The university campus is set within of grounds beneath the
Ochil Hills, from the centre of
Stirling, close to the town of
Bridge of Allan. It is regularly described as one of the most beautiful campuses in the world and was ranked 1st in the UK for its campus environment in the International Student Barometer 2016. It is situated on the site of the historic Airthrey estate which includes the
Robert Adam-designed 18th-century
Airthrey Castle and includes the Hermitage woods, Airthrey Loch, Airthrey Golf Course. The Andrew Miller Building incorporates an
Atrium, which contains several retail and food outlets including a bookstore,
bank and
general store. This building links the Library and Robbins' Centre Students' Union and has connecting bridges to the Cottrell Building, on-campus student residences and the
MacRobert Arts Centre. The Library holds over 500,000 volumes and over 9,000 journals. Home to the archives of both the novelist
Patrick McGrath and filmmaker
Norman McLaren, the Library reopened in August 2010 after a major refurbishment programme.
MacRobert Arts Centre is a small theatre and cinema complex open to members of the university community and the general public. The university houses a considerable
fine art collection in the Pathfoot Building, comprising over 300 works including paintings, tapestries and sculpture. The university previously maintained campuses in
Inverness and
Stornoway, which specialised in Nursing and Midwifery. The Highland site was on the outskirts of Inverness within the grounds of
Raigmore Hospital. The Western Isles campus was located in Stornoway and the teaching accommodation was part of the
Western Isles Hospital. In 2016, it was announced that the University of Stirling would be transferring delivery of its programmes on these campuses to the
University of the Highlands and Islands.
Accommodation The University of Stirling student accommodation can cater for almost 3,000 students in over 20 properties located on and off campus. Most accommodation is in university halls and located on campus. There are town houses at Alexander Court for families and groups of students. Of the 2,000 rooms located on-campus, 800 were built since 2013 as part of a £40M investment programme in student accommodation which was completed in September 2015.
Halls of Residence located on campus include: • Andrew Stewart Hall • Willow Court Flats & Studios • Beech Court Flats & Studios • Juniper Court Flats & Studios • Fraser of Allander House • H H Donnelly House • Muirhead House • Polwarth House • Pendreich Way • Spittal Hill Residential buildings located off-campus, within Stirling city centre, include Union Street, Bayne Street, Lyon Crescent, John Forty's Court and Alangrange.
Sport facilities Stirling was designated as Scotland's University for Sporting Excellence by the Scottish Government in 2008. Scholarships are available in five core sports: football, golf, swimming, tennis and triathlon, which allow student athletes to prepare for international competition. The university has a comprehensive range of sports facilities including a 9-hole Airthrey Golf Course completed in 2001 as part of the National Swimming Academy – a partnership between the university,
Scottish Swimming and
British Swimming. The sports centre also holds the Gannochy National Tennis Centre, badminton and squash courts, a fitness centre, strength and conditioning centre, sports halls and
all-weather playing fields available for students, university staff and the public. The campus is the headquarters for a number of sports agencies including the
sportscotland institute of sport, Commonwealth Games Scotland,
Scottish Swimming and triathlonscotland. At Rio 2016, a number of students and alumni from the university competed for
Great Britain. Swimmers included
Duncan Scott and
Robbie Renwick, who both earned silver medals, as well as Commonwealth gold medalist
Ross Murdoch. Top seed tennis player
Andy Murray and his brother
Jamie Murray trained on the university courts when they were young.
Gordon Reid, wheelchair Olympic gold medalist in 2016, was a tennis scholar at the university. The university men's and women's golf teams are consistently ranked among the best in Europe. The university's most senior football teams compete in the main
Scottish league pyramid; the
men's team in the
regional fifth tier, and the
women's team in the
second tier. Lower teams compete in the
BUCS Football Leagues. In January 2023, the men's football team made history by reaching the 4th round of the
Scottish Cup. Losing 1-0 away to
Dundee United. In 2018, the university announced a £20 million transformation of its sports facilities. The project included construction of a new sports centre, which opened in November 2020. The university's new sports centre includes a fitness suite with more than 100 stations, wireless connectivity, three Outrace functional rigs across the new spaces, and new public strength and conditioning area. The University of Stirling is one of the first universities in the UK to install Technogym's new Excite Live range of equipment.
International degree partnerships The university has international degree programme partnerships in Singapore, Oman and Vietnam, with the established partnership with
British University Vietnam in 2024.
Ras al-Khaimah In 2018, the university opened a branch in
Ras al-Khaimah which is shared by four other satellite campuses in
United Arab Emirates. The campus is not accredited by the local Ministry of Education. ==Organisation and governance==