variety of other nearby sites.

Highfield Campus

[edit]
Main article:Highfield Campus
Aerial view of the Highfield Campus

The university's main campus is located in the residential area ofHighfield. Opened on 20 June 1914, the site was initially used as a military hospital during World War I. The campus grew gradually, mainly consisting of detailed red brick buildings (such as the Hartley library and West building of the Students' Union) designed bySir Giles Gilbert Scott.[51] In 1956, SirBasil Spence was commissioned to prepare a masterplan of the campus for the foreseeable future.[52] This included incorporating the University Road, that split the 59-acre (24 ha) campus in two and the quarry of SirSidney Kimber's brickyard that itself was split by a stream. Unable to remove the road and the private houses along it, Spence designed many of the buildings facing away from it, using contemporary designs working in concrete, glass and mosaic.[52] During recent decades, new buildings were added that contravened the master plan of Spence, such as the Synthetic Chemistry Building and Mountbatten Building (the latter of which was destroyed by fire in 2005).

In 1991, the Highfield Planning Group was formed within the university under the chairmanship ofTim Holt.[52] This led to the development of new buildings such as the Jubilee Sports Hall, Student Services Building and theInstitute of Sound and Vibration Research. In addition, existing buildings, such as the Hartley Library, were extensively renovated and extended. A new masterplan for the Highfield campus was drawn up in 1998 byRick Mather, who proposed that the University Road should become a tree-lined boulevard backed by white-rendered buildings.[53] He also contributed some of the newer buildings such as the Zepler and Gower Buildings.[52]

Avenue Campus

[edit]
Main article:Avenue Campus
Avenue Campus

Avenue Campus is currently home to the Faculty of Humanities, with the exception of Music, and is located a short distance away from the main Highfield campus. The site previously housed the Southampton Tramsheds andRichard Taunton's College, of which the existing building still stands on the site. It was purchased by the university fromSouthampton City Council for £2 million in December 1993[24] so that the university could expand – planning regulations meant that excess land on the Highfield campus couldn't be built on and had to be reserved for future car parking spaces. The car parking spaces have now been built.[54] The departments moved onto the campus in 1996.[55] The campus consists of the original Tauntons building from the early 20th century but redeveloped with a glass-fronted courtyard and extension and a new Archaeology building built in 2006 costing £2.7 million.[56]

Boldrewood Campus

[edit]
Main article:Boldrewood Campus

Boldrewood Campus, located a short distance from the Highfield campus, houses the university's new Maritime Centre of Excellence, the Southampton Marine and Maritime Institute andLloyd's Register's Group Technology Centre.[57][58][59]

The campus was formerly the Biomedical Sciences campus of the university and acted, until 2010, as a non-hospital base for the School of Medicine and home to a research facility for the Biological Sciences. These departments were then relocated to either Southampton General Hospital, the new Life Sciences building at Highfield, or the University of Southampton science park.[60]

National Oceanography Centre, Southampton

[edit]
Main article:National Oceanography Centre, Southampton
National Oceanography Centre, Southampton

The National Oceanography Centre, Southampton (NOCS) is located inSouthampton Docks three miles south of the main university campus. The campus is home of the university's Ocean and Earth Sciences department and is also a campus of theNatural Environment Research Council's research institute, theNational Oceanography Centre.[61] Five of the National Oceanography Centre's research divisions are based on the campus.[61]

Planning of the campus began in 1989 and was completed in 1994 due to cuts and uncertainties whether a national research centre could be successfully integrated with a university.[62] It was opened in 1996 byPrince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. The campus was also the base for the NERC purpose-built research vesselsRRSJames Cook and until recently theRRSDiscovery and theRRSCharles Darwin.[63]

University Hospital Southampton (UHS)

[edit]
Main article:Southampton General Hospital

The university maintains a presence at Southampton General in partnership with theNHS trust operating the hospital.[64] It is home to some operations of the Faculty of Medicine and the Faculty of Health Sciences, although these two faculties have bases on Highfield campus. As a teaching hospital, it is used by a range of undergraduate and postgraduate medical students, research academics and clinicians.[65]

The university's involvement began in 1971, when it became the first to house a new school of medicine alongside the universities ofNottingham andLeicester, and currently extends to several operations and specific research centres.[24]

Winchester School of Art

[edit]
Main article:Winchester School of Art

The Winchester School of Art, located in centralWinchester, houses the university's arts and textiles courses that are part of the Faculty of Arts and Humanities. The school itself was established in the 1960s and was integrated into the University of Southampton in 1996.[66] The campus contains the original school buildings from the 1960s, in addition to structures built when the merger occurred and in 1998 when theTextile Conservation Centre moved to the site fromHampton Court Palace. The centre remained with the school until its closure in 2009.[67]

Malaysia Campus

[edit]

The university opened its first international campus inIskandar Puteri, Malaysia, as theUniversity of Southampton Malaysia in October 2012.[68] Located in the state of Johor near the southwestern tip of Malaysia, the campus is located within EduCity in Iskandar Puteri - a new city comprising universities and institutes of higher education, academia-industry action and R&D centres, as well as student accommodation, shared sports and recreational facilities.[69]

The campus operates courses in engineering, it offers an Engineeringfoundation year programme[70] andMEng programmes inAeronautics andAstronautics, Mechanical Engineering and Electrical and Electronic Engineering. All programmes have been approved by theMalaysian Qualifications Agency (MQA) and the Board of Engineers Malaysia (BEM).[71]

The split campus degree programmes take place in Malaysia for the first two years, with the final two years at Southampton.[72] In 2016, the Malaysia Campus' first group of students graduated, along with the first PhD graduate.[73]

As part of its expansion plans, the University of Southampton Malaysia has moved into its new 150,000sq ft estate in Eco Botanic City, Iskandar Puteri.[74] The new campus is equipped with open learning spaces, lecture halls, an Aerospace Lab, a Design Studio, Business Experimental Labs, and a 12-terminal Bloomberg Suite. From the initial offerings of four Engineering programmes, UoSM has now grown to offer 20 programmes in the fields of Engineering, Business and Computer Science fields.

Currently, among all the British universities with a campus in Malaysia, UoSM is the only one that is ranked in the world’s top 100 universities and the top UK university in Malaysia.[75]

India Campus

[edit]

In 2024, the university was awarded a licence to establish a new campus inDelhi, India.[76] Programmes are planned to begin in 2025. The university will offerBSc programmes in Computer Science, Business Management, Accounting and Finance, and Economics.MSc programmes will be offered in International Management and Finance.[77]

Science Park

[edit]
Chilworth Manor, part of the University of Southampton Science Park

TheUniversity of Southampton Science Park contains approximately 50 businesses connected to the university.[78] Originally established in 1983 as Chilworth Science Park, named after the manor house that is now a luxury hotel and conference centre,[79] the park housesbusiness incubator units to help these companies. The companies occupying the park range in expertise and fields including oil and gas exploration, pharmaceuticals, nanotechnology andoptoelectronics,[80] with three of the twelve successful spin-out companies created since 2000 being floated on London'sAlternative Investment Market (AIM) with a combined market capitalisation value of £160 million.[81] The park was renamed in 2006.[82]

Transport links

[edit]
Main article:Unilink
A Unilink double-decker bus passing through Highfield Campus

To connect the university's Southampton campuses, halls of residence, hospitals, and other important features of the city, the university operates the Unilink bus service for the benefit of the students, staff and the general public. The service is currently operated by local bus companyBluestar using the Unilink name. The service consists of four routes. The U1 runs betweenSouthampton Airport and the National Oceanography Centre via Wessex Lane Halls, Highfield campus,Portswood, Southampton City Centre andSouthampton Central railway station. The other regular routes, the U2 and the U6, run between the City Centre andBassett Green and Southampton General Hospital respectively. Introduced in 2023, the U7 and U8 lines connect the Highfield campus to Winchester and Chilworth respectively while the final route, the U9, runs an infrequent service between Southampton General hospital andTownhill Park. Students who live in halls of residence provided by the university receive an annual bus pass, allowing them to use all Unilink services for free.[83]

Organisation

[edit]

Governance

[edit]
The George Thomas Student Services Building on Highfield Campus where the university management is located.

Responsibility for running the university is held formally by the Chancellor and led at the executive level by the Vice-Chancellor, currently Prof Mark E. Smith. The key bodies in the university governance structure are the Council and Senate.

The Council is the governing body of the university.[84] It is ultimately responsible for the overall planning and management of the university.[84] The council is also responsible for ensuring that the funding made available to the university by theHigher Education Funding Council for England is used as prescribed.[84] The council is composed of members from 5 different classes, namely (1) officers; (2) eight lay members appointed by the council; (3) four members appointed by the Senate; (4) one member of the non-teaching staff; (5) the President of the Students' Union.[84]

The Senate is the university's primary academic authority, with responsibilities which include the direction and regulation of education and examinations, the award of degrees, and the promotion of research.[85] The Senate has approximately 65 members, including the Vice-Presidents, the Deans and representatives from the academic staff in each faculty and those administrative groups most closely associated with educational activities, and representatives of the Students' Union. The Senate is chaired by the Vice-Chancellor.[85]

Faculties

[edit]

The university comprises five faculties, each with a number of academic units.[86] This current faculty structure came into effect in 2018, taking over from a previous structure consisting of eight faculties. The current faculty structure is:

  • Faculty of Arts and Humanities
    • Humanities
    • Winchester School of Art
  • Faculty of Engineering and Physical Sciences
    • Chemistry
    • Electronics and Computer Science
    • Engineering
    • Optoelectronics Research Centre
    • Physics and Astronomy
  • Faculty of Environmental and Life Sciences
    • Biological Sciences
    • Geography and Environmental Science
    • Health Sciences (nursing, midwifery, allied health professionals)
    • Ocean and Earth Sciences
    • National Oceanography Centre
    • Psychology
  • Faculty of Medicine
    • Southampton Medical School
    • Cancer Sciences
    • Clinical and Experimental Sciences
    • Healthcare Enterprise and Innovation
    • Human Development and Health
    • Primary Care, Population Sciences and Medical Education
  • Faculty of Social Sciences
    • Economic, Social and Political Sciences
    • Southampton Statistical Sciences Research Institute
    • Mathematical Sciences
    • Southampton Business School
    • Southampton Education School
    • Southampton Law School

Affiliations

[edit]

Southampton is a founding member of theRussell Group of research-intensive universities in Britain.[87]

Academic profile

[edit]

Courses and subjects

[edit]

Southampton awards a wide range of academic degrees spanningacademic degrees forbachelor's in a variety of degrees andmaster's degrees as well as junior doctorates andhigher doctorates. Thepostnominals awarded are thedegree abbreviations used commonly among British universities. The university is part of theEngineering Doctorate scheme,[88] for the award of Eng. D. degrees.

Short courses and professional development courses are run by many of the university's Academic Schools and Research Centres.[89]

The university works closely with members of the Armed Forces.[89] It provides professional military educators in theBritish Army to study for aPostgraduate Certificate in Education (PGCE). The university also works with theRoyal Navy to provide training and qualifications towardsChartered Engineer status.[89]

Admissions

[edit]
UCAS Admission Statistics
20242023202220212020
Applications[α][90]43,41545,28043,25537,58035,800
Accepted[α][90]5,6955,2355,0755,3154,560
Applications/Accepted Ratio[α]7.68.68.57.17.9
Offer Rate (%)[β][91]76.571.769.263.967.8
Average Entry Tariff[92]156155
  1. ^abcMain scheme applications, International and UK
  2. ^UK domiciled applicants
HESA Student Body Composition (2023/24)
Domicile[93] and Ethnicity[94]Total
British White[a]42%42
 
British Ethnic Minorities[b]18%18
 
International EU3%3
 
International Non-EU37%37
 
UndergraduateWidening Participation Indicators[93][95]
Female50%50
 
Independent School13%13
 
Low Participation Areas[c]8%8
 

In terms of averageUCAS points of entrants, Southampton ranked 25th in Britain in 2023.[96] The university gives offers of admission to 84.0% of its applicants, the 6th highest amongst theRussell Group.[97]

According to the 2017Times andSunday Times Good University Guide, approximately 15% of Southampton's undergraduates come from independent schools.[98] In the 2016–17 academic year, the university had a domicile breakdown of 72:7:21 of UK:EU:non-EU students respectively with a female to male ratio of 53:47.[99] 60.5% ofinternational students enrolled at the institution are from China, the highest proportion out of all mainstream universities in the UK.[100]

Rankings and reputation

[edit]
Rankings
National rankings
Complete (2025)[101]20
Guardian (2025)[102]22
Times / Sunday Times (2025)[103]19
Global rankings
ARWU (2024)[104]151–200
QS (2025)[105]80=
THE (2025)[106]115
University of Southampton'snational league table performance over the past ten years

In the 2023 international university rankings, Southampton ranked 78th (QS World University Rankings)[107] and 108th (Times Higher Education World University Rankings).[108] The 2022Round University Ranking ranked Southampton 72nd globally,[109] and the 2022CWTS Leiden Ranking placed Southampton 85th worldwide.[110] The 2021U.S. News & World Report ranks Southampton 97th in the world and 11th in the UK.[111]

Southampton was originally awarded Bronze ("provision is of satisfactory quality") in the 2017Teaching Excellence Framework, a government assessment of the quality of undergraduate teaching in universities and other higher education providers in England.[112] The Bronze award was appealed by the university,[113] however it was rejected by theHEFCE in August 2017.[114] In response, the university's Vice Chancellor, Christopher Snowden, claimed the exercise was "devoid of any meaningful assessment of teaching" and that "there are serious lessons to be learned if the TEF is to gain public confidence."[115] Enrollment into the exercise was voluntary and institutions were made aware of the metrics used before agreeing to be assessed by the TEF.[116] In January 2018, the university confirmed that it would re-enter the TEF believing that it would benefit from changed evaluations that would benefit Russell Group universities.[117] In 2018, Southampton was awarded Silver by theTeaching Excellence Framework Panel.[118] In the 2023 TEF assessment, the university maintained its overall Silver rating.[119]

The Guardian ranked the university at number 1 in the UK for Civil Engineering[120] and Electronic and Electrical Engineering in 2020.[121]

In the 2021Research Excellence Framework (REF), which assesses the quality of research in UK higher education institutions, Southampton is ranked 17th by GPA and 16th for research power (the grade point average score of a university, multiplied by the full-time equivalent number of researchers submitted).[122]

Research

[edit]

The university conducts research in most academic disciplines and is home to a number of notable research centres. Southampton has leading research centres in a number of disciplines, e.g. music, computer sciences, engineering or management sciences, and houses world-leading research institutions in fields as varied as oceanography and web science.[citation needed]

Within the university there are a number of research institutes and groups that aim to pool resources on a specific research area.[89] Institutes or groups identified by the university of being of significant importance are marked in italics.

University of Southampton Research Institutes and Groups
Inter-Faculty
NameAcademic groupFoundation date
Centre for Banking, Finance and Sustainable Development[123]Southampton Business School
School of Social Sciences
Centre for Complex Autonomous Systems Engineering[124]Faculty of Engineering and the Environment
Faculty of Physical and Applied Sciences
Institute for Life Sciences
National Oceanography Centre, Southampton
Centre for Health Ethics and Law (HEAL)[125]Southampton Law School
Health Sciences
Medicine
Psychology
Geography and the Environment
November 2005[126]
Centre for Operational Research, Management Science and Information Systems (CORMSIS)[127]Southampton Business School
Mathematics
Institute of Criminal Justice Research[128]Southampton Law School
School of Social Sciences
1986
Institute for Life Sciences (IfLS)[129]September 2011
Faculty of Business, Law and Art
NameAcademic groupFoundation date
Centre for Law Ethics and Globalisation (LEAG)[130]Southampton Law SchoolApril 2009
Centre for Risk Research[131]Southampton Business School1990
Centre for Research in Accounting, Accountability and Governance (CRAAG)[132]Southampton Business School
Centre for Strategic Innovation[133]
Entrepreneurship Research Group[134]Southampton Business School
Finance and Banking Research Group[135]Southampton Business School
Institute for Law and the Web (ILAWS)[136]Southampton Law School2006
Institute of Maritime Law[137]Southampton Law School1982
Marketing Research Group[138]Southampton Business School
Organisational Behaviour and Human Resources Research Group[139]Southampton Business School
Strategy and Innovation Research Group[140]Southampton Business School
Winchester Centre for Global Futures in Art Design & Media[141]Winchester School of Art
Faculty of Engineering and the Environment
NameAcademic groupFoundation date
Aerodynamics and Flight Mechanics Research Group[142]Engineering and the Environment
Airbus Noise Technology Centre (ANTC)[143]November 2008
Astronautics Research Group[144]Engineering and the Environment
Bioengineering Science Research Group[145]Engineering and the Environment
Carbon Management Research Group[146]Engineering and the Environment
Centre for Environmental Sciences[147]Engineering and the Environment
Computational Engineering and Design Research Group[148]Engineering and the Environment
DePuy International University Technology Partnership in Bioengineering Science[149]2000[150]
Dynamics Research Group[151]Institute of Sound and Vibration Research
Electro-Mechanical Engineering Research Group[152]Engineering and the Environment
Energy and Climate Change Research Group[153]Engineering and the Environment
Energy Technology Research Group[154]Engineering and the Environment
Engineering Materials Research Group[155]Engineering and the Environment
Fluid Dynamics and Acoustics Research Group[156]Institute of Sound and Vibration Research
Fluid Structure Interactions Research Group[157]Engineering and the Environment
Hearing and Balance Centre[158]Institute of Sound and Vibration Research
Human Factors Research Unit (HFRU)[159]Institute of Sound and Vibration Research1970s[160]
Infrastructure Research Group[161]Engineering and the Environment
Institute of Sound and Vibration Research (ISVR)[162]1963[162]
Lloyd's Register Educational Trust University Technology Centre in Ship design for Enhanced Environmental Performance (LRET UTC)[149]Engineering and the Environment
Microsoft Institute for High Performance Computing[163]November 2005[163]
National Centre for Advanced Tribology (nCATS)[164]11 November 2009[165]
Rolls-Royce University Technology Centre for Computational Engineering[166]Engineering and the Environment
Rolls-Royce University Technology Centre in Gas Turbine Noise[167]Institute of Sound and Vibration Research
Royal National Lifeboat Institution Advanced Technology Partnership on Maritime Engineering and Safety (RNLI ATP)[149][168]Engineering and the Environment27 February 2001[168]
Signal Processing and Control Group[169]Institute of Sound and Vibration Research
Transportation Research Group (TRG)[170]Engineering and the Environment1967[170]
Waste Management Research Group[171]Engineering and the Environment
Water and Environmental Engineering Research Group[172]
Faculty of Health Sciences
NameAcademic groupFoundation date
Cancer, Palliative and End of Life Care Research Group (CPELC)[173]Health Sciences
Macmillan Survivorship Research Group[174]Health Sciences2009[175]
Organisation and Delivery of Care Research Group[176]
Rehabilitation and Health Technologies Research Group[177]
Faculty of Humanities
NameAcademic groupFoundation date
19th and Early 20th Century European Philosophy Research Group[178]Philosophy
Analytic Aesthetics and the History of Aesthetics Research Group[179]Philosophy
Archaeological Computing Research Group[180]Archaeology1990s[181]
Archaeological Prospection Services of Southampton (APSS)[182]Archaeology2001[182]
Centre for Applied Archaeological Analyses[183]Archaeology1994[183]
Centre for Applied Human Origins Research[184]Archaeology
Centre for Applied Language Research (CALR)[185]Modern Languages2003[186]
Centre for the Archaeology of Human Origins[187]Archaeology2000
Centre for Global Englishes[188]
Centre for Imperial and Post Colonial Studies[189]History2006[189]
Centre for Language, Linguistics and Area Studies (LLAS)[190]Modern Languages2000[191]
Centre for Maritime Archaeology[192]Archaeology1995[193]
Centre for Medieval and Renaissance Culture[194]Archaeology
English
History
Music
Centre for Mexico – Southampton Collaboration (Mexsu)[195]
Centre for Modern and Contemporary Writing[196]English
Centre for Transnational Studies[197]Film
Modern Languages
Classical and Historical Archaeology Research Group[198]Archaeology
Composition and Music Technology Research Group[199]Music
Early Modern and Modern Philosophy Research Group[200]Philosophy
Ethics and Practical Reason Research Group[201]Philosophy
Languages South East[202]Modern LanguagesApril 2011[203]
Maritime Archaeology Research Group[204]Archaeology
Centre for Maritime Archaeology
Music Performance Research Group[205]Music
Musicology and Ethnomusicology Research Group[206]Music
Osteo-archaeology Research Group[207]Archaeology
Parkes Institute for the Study of Jewish/non-Jewish Relations[208]English
History
Modern Languages
October 2000 (Institute)[186]
1964 (Library donated)[209]
Philosophy of Language, Philosophy of Mind and Epistemology Research Group[210]Philosophy
Routes into Languages[211]Modern Languages2006 (Initial programme)[186]
August 2013 (Southampton project)[212]
Social Prehistory Research Group[213]Archaeology
Centre for the Archaeology of Human Origins
Southampton Centre for Eighteenth Century Studies (SCECS)[214]English
History
Music
philosophy
16 October 2008
Southampton Centre for Nineteenth Century Research[215]Archaeology
English
Film
History
Modern Languages
Music
philosophy
Social Sciences
September 2012 (Research Centre)[216]
2010 (Research Group)[217]
Southampton Ceramics Research Group[218]Archaeology
Southampton Digital Humanities[219]Humanities
Theory, Representation and Cultural Politics Research Group[220]Archaeology
Wittgenstein and Early Analytic Philosophy Research Group[221]Philosophy
Faculty of Medicine
NameAcademic groupFoundation date
Centre for Developmental Origins of Health and Disease (DOHaD)[222]Medicine
Centre for Human Development, Stem Cells and Regeneration[223]Medicine
Institute for Life Sciences
Centre for Respiratory Science[224]Medicine
MRC Lifecourse Epidemiology Unit[225]Medicine2010[225]
NIHR Southampton Biomedical Research Centre in Nutrition[226]Southampton Centre for Biomedical Research
Medicine
1990s[226]
NIHR Southampton Respiratory Biomedical Research Unit[227]Southampton Centre for Biomedical Research
Medicine
1980s[227]
NIHR/Cancer Research UK Experimental Cancer Medicine Centre[228]Southampton Centre for Biomedical Research
Medicine
NIHR/Wellcome Trust Clinical Research Facility[229]Southampton Centre for Biomedical Research
Medicine
Shadow Cardiovascular Biomedical Research Unit[224]Southampton Centre for Biomedical Research
Medicine
Shadow Musculoskeletal Biomedical Research Unit[224]Southampton Centre for Biomedical Research
Medicine
SouthamptonCancer Research UK Centre[230]Medicine
Southampton Centre for Biomedical Research[224]Medicine
Translational Immunology Partnership[231]Medicine
Institute for Life Sciences
University of Southampton Clinical Trials Unit (In conjunction withNIHR andCancer Research UK)[232]Southampton Centre for Biomedical Research
Medicine
November 2007[232]
Faculty of Natural and Environmental Sciences
NameAcademic groupFoundation date
Biomedical Sciences Research Group[233]Centre for Biological Sciences
Institute for Life Sciences
Centre for Marine Microsystems[234]Ocean and Earth Sciences
National Oceanography Centre, Southampton
School of Electronics and Computer Science
2008[234]
Characterisation and Analytics Research Group[235]Chemistry
Computational Systems Research Group[236]Chemistry
Education Research Group[237]Chemistry
Electrochemistry Research Group[238]Chemistry
Environmental Biosciences Research Group[239]Centre for Biological Sciences
Geochemistry Research Group[240]Ocean and Earth Sciences
National Oceanography Centre, Southampton
Geology and Geophysics Research Group[241]Ocean and Earth Sciences
National Oceanography Centre, Southampton
Magnetic Resonance Research Group[242]Chemistry
Marine Biogeochemistry Research Group[243]Ocean and Earth Sciences
National Oceanography Centre, Southampton
Marine Biology and Ecology Research Group[244]Ocean and Earth Sciences
National Oceanography Centre, Southampton
Institute for Life Sciences
Molecular and Cellular Biosciences Research Group[245]Centre for Biological Sciences
Molecular Assembly, Function and Structure Research Group[246]Chemistry
Molecular Diagnostics and Therapeutics Research Group[247]Chemistry
National Oceanography Centre, Southampton[248]
Palaeoceanography and Palaeclimate Research Group[249]Ocean and Earth Sciences
National Oceanography Centre, Southampton
Physical Oceanography Research Group[250]Ocean and Earth Sciences
National Oceanography Centre, Southampton
Research Facilities Research Group[251]Centre for Biological Sciences
Southampton Marine and Maritime Institute[252]March 2012[253]
Southampton Neurosciences Group (SoNG)[254]Institute for Life Sciences2001[254]
Faculty of Physical Sciences and Engineering
NameAcademic groupFoundation date
Academic Centre of Excellence in Cybersecurity[255]School of Electronics and Computer Science1 July 2012[256]
Adaptive Photonics Group[257]Quantum Light and Matter Research Group
Advanced Fibre Technologies and Applications Research Group[258]Optoelectronics Research Centre
Advanced Solid-state Sources Research Group[258]Optoelectronics Research Centre
Agents, Interaction and Complexity Research Group (AIC)[259]School of Electronics and Computer Science
Astronomy Research Group[260]Physics and Astronomy
STAG Research Centre
Communications, Signal Processing and Control Research Group (CSPC)[261]School of Electronics and Computer Science
Computational Nonlinear Optics Research Group[258]Optoelectronics Research Centre
Distributed Optical Fibre Sensors[258]Optoelectronics Research Centre
Electronic and Software Systems Research Group (ESS)[262]School of Electronics and Computer Science
Electronics and Electrical Engineering Research Group (EEE)[263]School of Electronics and Computer Science2011[264]
EPrints[265]School of Electronics and Computer Science
Fibre Bragg Gratings Research Group[258]Optoelectronics Research Centre
Harvesting Energy Network[266]School of Electronics and Computer Science
High Power Fibre Lasers Research Group[258]Optoelectronics Research Centre
Hybrid Photonics Research Group[267]Quantum Light and Matter Research group
Infrared Science and Technology Research Group[258]Optoelectronics Research Centre
Institute for Complex Systems Simulation[268]School of Electronics and Computer Science18 March 2009[269]
Integrated Photonic Devices Research Group[258]Optoelectronics Research Centre
The IT Innovation Centre[270]School of Electronics and Computer Science
Laboratory for Inorganic Colloidal Nanocrystals[271]Quantum Light and Matter Research group
Laser-Induced Forward Transfer Research Group[258]Optoelectronics Research Centre
Magnetism and Superconductivity Research Group[272]Quantum Light and Matter Research group
MailScanner[273]School of Electronics and Computer Science
Microstructured Optical Fibres Research Centre[258]Optoelectronics Research Centre
Nanomaterials Research Group[274]Quantum Light and Matter Research group
Nanophotonics and Metamaterials Research Group[258]Optoelectronics Research Centre
Nano Research Group[275]School of Electronics and Computer Science
Zepler Institute
Nonlinear and Microstructured Optical Materials Research Group[258]Optoelectronics Research Centre
Novel Glass and Fibre Research Group[258]Optoelectronics Research Centre
Optical Biosensors and Biophotonics Research Group[258]Optoelectronics Research Centre
Optical Fibre Communications Research Group[258]Optoelectronics Research Centre
Optical Microfibre Devices and Sensors[258]Optoelectronics Research Centre
Optical Parametric Oscillators Research Group[258]Optoelectronics Research Centre
Optical Sensors and Instrumentation Research Group[258]Optoelectronics Research Centre
Optoelectronics Research Centre[276]1989[277]
The ORCHID Project[278]School of Electronics and Computer Science
Pervasive Systems Centre[279]School of Electronics and Computer Science
Photonic, Electronic and Plasmonic Microstructured Optical Fibres Research Group[258]Optoelectronics Research Centre
Photonic Systems Circuits and Sensors Research Group[258]Optoelectronics Research Centre
Physical Optics Research Group[258]Optoelectronics Research Centre
Planar Optical Materials Research Group[258]Optoelectronics Research Centre
Planar Waveguide and Slab Lasers Research Group[258]Optoelectronics Research Centre
Power Photonics and Applications Research Group[258]Optoelectronics Research Centre
Pulsed Fibre Lasers Research Group[258]Optoelectronics Research Centre
Pulsed Laser Deposition Research Group[258]Optoelectronics Research Centre
Quantum Control Group[280]Quantum Light and Matter Research Group
Quantum Light and Matter Research Group[281]Physics and Astronomy
Quantum Nanophysics and Matter Wave Interferometry Research Group[282]Quantum Light and Matter Research Group
Scanning Near-field Optical Microscopy Research Group[258]Optoelectronics Research Centre
Semiconductor Fibre Devices for Nonlinear Photonics Research Group[258]Optoelectronics Research Centre
Silica Fibre Fabrication Research Group[258]Optoelectronics Research Centre
Silica Photonics Research Group[258]Optoelectronics Research Centre
Southampton High Energy Physics Theory Group[283]Physics and Astronomy
Southampton Nanofabrication Centre[284]School of Electronics and Computer Science
Space Environment Physics Group[285]Physics and Astronomy
Astronomy Group
Synote[286]School of Electronics and Computer Science
Telecommunications Devices and Sub-Systems Research Group[258]Optoelectronics Research Centre
The Terahertz Laboratories Group[287]Quantum Light and Matter Research group
Theory of Light Matter Coupling in Nanostructures Research Group[288]Quantum Light and Matter Research group
Ultrafast Laser X-Ray Research Group[258]Optoelectronics Research Centre
Vertical-external-cavity surface-emitting-laser Research Group[289]Quantum Light and Matter Research group
Web and Internet Science Research Group[290]School of Electronics and Computer Science
Web Science Doctoral Training Centre[291]School of Electronics and Computer Science
Web Science Trust[292]School of Electronics and Computer Science2006[292]
Web Science Institute[293]School of Electronics and Computer Science11 November 2013[294]
Zepler Institute[295]12 September 2013[296]
Faculty of Social, Human and Mathematical Sciences
NameAcademic groupFoundation date
Applied Mathematics Research Group[297]Mathematics
Centre for Applications of Health Psychology (CAHP)[298]Psychology
Centre for Applied Social Surveys[299]Southampton Statistical Sciences Research Institute (S3RI)
Centre for Charitable Giving and Philanthropy[300]
Centre for Citizenship, Globalisation and Governance (C2G2)[301]Social Sciences
Centre for Higher Education Management and Policy at Southampton (CHEMPaS)[302]School of Education2004[302]
Centre for Global Health, Population, Poverty and Policy (GHP3)[303]Social Sciences
Centre for Research on Ageing[304]Social Sciences
Centre for Research on Self and Identity (CRSI)[305]Psychology
Centre for Sexual Health Research (CSHR)[306]Psychology
Centre for Vision and Cognition (CVC)[307]Psychology
Comparative Education, Citizenship and Political Socialisation Research Group[308]Southampton Education School
Leadership, School Improvement and Effectiveness (LSIE) Research Centre
Design and Utilisation of Digital Technologies Research Group[309]Southampton Education School
Lifelong and Work-Related Learning (LaWRL) Research Centre
Developmental Brain-Behaviour Unit (DBBU)[310]PsychologyNovember 2003[310]
Earth Surface Dynamics Research Group[311]Geography and the Environment
Economy, Society and Space Research Group[312]Geography and the Environment
Educational and Career Decision-making Research Group[313]Southampton Education School
Lifelong and Work-Related Learning (LaWRL) Research Centre
Educational Leadership, Management and Administration Research Group[314]Southampton Education School
Leadership, School Improvement and Effectiveness (LSIE) Research Centre
Emotion and Personality Bio-behavioural Laboratory[315]PsychologyJuly 2011[315]
ESRC Care Lifecycle Research Programme[316]Social SciencesApril 2010 – 2015[316]
ESRC Centre for Population Change (CPC)[317]January 2009[317]
ESRC National Centre for Research Methods (NCRM)[318]April 2004[319]
ESRC Third Sector Research Centre (TSRC)[320]September 2008[321]
Experimental Psychopathology Laboratory (EPL)[322]Psychology
GeoData Institute[323]Geography and the Environment1984[324]
Global Environment Change and Earth Observation Research Group[325]Geography and the Environment
Higher Education Research Group[326]Southampton Education School
Inclusion and Special Education Research Group[327]Southampton Education School
Social Justice and Inclusive Education (SJIE) Research Centre
International Centre for Child Wellbeing[328]
Internationalisation ofHE Special Interest Group[329]Southampton Education School
Language and Literacy in Education Research Group[330]Southampton Education School
Social Justice and Inclusive Education (SJIE) Research Centre
Leadership, School Improvement and Effectiveness (LSIE) Research Centre[331]Southampton Education School
Lifelong and Work-Related Learning (LaWRL) Research Centre[332]Southampton Education School
Marketing and Marketisation in Education Research Group[333]Southampton Education School
Leadership, School Improvement and Effectiveness (LSIE) Research Centre
Mathematics Education Special Interest Group[334]Southampton Education School
Mathematics and Science Education (MaSE) Research Centre
Early 1970s[334]
Mathematics and Science Education (MaSE) Research Centre[335]Southampton Education School
Operational Research Group[336]Mathematics
Palaeoenvironmental Laboratory at the University of Southampton (PLUS)[337]Geography and the Environment
Population, Health and Wellbeing Research Group (PHeW)[338]Geography and the Environment
Pure Mathematics Research Group[339]Mathematics
Quantitative Methodologies Special Interest Group[340]Southampton Education School
Race and Ethnicity Special Interest Group[341]Southampton Education School
Research onSEN Group[308]Southampton Education School
Social Justice and Inclusive Education (SJIE) Research Centre
Research in Teacher Education (RITE) Special Interest Group[342]Southampton Education School
School Improvement and Effectiveness Research Group[343]Southampton Education School
Leadership, School Improvement and Effectiveness (LSIE) Research Centre
Science Education Special Interest Group[344]Southampton Education School
Mathematics and Science Education (MaSE) Research Centre
Social Justice and Inclusive Education (SJIE) Research Centre[345]Southampton Education School
South Asian Communities (SAC) Special Interest Group[346]Southampton Education School
Southampton Institute of Mathematical Modelling (SIMM)[347]Mathematics
Southampton Practice Research Initiative Network Group (SPRING)[348]Social Sciences2007
Southampton Statistical Sciences Research Institute (S3RI)[349]2000s[350]
Southampton Theory Astrophysics and Gravity Research Centre (STAG)[351]
Statistics Research Group[352]Mathematics
Southampton Statistical Sciences Research Institute (S3RI)
Teacher Professional Development and Effectiveness[308]Southampton Education School
Leadership, School Improvement and Effectiveness (LSIE) Research Centre
Teaching and learning through the life-course Research Group[353]Southampton Education School
Lifelong and Work-Related Learning (LaWRL) Research Centre
Work Futures Research Centre[354]Social Sciences
Work-related and Workplace Learning Research Group[355]Southampton Education School
Lifelong and Work-Related Learning (LaWRL) Research Centre

Institute of Sound and Vibration Research

[edit]
Institute of Sound and Vibration Research Building

The Institute of Sound and Vibration Research (ISVR), is an acoustical research institute which is part of the University of Southampton. Founded in 1963, it has been awarded a 2006Queen's Anniversary Prize for Higher and Further Education.[356]

ISVR is divided into four distinct groups of research:

  • The Dynamics Group, (specialised in the modelling, measurement and control of structural vibrations).[357]
  • The Fluid Dynamics and Acoustics Group (including the Rolls-Royce University Technology Centre in Gas Turbine Noise) specialised in three fields which are aero-acoustics of aircraft engines, ultrasonics and underwater acoustics, noise source imaging and virtual acoustics.[358]
  • The Human Sciences Group (including the Hearing and Balance Centre and the Human Factors Research Unit) specialises in the human response to sound and vibration.[359]
  • The Signal Processing and Control Group, which specialises in acoustics, dynamics, audiology and human sciences and as a basis for control of sound and vibration.[360]

ISVR offers a number of Undergraduate and Postgraduate degree programmes in acoustical engineering, acoustics & music and audiology.[361]

EPrints

[edit]
Main article:EPrints

TheSchool of Electronics and Computer Science created the first archiving software (EPrints) to publish its research freely available on the Web.[362] This software is used throughout the university and as an archiving system for many different institutions around the world.[363]

Libraries

[edit]
Exterior of the 2005 extension to the Hartley Library

The university has libraries located on each of the academic campuses and in total the collection holds over 1.5 million books and periodicals.[364][365]

The university's primary library is theHartley Library, located on Highfield campus and first built in 1935 and extended further in 1959 and 2005.[365] The majority of the books and periodicals are held there as well as specialist collections of works such as Ford collection of Parliamentary papers and theEuropean Documentation Centre. In addition, the main library houses the Special Collections and Archives centre, housing more than 6 million manuscripts and a large archive of rare books.[366] Specific collections include the correspondence ofArthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington, acquired by the university in 1983, as well as the Broadlands Archive, including thePalmerston and Mountbatten papers. The library also contains 4,500 volumes ofClaude Montefiore's library on Theology andJudaism, the Ford Parliamentary Papers,Frank Perkins' collection of books on agriculture, SirSamuel Gurney-Dixon'sDante collection and the James Parkes Library of Jewish/non-Jewish relations.[366] The library also includes six rare editions of theDivina Commedia; the first of these, the Brescia edition of 1487, is the library's earliest book.[366]

In addition to the main Hartley Library, there are other libraries based at the university's other campuses primarily focused on the subjects studied at that location. As one of the smaller libraries and given its proximity to the Highfield campus, the Avenue Library only houses a collection of key Humanities resources.[367] It does however also hold an extensive film library, many of an international nature.[368] On a larger scale, the libraries at the National Oceanography Centre, Southampton General Hospital, Winchester School of Art are more complete and house the majority of the resources and specialist collections on oceanography and earth sciences, healthcare and art and design respectively.[369][370][371] The Malaysia campus holds a small collection of reference books but the majority of the resources needed for courses at the campus are available online.[372] Separate from the Hartley Library is the E. J. Richards Engineering Library, which contains further materials for more in-depth study and is freely accessible to Engineering students and staff.[373]

Arts

[edit]
The Nuffield Theatre, Southampton

The university's main Highfield campus is home to three main arts venues supported and funded by the university andArts Council England.[374] TheNuffield Theatre opened in 1963 with construction funded by a grant from theNuffield Foundation of £130,000 (£2,450,000 in 2013).[375] The building was designed by SirBasil Spence as part of his campus masterplan with additional direction provided bySir Richard Southern.[376] The theatre consists of a 480-seat auditorium, that also served as the principal lecture theatre at the time of construction, as well as additional lecture theatres and adjacent Kitchen bar.[377][378] The theatre went into administration in May 2020 and permanent closure was announced in July 2020.[379]

The Turner Sims Concert Hall on Highfield Campus.

TheTurner Sims Concert Hall was added to the art provision in October 1974 following a £30,000 (£460,000 in 2012) donation from Margaret Grassam Sims in 1967.[380] It was made to provide a venue specifically for music following difficulties in gaining space in the Nuffield Theatre and due to acoustical differences with the spaces.[380] The new space has a single auditorium, designed by the university'sInstitute of Sound and Vibration Research with musical performances in mind, with a flat space at the bottom so it could be used for exams.[380]

The final of the three Art Council supported venues on campus is theJohn Hansard Gallery. The gallery was opened on 22 September 1980 but is housed in a building that previously housed a tidal model of Southampton Water between 1957 and 1978.[381] It took over responsibility from a photographic gallery, a gallery in the Nuffield Theatre and one located on Boldrewood campus.[381] It houses various exhibitions in contemporary art and is due to move to new premises in Guildhall Square in c.2015.[382]

In addition, the western half of Highfield campus contain several 20th-century sculptures byBarbara Hepworth,[383][384] Justin Knowles, Nick Pope and John Edwards.

Student life

[edit]

Students' Union

[edit]
Main article:University of Southampton Students' Union
The Students' Union Building on Highfield Campus

The University of Southampton Students' Union (SUSU) is the universitystudents' union and has a range of facilities located on the Highfield campus and on the Winchester School of Art campus. At Highfield the union is sited in three buildings opposite the Hartley Library. The main building (Building 42) was built in the 1960s as part of the Basil Spence masterplan. The building was also extensively renovated in 2002 leading to the creation of two new Bars and 'The Cube' multi-functional space. The West Building dates back to the 1940s in a red brick style, complementing the Hartley Library opposite. This originally held all of the Union's activities until the construction of the current Union. At present the building hosts the pub 'The Stags Head'.[385] The newest building was built during the mid-1990s which includes the union shop and other retail stores.

The union operates four media outlets.Surge Radio, broadcasts from new studios in the main union building over the internet.[386] Internet television stationSUSUtv broadcasts a wide range of programmes live and on demand through their website. The student newspaperWessex Scene is published once every three weeks.[387]The Edge entertainment magazine began life as an insert of the Wessex Scene in 1995 before growing to become a full publication and online presence in 2011.

Halls of residence

[edit]
Old block of Glen Eyre halls of residence

The university provides accommodation for all first-year students who require it and places in residences are available for international and MSc students. Accommodation may be catered, self-catered, have en-suite facilities, a sink in the room, or access to communal bathroom facilities. Each hall has aJunior Common Room (JCR) committee that is responsible for the running of social events and representing the residents to the students union and the university via the Students union JCR officer.

The university's accommodation exists around two large complexes of halls and some other small halls located around the city. These are:

  • Glen Eyre Complex: The complex lies less than half a mile to the north of Highfield Campus and houses approximately 2,000 students. The complex consists of several building sets, designed over the years and arranged either around the central landscaped garden – the oldest buildings, Richard Newitt Courts are separated into blocks A-G and are closest to the Glen Bar, students in these blocks have very small flats (between 4 and 6 to a kitchen with usually more than one bathroom). Old Terrace and New Terrace are close to the site's entrance, New Terrace has ensuite rooms. Chancellors' courts, consisting of Selbourne, Jellicoe and Roll courts are the most modern blocks in the accommodation with Brunei house, the most basic of accommodations, on the outskirts. Located on the south side of Glen Eyre Road on the periphery of the site are Chamberlain Halls, which share most things with the main Glen Eyre site. This site consists of Hartley Grove, South Hill, Beechmount House and the Chamberlain blocks. All Glen Eyre Halls are self-catered at present.
  • Wessex Lane Halls: Located inSwaythling approximately one mile east of the Highfield Campus. The complex provides accommodation for over 1,800 students and currently comprises two halls of residence: Montefiore andConnaught. Connaught Halls are fully catered. The complex also featuresSouth Stoneham House, a period building constructed in 1708.
  • City Gateway Hall: Located inSwaythling one mile north-east of the Highfield Campus at the intersection of two major roads. Opened in September 2015, the landmark building was included in the runners-up list of the 2015Carbuncle Cup. Featuring a 15-story elliptical tower and two adjoining six-story rectangular accommodation blocks the hall provides accommodation for up to 375 students.[388][389][390]
  • Mayflower Halls: Located in the city centre within the city's 'Cultural Quarter', and two minutes' walk away from Southampton Central railway station. The hall opened at the start of the 2014/2015 academic year, and houses over 1,100 students in a mix of rooms. It includes a gym which is available to both residents and the public.
  • Archers Road: Lying two miles south of Highfield and housing 500 students, Archers Road compromises two halls on separate sites. The two halls, Gateley and Romero, are all self-contained and self-catered but share a reception and other community facilities.
  • Highfield Halls: Located adjacent to Avenue Campus and half a mile from Highfield campus. Highfield Halls comprises Aubrey and Wolfe houses and both have on-site catering. The site is also used as a University conference facility during the summer months when vacated.
  • Gower Building: Gower is mainly used by mature and postgraduate students, located on Highfield campus. Gower contains a small number of self-contained apartments, located above other University amenities.
  • Erasmus Park: Located in Winchester, this hall houses around 400 students studying at the Winchester School of Art.
  • Riverside Way: Located in Winchester in close proximity to Erasmus Park. This is a private halls site but the university does have an agreement to allocate some students there.

The university also has accommodation located in Balmoral House and Victoria Place,Portsmouth and inBasingstoke for the use of Nursing and Midwifery students studying on placement in these areas.[citation needed]

Healthcare

[edit]

The University Health Service is an NHS GP practice located on the main Highfield campus, with over 20,000 patients as of December 2021[391] working from Building 48 between the Physics & Maths Buildings.[392][393]

Sports

[edit]
Wide Lane Sports Ground

The university's Sport and Wellbeing department runs the majority of the sports facilities on campus which are based predominately at two locations: the Jubilee Sports Centre and Wide Lane Sports Ground.[394] The Jubilee Sports Centre, opened in 2004 at a cost of £8.5 million, is located on the Highfield Campus and contains a six-lane 25-metre swimming pool, 160 workstation gym and an eight-court sports hall.[395] Wide Lane meanwhile is located nearby inEastleigh and was refurbished at cost of £4.3 million in 2007. The 73-acre (30 ha) complex includes flood-lit synthetic turf and grass pitches, tennis courts, a pavilion and a 'Team Southampton' Gym.[396] The university also runs facilities at the Avenue Campus, National Oceanography Centre, the Watersports Centre on theRiver Itchen and at Glen Eyre and Wessex Lane halls while there is another sports hall, squash courts, martial arts studio and bouldering wall located within theStudents' Union.[395][396]

The university competes in numerous sports in theBUCS South East Conference (after switching from the Western Conference in 2009).[397] A number of elite athletes are supported by the SportsRec through sports bursaries and the UK Government's Talented Athlete Scholarship Scheme (TASS).

The University Athletic Union was formally established on 29 November 1929, by the University College council. Versions of the union had existed previously to which many clubs such as Cricket, Association Football, Rugby, Boxing, Gymnastics, Tennis and Boat clubs (all formed before the turn of the 20th century) were members.[398]

Mustangs Baseball Club

[edit]

The Southampton Mustangs Baseball Club was founded in 1997. In the early years, the club participated in mainly friendly games against other British university baseball teams, as no formal university league was in existence. Starting in 1998, the Mustangs started to host a university baseball tournament – inviting other teams including Oxford, Cambridge, Portsmouth, Royal Holloway, and Norwich. In 2004 the Mustangs entered into the national adult baseball leagues run by theBritish Baseball Federation (BBF). The club entered in the lowest division, but after a few years of consolidation, the Mustangs have worked their way up from the lower leagues in the BBF to play in the top-tier league of British baseball, the British National Baseball League (NBL), in the 2010 season.[399]

National student championships

[edit]

Throughout its history the university has had a number of successful teams inNational student championships.

National student champions from the University of Southampton
YearTeam (men's)Team (women's)Team (mixed)
1936Tennis[400]
1958Basketball[400]Badminton[400]
1966Cricket[400]
Squash[400]
1968Cricket[400]
Table tennis[400]
1969Cricket[400]
Table tennis[400]
Squash[400]Rifle shooting[400]
1970Cricket[400]
Table tennis[400]
Hockey[400]Rifle shooting[400]
1971Table tennis[400]
1972Rifle shooting[400]
1974Tennis[400]
Trampolining[400]
Rifle shooting[400]
1975Badminton[400]
Tennis[400]
1976Ten pin bowling[400]Badminton[400]
1976Squash[400]
1977Badminton[400]
Swimming[400]
1979Squash[400]
Trampolining[400]
Lacrosse[400]
Ten pin bowling[400]
1980Squash[400]
Volleyball[400]
Lacrosse[400]
1981Volleyball[400]
1982Fencing[400]
1983Volleyball[400]
1984Archery[400]
1984Weight lifting[400]
1985Archery[400]
5-a-side[400]
Volleyball[400]
19865-a-side[400]Volleyball[400]
1991Archery[400]
5-a-side[400]
1992Archery[400]
1995Rowing[400]
2000Windsurf[400]
2001Windsurf[400]
2002Rifle shooting
2004Rifle shooting
2005Rifle shooting
2006Rifle shootingRifle shooting
2007Rifle shooting
2008Rifle shootingRifle shooting
2009Rifle shooting
2010Rifle shooting
2011Rifle shooting
2012Rifle shootingRifle shooting
2015Rifle shooting
2019Rifle shooting

Notable people

[edit]
Main article:List of University of Southampton people

Alumni

[edit]

Academics

[edit]

Academics working at the university include:

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]

Explanatory notes

[edit]
  1. ^Not be confused solely withWhite British
  2. ^Includes those who indicate that they identify asAsian,Black,Mixed Heritage,Arab or any other ethnicity except White.
  3. ^Calculated from the Polar4 measure, using Quintile1, in England and Wales. Calculated from theScottish Index of Multiple Deprivation (SIMD) measure, using SIMD20, in Scotland.

References

[edit]
  1. ^"University of Southampton Calendar 2013/14 – Preface". University of Southampton. Retrieved25 February 2013.
  2. ^abc"Financial Statements 2023–2024"(PDF). University of Southampton. p. 30.
  3. ^"Our Chancellor".University of Southampton. Archived fromthe original on 2 August 2024. Retrieved1 September 2024.
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