Coventry University superlab attracts £5m grant

COVENTRY University’s flagship new Science and Health Building has been awarded a £4.9m grant by the Higher Education Funding Council for England (HEFCE).
 
The building, which is set to bring together the Faculty of Health and Life Science’s teaching and research facilities into a new facility in Coventry’s city centre, will receive a share of the £200m set aside by the government for the development of so-called STEM subjects – science, technology, engineering and maths.

Amongst the state-of-the-art health simulation facilities in the new building will be a mock operating theatre, fully-equipped ambulance and a community house to test the latest assistive living technologies.
 
A purpose-built laboratory for teaching and research in biological and analytic sciences will sit alongside a strength and conditioning room, with a running track, sports therapy clinic and facilities for food and environmental sciences also on site.
 
The university said the £4.9m HEFCE grant represented a significant boost for the project ahead of the construction and equipment of the building, which is expected to total over £60m.
 
Guy Daly, executive dean of Coventry University’s Faculty of Health and Life Sciences, said: “This investment is excellent news and will allow us to ensure that our science students as well as our health and social care students benefit from state-of-the-art equipment and laboratories fit for a leading modern university.
 
“Our new teaching and simulation facilities will be crucial in providing students with the skills they need to develop into sought-after graduates, and we’ll have a suitably innovative environment to support our ambitious research strategy. As we approach the start of construction of the new building, this grant is another boost for our ambitions to provide not only the highest standards in teaching, learning and research, but also an effective service to the community.”
 
Madeleine Atkins, chief executive of HEFCE and former vice-chancellor of Coventry University, said: “This funding is badly needed by universities and colleges to meet the increased interest in science and engineering. It will also ensure that students benefit from state-of-the-art equipment and laboratories, and are thereby equipped for the workplace of the 21st century.”
 
Archaeological excavation work is under way at the future site of the five-storey, 120,000 sq ft building in Much Park Street. Finds already unearthed include the remains of a medieval cellar and well (circa 1400), the walls of a 19th century factory and an old clay pipe bearing the engraving of a penny farthing.

The new building is set for completion in 2017.

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