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Ulster University Belfast Campus

Words:
RSUA jury

Ulster University by Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios and McAdam Design moves its campus to Belfast city centre, bringing the people and energy that urban centres crave, to win 2024 RSUA Building of the Year

Ulster University Belfast Campus. Donal McCann
Ulster University Belfast Campus. Donal McCann

2024 RSUA Award
2024 RSUA Building of the Year Award

Ulster University Belfast Campus
Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios with McAdam Design for Ulster University

Contract value: Confidential 
GIA: 74,040m2

The new Ulster University campus on the northern edge of Belfast city centre is highly significant for two reasons. One is the university’s bold decision to relocate its Jordanstown campus from a 1970s complex on the city’s outskirts to a new scheme in Belfast’s core, bringing with it people and energy – something the contemporary city centre craves. The other is how the complex, expansive brief has been accommodated on a challenging, irregular site through the architects’ intelligence and skill. The mass of the overall building is carefully tailored to respond to its more domestic neighbours, while stepping up to create city-scaled moments at key junctions. Inside, the necessary accommodation is grouped around a series of light-filled atria.

The campus is statistically significant, with some 15,000 students and staff, 5,000 jobs, 74,000m2 of development and some 12 years in the making. Beyond the impressive headline facts and figures, however, is a project that is socially, economically and culturally important both to Belfast itself and to the very idea of city.

  • Ulster University Belfast Campus. Donal McCann
    Ulster University Belfast Campus. Donal McCann
  • Ulster University Belfast Campus. Donal McCann
    Ulster University Belfast Campus. Donal McCann
  • Ulster University Belfast Campus. Donal McCann
    Ulster University Belfast Campus. Donal McCann
  • Ulster University Belfast Campus. Donal McCann
    Ulster University Belfast Campus. Donal McCann
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While out-of-town campuses enjoy generous landscapes, their distance from the city can bring issues of disconnection from the importance of life outside of university. They also leave students and staff less able to benefit from the energy, opportunities and diversity the city offers socially, economically and culturally. Ulster University’s relocation of its campus indicates its recognition of the city as the melting pot of ideas, a place of cultural and commercial exchange. This bodes well for Belfast, which like many cities has suffered from the exodus of commerce to the online. The move is also hugely consequential from a sustainability perspective in a shift to active travel, public transport, and proximity to accommodation, shopping, and leisure.

The new campus lies on the edge of the historic city, close to the Cathedral and the MAC arts venue. It forms an emphatic northern destination and marker for Belfast. The idea of city as a generator of an architectural plan is evident in the design strategy for the building, which imagines this huge complex as a small city within the city. Where the 1970s architecture of the Jordanstown campus was profligate in terms of land, spreading out horizontally and encouraging the use of cars, the new campus condenses the large brief into vertical extension.

  • Ulster University Belfast Campus. Donal McCann
    Ulster University Belfast Campus. Donal McCann
  • Ulster University Belfast Campus. Donal McCann
    Ulster University Belfast Campus. Donal McCann
  • Ulster University Belfast Campus. Donal McCann
    Ulster University Belfast Campus. Donal McCann
  • Ulster University Belfast Campus. Donal McCann
    Ulster University Belfast Campus. Donal McCann
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Although the overall building is very large, it has been skilfully tailored in plan, section and elevation to break down the mass and respond to the scale of neighbouring buildings and the intricacies of the site boundaries. The organising diagram is concise and direct, arranged around a simple, flexible plan idea that invites a pattern of existing adjacent lanes through the building. Its 12m, column-free floor plates alternate with top-lit atria. These not only bring light, air, and amenity into the deep plan, but also create a series of destinations and venues, cafés, study areas, and auditoria, which the university is energetically and imaginatively developing.

See the rest of the RIBA RSUA Northern Ireland hereAnd all the RIBA Regional Awards here

To see the whole RIBA Awards process visit architecture.com

RIBA Regional Awards 2024 sponsored by EH Smith and Autodesk

Credits

Contractor Sacyr Somague/Lagan Somague JV
Structural engineer Mott MacDonald/RPS
Quantity surveyor/ cost consultant WH Stephens
Landscape architect Grant Associates
Acoustic engineers Sandy Brown Associates
Project management Currie & Brown/WH Stephens
Planning consultant Juno Planning
Services Engineer Mott MacDonald

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Credit: Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios with McAdam Design
Credit: Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios with McAdam Design
Credit: Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios with McAdam Design
Credit: Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios with McAdam Design
Credit: Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios with McAdam Design

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