Penrhyn Road This is the main university campus located close to Kingston town centre. Students based here study Arts and Social Sciences, Civil Engineering, Computing and Information Systems and Mathematics, Earth Sciences and Geography, Statistics, Biosciences, Pharmacy, Chemistry and Pharmaceutical Science, and Radiography. Development at this site has extended to the Learning Resources Centre. In 2015, the
Union of Kingston Students, moved into the main building. Penrhyn Road also houses the refurbished Fitness Centre.
Town House Kingston University's Town House building was opened in January 2020 and is located on the Penrhyn Road campus. The six-storey building was the first by
Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) Gold Medal-winning firm
Grafton Architects in the
United Kingdom and is open to students, staff and the local community. The building work was carried out by
Hertfordshire-based
Willmott Dixon. It features a three-floor academic library, archive, dance studios and a studio theatre. It incorporates a covered internal courtyard, two cafes and external balconies and walkways culminating in a rooftop garden with views across
Kingston upon Thames and the River Thames. Town House has been nominated for several awards, including two
The Guardian University Awards,
Kingston Hill Kingston Hill mainly caters to Nursing (adult, child, mental health and learning disability), Education, Business, Music and Social Care. Before 1989, this campus was known as Gipsy Hill. The Business School moved to a new building on the Kingston Hill Campus in 2012.
Knights Park Located on Grange Road, the Knights Park campus is home to some of the students from Kingston School of Art (KSA) - architecture, art and design students. The campus is built on the northern banks of the
Hogsmill River and opened in 1939. A £29 million refurbishment of the Mill Street workshops, studios and reception area, was completed in March 2020 and includes a gallery, a social space and an art shop. The regeneration project was shortlisted for a
Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) London Regional Award. Facilities on site include a wind tunnel, engineering workshops, a flight simulator, a range of vehicles, a Learjet 25 plane, several large 3D printers, plus automotive and aeronautical learning resources.
Reg Bailey Theatre Complex Former church converted into the Kingston
Drama students' base, the Reg Bailey has two theatres with lighting and sound equipment, three rehearsal rooms and a
costume room while its annexed Surrey Club is for
Dance students. The Reg Bailey has been home to such alumni members as
Ben Barnes,
Sam Chan,
Mandy Takhar,
Alphonsia Emmanuel,
Jessie Cave,
Laura Harling and
Trevor Eve.
Tolworth Court Sports Ground The university's 55-acre sports ground houses twelve football pitches, two rugby pitches, three cricket squares, one American football pitch, one lacrosse pitch, two netball courts and three tennis courts.
Galleries and museums The Stanley Picker Gallery is the Faculty's exhibition space which is now used to present a variety of research-based projects, fellowships and exhibitions. In 2003, the Stanley Picker Gallery gave birth to Transitstation, which was created/curated by Stanley Picker Fellow Dagmar Glausnitzer-Smith, and former gallery curator Charles Ryder. In 2003, the Director of Foundation Studies in Art and Design, Paul Stafford, converted a run-down public convenience in Kingston town centre into the Toilet Gallery. Kingston University runs Dorich House Museum which houses a huge collection of sculptor
Dora Gordine's work, and examples of
Russian Imperial art and furniture. Dorich House is also used as a meeting and conference venue.
Other locations Additional to the four main campuses is an administration building: Hind Court on London Road which was home to the office of the Vice-Chancellor until 2018 when they moved to Holmwood House. Furthermore, art and design studies students from Kingston School of Art are based at River House, on the High Street in Kingston town centre. ==Organisation==