In Manchester - the birthplace of the industrial revolution, home to an engineering evolution - is going to be building one of the greatest and most advanced world’s research and studies engineering center. As “pioneers’ home” as it is considered, the Manchester Univertity will continue to be led by discovery.

The University of Manchester has received planning permission from Manchester City Council to create a £350 million engineering campus, MECD, designed by Dutch Mecanoo. The new engineering campus will be a Manchester landmark, celebrating engineering within the world’s first modern city.
 

Description by Mecanoo 

Announced last year, the Manchester Engineering Campus Development (MECD) will be one of the largest, single construction projects ever undertaken by a higher education institution in the United Kingdom. The development will transform the way in which the University educates future engineers with inspiring, modern facilities.

At 195 metres long, the development’s main building - MEC Hall - could easily accommodate Manchester’s tallest building, Beetham Tower, laid sideways.

The development - due to be completed in 2020 - is part of the University’s campus masterplan to create a world-leading campus. This flagship project will bring together a multi-disciplinary engineering and scientific community and consolidate the University’s student campus around Oxford Road. The new campus will heighten the visibility and accessibility of the University’s world-changing engineering and applied science activity, and facilitate strong engagement with industry, local schools and the wider public.

Francesco Veenstra, Partner at Mecanoo and Design Team Leader for MECD said:

Integrating architecture, interior and landscape, we have designed a campus that will deliver a first-class teaching and research environment which will assist the University of Manchester’s ambition in becoming one of the top 25 research universities in the world. MECD will have a strong identity that reflects Manchester’s past, present and future, as a city of pioneers, continued to be led by discovery. The design is driven by the core principles of visibility of activities, technology, permeability, urban continuity and craftsmanship. As a gateway between the existing University of Manchester campus and the city, MECD’s open character will attract people to the facilities and showcase the activities inside. A palette of simple and honest materials, like brick and steel, is combined with a strong articulation of form and a clear structural expression of the facades. The building can be envisioned as an engine: spawning a wide range of research and teaching activities and to take place with a high level of flexibility and adaptability for future change.
 
The new campus will help demonstrate how UK engineering is one of the most creative industries in the world with a focus on users building, making and doing. A key feature on the ground floor of the main hall will be dedicated ‘maker spaces’: dynamic workshops in which students and academics will share ideas and work together. The scheme boasts flexible labs, bespoke project areas and interactive learning environments to support innovation, creativity and collaboration on a completely new scale.

Professor Martin Schröder, Vice-President and Dean of the Faculty of Engineering and Physical Sciences at the University, said: “This exciting new campus development is a once in a lifetime project that builds upon Manchester’s proud heritage of innovation and discovery across engineering and science that began with the establishment of the Manchester Mechanics’ Institute in 1824. MECD brings Manchester Engineering into one building as a focus for interdisciplinary teaching and research. We will train the engineers of the future and discover and apply new knowledge to help industry and society to increase wealth and employment and to overcome global challenges of climate change, finite natural resources and changing world markets.”

Once complete, MECD will become home to the University’s four engineering schools and two research institutes from the Faculty of Engineering and Physical Sciences. It will include 70,590 m2 of modern teaching spaces and facilities that reflect the changing demands of students and staff for mobile and flexible working. Cutting-edge technologies will enable students across all disciplines to engage with new modes of teaching.

Demolition on the site is currently underway and main construction works are scheduled to begin later this year.

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Francine Houben (Holland 1955) began formulating the three fundamentals of her lifelong architectural vision while studying at the Delft University of Technology. It was in this crucible of higher learning that she began an architectural practice with two fellow students with the design of a groundbreaking social housing development. As a result, she graduated as architect with cum laude honours in 1984 and officially founded Mecanoo architecten with these same partners.

Francine has remained true to her architectural vision, Composition, Contrast, Complexity throughout her career. Always looking for inspiration and the secret of a specific location, Francine bases her work on both analyses and intuition. She enjoys interweaving social, technical, playful and humane aspects together in order to form a unique solution to each situation. Francine Houben combines the disciplines of architecture, urban planning and landscape architecture in an untraditional way; with sensitivity for light and beauty.

Her use of material is expressive. She is known as one of the most prolific architects in Europe today. Her wide-ranging portfolio comprises an intimate chapel built on the foundations of a former 19th century chapel in Rotterdam (2001) to Europe’s largest library in Birmingham (2013). Francine Houben’s work reveals a sensory aspect determined by form and space, a lavish use or subtle combinations of the most diverse materials, as well as planes of saturated colour. Francine’s contribution to the profession of architecture is widely recognized. She was granted lifelong membership to the Akademie der Künste, Berlin in 2010.

In 2008, she received the Veuve Clicquot Business Woman of the Year Award. Honorary fellowships to the American Institute of Architects and the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada, and an international fellowship to the Royal Institute of British Architects were granted to her in previous years. The past three decades have seen her cumulative effect on the profession of architecture. Francine lectures all over the world and takes part as a jury member in prestigious competitions.

Her commitment to research and education is evidenced in her instatement as professor in Architecture, Chair of Aesthetics of Mobility at the Delft University of Technology (2000), her professorship at the Universitá della Svizzera Italiania, Accademia di architettura, Switzerland (2000) and her appointment as visiting professor at Harvard (2007). Dedication to her alma mater is reflected in generous sponsorship of the UfD-Mecanoo Award for the best graduating student of the Delft University of Technology.

Francine Houben lives in Rotterdam, a modern city where the skyline is dotted with buildings designed by world renowned architects; including her award winning Montevideo Skyscraper (2005). It was in this dynamic city that she directed and curated the First International Architecture Biennale Rotterdam (2003), with the theme, ‘Mobility, a room with a view’. She has realised numerous signature projects throughout the Netherlands and Europe including Philips Business Innovation Centre, FiftyTwoDegrees in Nijmegen, (2005-2006), La Llotja Theatre and Conference Centre in Lleida, Spain (2009) and the Delft University of Technology Library (1999). Currently, she is expanding her architectural vision to other continents with the design of Taiwan’s largest theatre complex, The Wei-Wu-Ying Center for the Arts in Kaohsiung (2014), Dudley Municipal Center in Boston (USA) and Shenzhen Cultural Center (China). In 2011 the book Dutch Mountains was released, a chronicle of Francine Houben and eight special projects in five different countries.

Francine maintains an active presence in academia and culture, regularly publishing and giving lectures worldwide. She has performed in many academic and professional capacities throughout her career, including Chair of Architecture and Aesthetics of Mobility at Delft University of Technology, visiting professor at Harvard Graduate School of Design, and as director of the First International Architecture Biennale in Rotterdam.

Francine has received honorary fellowships from the Royal Institute of British Architects, the American Institute of Architects and the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada. In 2014 Francine was named Woman Architect of the Year by the Architects’ Journal and in November 2015 Queen Máxima of The Netherlands presented Francine with the Prins Bernhard Cultuurfonds Prize for her wide-ranging career. Francine was awarded Honorary Doctorates from the Université de Mons, Belgium (2017) and the Utrecht University (2016).

“Architecture must appeal to all the senses. Architecture is never a purely intellectual, conceptual, or visual game alone. Architecture is about combining all the individual elements into a single concept. What counts in the end is the arrangement of form and emotion.”

Francine Houben, architect/creative director Mecanoo Architecten.

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Published on: June 10, 2016
Cite: "Mecanoo will build its Manchester University campus design" METALOCUS. Accessed
<http://www.metalocus.es/en/news/mecanoo-will-build-its-manchester-university-campus-design> ISSN 1139-6415
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