The new 16,000 m2 building will be on the University of Manchester鈥檚 Engineering Campus, housing materials scientists who are riding high on graphene glory.
Laing O鈥橰ourke is already on campus building the 拢60m Graphene Engineering Innovation Centre (GEIC).
The Henry Royce Institute building is scheduled to open in 2019 and at 46 metres high will be the tallest on the University of Manchester campus. It is all part of a 10-year, 拢1bn masterplan to transform the campus.
The project and cost managers are Arcadis; civil and structural engineer is Ramboll. Both companies also completed the NGI and are working on the GEIC, while Arup, as building services engineer, is also working on MECD.
The new building will be next to the Alan Turing Building on Upper Brook Street, near the Schools of Physics & Chemistry, as well as the 拢61m National Graphene Institute (NGI) and the 拢350m Manchester Engineering Campus Development (MECD), which is also currently under construction.
The 拢235m Royce Institute is a hub and spoke operation; the hub is at the University of Manchester and spokes are at the other founding partners 鈥 the universities of Sheffield, Leeds, Liverpool, Cambridge, Oxford and Imperial College London, as well as the Culham Centre for Fusion Energy (CCFE) and the National Nuclear Laboratory (NNL).
The building design is intended to allow 鈥楽cience on Show鈥 鈥 areas of the building visible to engage people outside 鈥 while also providing closed spaces for commercially sensitive research.
Professor Dame Nancy Rothwell, vice-chancellor of the university, said: 鈥淭he Henry Royce Institute building will be a stunning addition to the University of Manchester campus, and will become a focal point for the UK鈥檚 research and commercialisation in advanced materials.鈥
Estates director Diana Hampson said: 鈥淭his is one of our major capital projects and forms an important part of our vision for the campus and will benefit from its location, close to the NGI and GEIC.鈥
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