Edgbaston campus Original buildings , proposed by architects Sir Aston Webb and Mr Ingress Bell in 1909 Buildings, Chancellor's Court The main campus of the university occupies a site some south-west of
Birmingham city centre, in
Edgbaston. It is arranged around
Joseph Chamberlain Memorial Clock Tower (affectionately known as "Old Joe" or "Big Joe"), a grand
campanile which commemorates the university's first chancellor,
Joseph Chamberlain. Chamberlain may be considered the founder of the University of Birmingham, and was largely responsible for the university gaining its Royal Charter in 1900 and for the development of the Edgbaston campus. The university's Great Hall is located in the domed
Aston Webb Building, which is named after one of the architects – the other was
Ingress Bell. The initial site was given to the university in 1900 by Lord Calthorpe. The grand buildings were an outcome of the £50,000 given by steel magnate and philanthropist
Andrew Carnegie to establish a "first class modern scientific college" on the model of
Cornell University in the United States. Funding was also provided by Sir
Charles Holcroft. The original domed buildings, built in
Accrington red brick, semicircle to form Chancellor's Court. This sits on a drop, so the architects placed their buildings on two tiers with a drop between them. The clock tower stands in the centre of the Court. The campanile itself draws its inspiration from the
Torre del Mangia, a medieval clock tower that forms part of the
Town Hall in
Siena, Italy. When it was built, it was described as 'the intellectual beacon of the Midlands' by the
Birmingham Post. The clock tower was Birmingham's tallest building from the date of its construction in 1908 until 1969; it is now the third highest in the city. It is one of the top 50 tallest buildings in the UK, and the tallest free-standing clock tower in the world, and tall in different sources. , remains the tallest freestanding clock tower in the world. The campus has a wide diversity in architectural types and architects. "What makes Birmingham so exceptional among the Red Brick universities is the deployment of so many other major Modernist practices: only Oxford and Cambridge boast greater selections". The Guild of Students original section was designed by Birmingham inter-war architect
Holland Hobbiss who also designed the
King Edward's School opposite. It was described as "Redbrick Tudorish" by
Nikolaus Pevsner. The statue on horseback fronting the entrance to the university and
Barber Institute of Fine Arts is a 1722 statue of
George I rescued from Dublin in 1937. This was saved by Bodkin, a director of the National Gallery of Ireland and first director of the Barber Institute. The statue was commissioned by the
Dublin Corporation from the Flemish sculptor
John van Nost. Final negotiations for part of what is now the Vale were completed in only March 1947. By then, properties that would have their names used for halls of residences, such as Wyddrington and Maple Bank, were under discussion and more land was obtained from the Calthorpe estate in 1948 and 1949, providing the setting for the Vale. Landscape architect
Mary Mitchell designed the layout of the campus and she included mature trees that were retained from the former gardens. Construction on the Vale started in 1962 with the creation of a artificial lake and the building of Ridge, High, Wyddrington and Lake Halls. The first, Ridge Hall, opened for 139 women in January 1964, with its counterpart High Hall admitting its first male residents the following October.
1960s and modern expansion 's Faraday sculpture The university underwent a major expansion in the 1960s owing to the production of a masterplan by
Casson, Conder and Partners. The first of the major buildings to be constructed to a design by the firm was the Refectory and Staff House, which was built in 1961 and 1962. The two buildings are connected by a bridge. The next major buildings to be constructed were the Wyddrington and Lake Halls and the Faculty of Commerce and Social Science, all completed in 1965. The Faculty of Commerce and Social Science, now known as the Ashley Building, was designed by Howell, Killick, Partridge and Amis and is a long, curving two-storey block linked to a five-storey
whorl. The two-storey block follows the curve of the road, and has load-bearing brick cross walls. It is faced in specially-made concrete blocks. The spiral is faced with faceted pre-cast concrete cladding panels. It was
statutorily listed in 1993 Chamberlain, Powell and Bon were commissioned to design the Physical Education Centre, which was built in 1966. The main characteristic of the building is the roof of the changing rooms and small gymnasium, which has hyperbolic paraboloid roof light shells and is completely paved in quarry tiles. The roof of the sports hall consists of eight conoidal 2½-inch thick sprayed concrete shells springing from long pre-stressed valley beams. On the south elevation, the roof is supported on raking pre-cast columns and reversed shells form a
cantilevered canopy. Also completed in 1966 was the Mining and Minerals Engineering and Physical Metallurgy Departments, which was designed by
Philip Dowson of
Arup Associates. This complex consisted of four similar three-storey blocks linked at the corners. The frame is of pre-cast reinforced concrete with columns in groups of four and the whole is planned as a tartan grid, allowing services to be carried vertically and horizontally so that at no point in a room are services more than ten feet away. The building received the 1966
RIBA Architecture Award for the West Midlands. Taking the full five years from 1962 to 1967, Birmingham erected twelve buildings, which each cost in excess of a quarter of a million pounds. In 1967, Lucas House, a new hall of residence designed by
The John Madin Design Group, was completed, providing 150 study bedrooms. It was constructed in the garden of a large house. The Medical School was extended in 1967 to a design by Leonard J. Multon and Partners. The two-storey building was part of a complex that covers the southside of
Metchley Fort, a Roman fort. In 1968, the Institute for Education in the Department for Education was opened. This was another Casson, Conder and Partners-designed building. The complex consisted of a group of buildings centred around an eight-storey block, containing study offices, laboratories and teaching rooms. The building has a reinforced concrete frame that is exposed internally, and the external walls are of silver-grey rustic bricks. The roofs of the lecture halls, penthouse and Child Study wing are covered in copper. The name, Muirhead Tower, came from that of the first philosophy professor of the university
John Henry Muirhead. Completed in 2012, the Bramall Music Building is a 450-seat concert hall, which completes the redbrick semicircle of the Aston Webb building, designed by
Glenn Howells Architects with venue design by Acoustic Dimensions. This auditorium, with its associated research, teaching and rehearsal facilities, houses the Department of Music. In August 2011 the university announced that architects
Lifschutz Davidson Sandilands and
S&P were appointed to develop a new Indoor Sports Centre as part of a £175 million investment in the campus.
Railway station In 1978, University station, on the
Cross-City Line, was opened to serve the university and its hospital. It is the only university campus in mainland Britain with its own railway station. In 2021, construction began on a redeveloped facility adjacent to the existing structure as part of the West Midlands Rail Programme (WMRP). The rebuilt station was completed and opened to the public in January 2024. Nearby, the Steampipe Bridge, which was constructed in 2011, transports steam across the Cross-City Railway Line and
Worcester & Birmingham Canal from the energy generation plant to the medical school as part of the university's sustainable energy strategy. Its laser-cut exterior is also a public art feature.
Other features Located within the Edgbaston site of the university is the
Winterbourne Botanic Garden, a 24,000-square-metre (258,000 square foot)
Edwardian Arts and Crafts-style garden. The large statue in the foreground was a gift to the university by its sculptor Sir Edward Paolozzi – the sculpture is named "Faraday", and has an excerpt from the poem
The Dry Salvages by
T. S. Eliot around its base. The University of Birmingham operates the
Lapworth Museum of Geology in the Aston Webb Building in
Edgbaston. It is named after
Charles Lapworth, a geologist who worked at Mason Science College. Since November 2007, the university has been holding a
farmers' market on the campus. Birmingham is the first university in the country to have an accredited farmers' market. The considerable extent of the estate meant that by the end of the 1990s it was valued at £536 million. University of Birmingham marked its grand ending of Green Heart Project at the start of 2019. In 2021, the University opened a central-city meeting and conference site called
The Exchange in the former
Birmingham Municipal Bank in
Centenary Square.
Selly Oak campus The university's
Selly Oak campus is a short distance to the south of the main campus. It was the home of a federation of nine colleges, known as
Selly Oak Colleges, mainly focused on theology, social work, and teacher training. The Federation was for many years associated with the University of Birmingham. A new library, the Orchard Learning Resource Centre, was opened in 2001, shortly before the Federation ceased to exist. The OLRC is now one of the University of Birmingham's site libraries. Among the
Selly Oak Colleges was Westhill College, (later the University of Birmingham, Westhill), which merged with the university's School of Education in 2001. In the following years most of the remaining colleges closed, leaving two colleges which continue today,
Woodbrooke College, a study and conference centre for the
Society of Friends, and
Fircroft College, a small adult education college with residential provision.
Woodbrooke College's Centre for Postgraduate Quaker Studies, established in 1998, works with the University of Birmingham to deliver research supervision for the degrees of MA by research and PhD. The Selly Oak campus is now home to the Department of Drama and Theatre Arts in the newly refurbished
Selly Oak Colleges Old Library and George Cadbury Hall 200-seat theatre. The UK
daytime television show
Doctors is filmed on this campus. The
University of Birmingham School occupies a brand new, purpose-built building located on the university's Selly Oak campus. The
University of Birmingham School is sponsored by the University of Birmingham and managed by an Academy Trust. The
University of Birmingham School opened in September 2015.
Mason College and Queen's College campus building housed the Faculties of Arts and Law until 1962 (picture date: 1880) The Victorian neo-gothic
Mason College Building in Birmingham city centre housed the University of Birmingham's Faculties of Arts and Law for more than 50 years after the founding of the university in 1900. The Faculty of Arts building on the Edgbaston campus was not constructed until 1959–61. The Faculties of Arts and Law then moved to the Edgbaston campus. The original
Mason College Building was demolished in 1962 as part of the redevelopment within the inner ring road. The 1843 Gothic Revival building constructed opposite the Town Hall between Paradise Street (the main entrance) and Swallow Street served as
Queen's College, one of the founder colleges of the university. In 1904 the building was given a new buff-coloured terracotta and brick front. The medical and scientific departments merged with Mason College in 1900 to form the University of Birmingham and sought new premises in Edgbaston. The theological department of Queen's College did not merge with Mason College, but later moved in 1923 to Somerset Road in Edgbaston, next to the University of Birmingham as the
Queen's Foundation, maintaining a relationship with the University of Birmingham until a 2010 review. In the mid 1970s, the original Queen's College building was demolished, with the exception of the grade II listed façade.
Dubai Campus The university also has an affiliated
Dubai campus established in 2017 at Dubai International Academic City (DIAC). They have since moved from the DIAC headquarters with the construction of a new campus in 2022 in the same area, inaugurated by the Dubai crown prince
Hamdan Bin Mohammed Al Maktoum. The campus boasts of having all faculty flown in or permanently staffed from the UK campus. ==Organisation and administration==