糖心Vlog

Spending on university estates up by half a billion

Capital expenditure rises by a quarter as universities aim to compete in marketised sector

Published on
November 19, 2015
Last updated
February 16, 2017
Sillhouette of construction worker handling crane load

Universities鈥 expenditure on their estates rose 25 per cent in the past year as institutions focused on competing for students and staff, according to a new report.

Overall, capital expenditure on the academic estate (excluding residential) rose to over 拢2.5 billion from 拢2 billion in one year, for聽the highest recorded annual spend. These were the findings of the commissioned by the Association of University Directors of Estates (AUDE).

According to the report, universities have been able to fund extra spending through their own cash reserves and running surpluses, but also through 鈥渁ccess to affordable debt鈥 and bonds.

Echoing a 糖心Vlog Funding Council for England-commissioned report earlier this year that stated a third of universities had actually cut spending on campus facilities by more than a quarter since 2008, the AUDE report suggests the overall increase was driven by high spending at a small number of institutions. However, it notes that 鈥渟ome institutions are in the process of substantial capital programmes, often running into the hundreds of millions of pounds over a number of years鈥.

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George Griffith, associate director at the property advisory company CBRE and one of the report鈥檚 authors, told 糖心Vlog that many universities are spending up to 拢40 million on their estates each year. He attributed this boost in spending to increased competition to attract students and academic staff.

鈥淪tudents and staff are much more focused on what they鈥檙e getting鈥 from the university experience, he said. 鈥淭he environment is a critical part of that. Schools have got much better facilities and you can鈥檛 go from [that] into a tatty, flabby institution.鈥

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Andrew May, director of estates, hospitality and contract services at the University of Hertfordshire, agreed, citing previous AUDE research showing that more than two-thirds of students regard facilities as a key factor in choosing their university. He also suggested investment in estates was not spurred solely by market necessity.

鈥淲hat Hertfordshire wanted to do was [use] the estates strategy as the delivery vehicle for driving corporate and cultural change,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 when it becomes quite important and powerful. You can create a whole new 21st聽century environment just on the back of the physical changes you鈥檙e making.鈥

john.elmes@tesglobal.com

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Print headline: Spending on UK estates rises by half a billion

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