Student recreational and general facilities Brunel has a gym, spa, and running track with professional training and medical facilities. On campus there is also a pharmacy, a shop, one bar called Locos, a nightclub called Venue, and a café named "1966" after the year of the university's founding. Historically Brunel Student Hall and The Sports Barn were key venues for band tours in the 1970-90s with some of the biggest names in rock music including,
Fairport Convention,
Fleetwood Mac,
The Who,
Deep Purple,
Genesis,
ELO,
The Kinks,
Thin Lizzy,
Joy Division,
The Pretenders,
The Specials,
The Stone Roses. The
Sex Pistols played the first gig of their 'Never Mind the Bans Tour' at Brunel on 16 December 1977. The Bannerman Centre at the heart of the campus contains a 4 floor library (opened in 1973 by
Heinrich Böll) with c.400,000 books and 1,500 study spaces, usually open 24/7 during term-time. The Bannerman Annexe contains the Professional Development (Careers) Centre, PC labs, large teaching rooms with collaborative technology and various student service functions such as the Assistive Technology Centre.
Union of Brunel Students The Union of Brunel Students is the
students' union of Brunel University. The Union is based within the Hamilton Centre on the Uxbridge campus. Among other services, the Union runs two venues on the Brunel campus: the Venue nightclub, Loco's bar. The Union is led by fourteen democratically elected staff from the student body – six Student Officers, four Standing Committee Chairs and six Working Group Chairs – supported by more than thirty professional staff. which has
Brunel spelt backwards. Before that, it was a magazine called
Route 66, named after the different campus locations – Runneymede, Osterley, Uxbridge and Twickenham – not after a bus route that supposedly ran through Brunel's campus along Cleveland Road. The newspaper editorial team is made up of volunteer students and is funded by the Union of Brunel Students. Traditionally, the newspaper has held a left-wing bias and has published interviews with prominent political figures including Shadow Chancellor
John McDonnell, a Brunel alum and MP for Hayes and Harlington.
Hillingdon Herald is a monthly newspaper, written and produced by students from Brunel University of London, with a focus on the London Borough of Hillingdon and wider London. Launched in October 2021, the first issue included columns from Prime Minister
Boris Johnson, MP for Uxbridge and South Ruislip; former Shadow Chancellor
John McDonnell; and
David Simmonds, MP for Ruislip, Northwood and Pinner.
Formula Student Brunel was one of the first UK universities to enter the
Formula Student engineering competition, an annual event in which universities from around the world compete in static and dynamic events using formula style racing cars designed and manufactured by students. Brunel's Formula Student teams have won prizes in the annual competition every year since they first entered in 1999. The Brunel Racing team is composed of undergraduate and postgraduate students, each being allocated an area of the car to develop. Students on MEng Mechanical Engineering courses act as team leaders and manage BEng students throughout the year to ensure a successful completion of a new car each year. Brunel Racing were UK Class 1 Formula Student Champions in 2002, and were the leading UK team at Formula ATA 2005, the Italian Formula Student event. In 2006, Formula Student Event, Brunel Racing were also the highest finishing UK competitor using E85 (fuel composed of 85% ethanol and 15% petrol.)
Student housing Brunel's £250 million campus redevelopment programme, completed in 2008, refurbished existing halls and the built the new Isambard Complex. There are 34 self-catering halls of residence on-campus, with a total of 4,549 rooms, including studio flats for co-habiting couples. Rooms are available for undergraduates, postgraduates, students with disabilities and co habiting couples. All rooms have network access. Many of the
halls of residence around the Uxbridge campus are named after bridges that
Isambard Kingdom Brunel either built or helped to design; other halls are named after him or other notable engineers or scientists. For example: • Clifton Hall (after the
Clifton Suspension Bridge) • Saltash Hall (after the
Royal Albert Bridge that crosses the
River Tamar at
Saltash) • Chepstow Hall (after the bridge across the
River Wye at
Chepstow) • Fleming Hall (after
Sir Alexander Fleming) • Faraday Hall (after
Sir Michael Faraday) • Galbraith Hall (after W R Galbraith, who designed the
Kew Railway Bridge) • Mill Hall (after
John Stuart Mill) There are also three accommodation complexes: the Bishop Complex (Bishop, Kilmorey, Lacy and St Margaret's Halls); the Lancaster Complex (Lancaster, Stockwell, Southwark, Borough Road, Maria Grey and Gordon Halls); and the Isambard Complex (North, Meadow, Michael Bevis, Concourse, Stephen Bragg, West, Maurice Kogan, David Neave, Central, East, Runnymede, George Shipp, Trevor Slater, Shoreditch, Syd Urry, South and Brian Winstanley Halls). ==Notable academics==