With several new higher education development projects in the pipeline in the UK, it has been the Dyson Institute 鈥 backed by the聽billionaire inventor of the bagless vacuum cleaner James Dyson 鈥 and聽Hereford鈥檚 planned engineering university that have hoovered up most of the national media attention.
But the University of Northampton鈥檚 new 拢330 million campus on the banks of the River Nene is arguably far more adventurous than anything else on the drawing board.
Due to open in autumn 2018, the Waterside campus was recently described as 鈥渢he UK鈥檚 most exciting higher education project鈥 by Nick Hillman, director of the 糖心Vlog Policy Institute, not simply because of the hefty price tag of the university鈥檚 new facilities. Curiosity has also been piqued by some of the controversial new working practices set to be introduced at the new site: for instance, staff will no longer have offices or even their own desks, having to hot-desk and use lockers to store their personal effects.
鈥淎 lot of [the staff] don鈥檛 like it, but this is how we鈥檒l be running the university,鈥 said Nick Petford, Northampton鈥檚 vice-chancellor, who is among those already hot-desking.聽鈥淚鈥檓 in the same office as the chief executive officer and dean of student experience and it works much better as we actually speak to each other.鈥
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Academic staff who also work in industry are particularly unfazed by the move to open-plan offices as they are 鈥渦sed to these conditions鈥, he added.
The change is in part necessitated by the fact that the university will reduce its real-estate footprint by about 40 per cent when it consolidates its two campuses into a single site. University offices are notoriously underused, with institutions running up substantial bills heating them.
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鈥淲hy would we build all that space if we are not going to use it? We are downsizing,鈥 Professor Petford said.
The university is also introducing a new teaching method, titled 鈥渁ctive blended learning鈥, where students will make greater use of digital learning resources before coming to class, said Professor Petford. Studies from the US indicate that student success rates are much higher when this online-offline hybrid approach is used, with face-to-face teaching remaining central to the process, he said.
鈥淭his is absolutely not the Open University by another name as our students will not pay 拢9,000 a year for that,鈥 he said.
However, despite insisting that Northampton had to embrace digital learning in its curriculum, the institution faced a 鈥渞isk [in] selling a brand new model鈥 of teaching not fully understood by students, he admitted.
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Doubts continue to linger over the huge financial cost of the campus, which will house 14,000 students and 2,000 staff. The project is funded by nearly 拢300 million of borrowing and, last week, BBC Radio Northampton , with one stating that the 拢10 million a year loan repayment for the new campus would be 鈥渇inancial suicide鈥. With overall domestic student numbers set to decline until 2022 and overseas numbers under threat from tougher student visa requirements, is the project too risky?
With 鈥渋ncredibly low鈥 borrowing costs, Professor Petford said that he believed all the risks of the project have been properly hedged.
Falling international student numbers 鈥渨as a worry faced by all institutions, but this project doesn鈥檛 rely on any increase in numbers鈥, he said. 鈥淲e have not based our finance on growing student numbers or international income 鈥 getting any more [of either] will be a surplus,鈥 he said.
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