The University of Wolverhampton is located across four campuses across the West Midlands and Shropshire.
City Campus City Campus is the main site for the university and is situated in Wolverhampton city centre, opposite
Molineux Stadium and approximately 16 miles (26 km) from
Birmingham. Divided into City Campus Wulfruna and City Campus Molineux, it is home to several academic schools/faculties; administration departments; the
Students' Union and student support facilities. In addition, there are three separate Halls of Residence on this campus: North Road, Lomas Street and Randall Lines. The Millennium City Building, opened in 2003, provides over 10,000 square metres of teaching space, a 300-seat lecture theatre, exhibition gallery, campus restaurant, and an "informal Social Learning Space". The
Alan Turing Building contains an open plan workspace, as well as prototyping equipment and software packages for 3D modelling and product design. The Centre includes a TV studio with greenscreen capability, a radio studio, Newsroom and digital editing suites. The Harrison Learning Centre has traditional and electronic-based library facilities over four floors. It provides electronic auto-service and online cataloguing facilities, and academic librarians manage, monitor and update the available information. ----
George Wallis Building The Wolverhampton School of Art is housed in the nine-storey Brutalist
George Wallis Building, which was formally opened by Sir Charles Wheeler in 1970. It provides specialist equipment, facilities and expertise for students studying one of the various art and design specialisms available to study at the School of Art.
Grade II Listing Status On 16 December 2025, the George Wallis Building was granted
Grade II listed status by the
Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS), following advice from
Historic England. The designation affords the structure legal protection as a site of special architectural or historic interest and effectively prevented its planned demolition. The decision followed a sustained campaign by heritage organisations, notably the
Twentieth Century Society, which submitted the original listing application, alongside a public petition that attracted thousands of signatures. Under these plans, the art school would have been removed and the site redeveloped on the advice of external university consultants. Historic England’s recommendation for listing cited the building’s dual significance. This included its association with the British Black Art movement, particularly its role as the host venue for the First National Black Art Convention in 1982, as well as its architectural importance as a “striking” example of post-war Brutalist design. The organisation described the structure as an “emblem on the skyline of the city”, highlighting its visual prominence and sculptural concrete form. Opponents of demolition argued that the building possessed “abundant potential” for adaptive reuse and retrofitting, and that redevelopment proposals failed to adequately account for its cultural, architectural and environmental value. ----
Arena Theatre The
Arena Theatre contains an auditorium seating 150, a studio seating 100 and a seminar room for up to 50 people. Its programme includes professional companies, celebrating drama, dance and music, as well as showcasing work by local schools, colleges, students, amateur companies and community events. ----
Telford Innovation Campus The Telford Innovation Campus opened in 1994. 18 miles (29 km) from Wolverhampton and 26 miles (42 km) from Birmingham, the campus is on a greenfield site in the grounds of
Priorslee Hall – a grade-II listed 18th Century redbrick mansion. The campus houses facilities for engineering, built environment, business, computing and social work. Halls of residence for just under 500 students are located on campus. The environment in the university is very good and friendly. The campus is home to the e-Innovation Centre which provides
startup companies and
small and medium enterprises with business accommodation and funded support from a team of IT consultants, giving them access to the university's IT facilities, expertise and resources. It has hi-tech meeting rooms, social meeting areas, "hot-desking" provision, fully furnished offices, "incubation" units, and "grow-on" space for businesses who need to expand. ----
Walsall Campus The Walsall Campus is based a mile from
Walsall town centre. Students studying sport, music, dance, education, health, events management, tourism and hospitality are based here. Opened in 2005, the Student Village provides accommodation for over 300 students. The campus has a teaching building with three lecture theatres and specialist teaching rooms. It's also home to the Institute for Learning Enhancement. Facilities at Boundary House allow trainee nurses and other healthcare professionals to follow the academic part of their course. The Performance Hub houses performing arts facilities and opened in September 2011. The Walsall Campus Sports Centre was named as an official training base for the
London 2012 Summer Olympics. It hosts training facilities for the Olympic sports of Basketball, Judo and Taekwondo. The campus hosts a judo Centre of Excellence in England by the
British Judo Association which opened in September 2013. ----
Springfield Campus The Springfield Campus was opened on October 31, 2021, serving as the university's main campus for its
RIBA certified School of Architecture and Built Environment. The campus building was originally a 12-acre
Grade II-listed brewery established in 1873 by William Butler through his company William Butler & Co. Ltd, which ceased operations in 1990, leaving the building abandoned and ultimately damaged in a fire in 2004. The university bought the damaged property and redeveloped the building into a new £40 million school campus. The new campus was designed by Birmingham-based architecture firm
Associated Architects, which won the 2023 RIBA West Midlands Award for its design. ----
University of Wolverhampton Science Park The University of Wolverhampton Science Park is home to around 80 businesses working in science, technology, knowledge-based and creative sectors. As well as business support services, it offers office accommodation and workshop/laboratory areas for companies, as well as conference and meeting facilities. The Science Park was formed in 1993 as a joint venture between the University of Wolverhampton and Wolverhampton City Council. . ==Organisation and governance==