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University of Lancashire

University in Lancashire, England From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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The University of Lancashire (previously abbreviated UCLan) is a public university based in the city of Preston, Lancashire, England. It has its roots in The Institution For The Diffusion Of Useful Knowledge, founded in 1828. Previously known as the University of Central Lancashire, Harris Art College, Preston Polytechnic and Lancashire Polytechnic, in 1992 it was granted university status by the Privy Council. The university is the 19th largest in the UK in terms of student numbers.[3]

Quick Facts Former names, Motto ...

In December 2024, the university received approval from the Office for Students to change its name to the University of Lancashire, with the rebrand intended to come into effect by September 2025.[4][5]

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History

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The Institution for the Diffusion of Knowledge was founded in 1828 by Joseph Livesey's Temperance Society. The society was born from a pledge made by seven Preston working men (whose names can be seen on a plaque in the university's library) to never again consume alcohol.[6]

The institute was housed in a classical-revivalist building on Cannon Street, before eventually expanding under the endowment of a local lawyer Edmund Robert Harris, who died in 1877. The expansion brought with it several new buildings and houses in the nearby Regent Street were purchased and demolished as a consequence. The institute became a regional centre for the arts and sciences.

As part of Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee celebrations in 1897, the institute's trustees paid the Victorian/Edwardian architect Henry Cheers to design the "Victoria Jubilee Technical School" (later known as the Harris Institute and now known as the Harris Building), to be built on Corporation Street. The foundation stone was laid in July 1895. Its goal was to provide local youths with a technical education in all areas. The building was progressive for the period, being powered entirely by electricity.

The institute existed in this state until 1932, when it changed its name to become the Harris Art College. It underwent further expansion and in 1952, and became the Harris College. In 1973, this became Preston Polytechnic, then the Lancashire Polytechnic in 1984. In 1992, full university status was awarded, and the University of Central Lancashire came into existence. The first chancellor of the university was Sir Francis Kennedy, and he was succeeded in 2001 by Sir Richard Evans. In 2016, Ranvir Singh became the new chancellor of the university.

The journalism division, now part of the School of Journalism and Media, is one of the oldest in the country, opening as part of the Harris College in 1962. In 1991, it became one of the first to teach journalism undergraduate degrees, with a strong emphasis on practical work.

In 2012, the University of Lancashire announced a partnership with the BAE Systems, and four other north-western universities (Liverpool, Salford, Lancaster and Manchester) in order to work on the Gamma Programme which aims to develop "autonomous systems". According to the University of Liverpool when referring to the programme, "autonomous systems are technology based solutions that replace humans in tasks that are mundane, dangerous and dirty, or detailed and precise, across sectors, including aerospace, nuclear, automotive and petrochemicals".[7]

In 2013, the School of Dentistry and the School of Postgraduate Medical and Dental Education merged to create the School of Medicine and Dentistry.

The university sponsored the now-defunct Wigan UTC, a university technical college which opened in September 2013.[8][9]

The university applied for permission to change its name to the University of Lancashire in January 2024.[10][4] 90% of respondents to the official consultation argued that the name change was confusing, particularly given the existence of Lancaster University. The Office for Students found that the change had "the potential to be confusing for particular groups" but ultimately approved it, citing a need to "protect the institutional autonomy of English higher education providers, and the need to encourage competition".[11]

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Campus

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The Harris building

The university is on an urban campus in Preston,[12] with sites in Burnley[13] and in Westlakes, West Cumbria (for Nursing and Medical programmes). A campus in Cyprus opened in October 2012.[14]

Preston

The JB Firth building, named after forensic scientist James Brierly Firth,[15] was opened by the university in September 2011, at a cost of £12.5m. It houses the School of Forensic and Applied Sciences, which includes subjects such as chemistry and forensic science. The new building has a 4,000 m2 teaching area, which includes six laboratories.

In September 2019, the Engineering Innovation Centre opened.[16] The building contains several specialist labs and simulators, as well as teaching and exhibition space.[17]

In May 2018, the Oasis Faith and Spirituality Centre opened. The building consists of multiple faith rooms, counselling and event space as well as roof terrace. The multi faith centre replaced the existing one located on St. Peter's Court.[18]

The Student Centre and New Square opened in 2021. A new square was also built in front of the student centre. Both the new square and student centre were constructed partially on the existing Adelphi roundabout and on the land once occupied by the Fylde building.[19]

Cyprus

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The main building of UCLan Cyprus

The university's Cyprus location is a branch campus of the University of Lancashire situated in Pyla, Larnaka.[14] The campus opened in 2012 and is licensed and registered as a university in Cyprus. It is the only British private university in Cyprus.[14] It accepts international students.

The campus is the first in Cyprus that has a Moot Court for use by the School of Law students.[14]

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Academic profile

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The university has students and researchers from over 100 countries and partnerships with 125 international institutions. The University has 98 professors, over 600 research or knowledge transfer-active members of staff, and 763 research students. There are 246 Honorary Fellows of the university.

The university has the following schools:

  • Centre for Collaborative Learning
  • Arts and Media
  • Business
  • Engineering and Computing
  • Health, Social Work and Sport
  • Law and Policing
  • Nursing and Midwifery
  • Pharmacy and Biomedical Sciences
  • Psychology and Humanities
  • Veterinary Medicine

The University of Lancashire is the only university in the UK to run a feature film module. Results of this course include The Collaborators (2015), Audax (2014),[20] The Wedding (2013),[21] Wraith (2012),[22] Blue December (2011) and Needle In The Hay (2011).[23]

Quick Facts National rankings, Complete (2026) ...

Rankings

The University of Lancashire is in the top 7% of universities worldwide according to The Center for World University Rankings 2024 (CWUR).[30] The University of Lancashire is in the top 800 universities globally according to the Times Higher Education World University Rankings.[31]

International developments

In 2012 the university opened University of Lancashire Cyprus a €53 million branch campus in Larnaka, Cyprus.[32][33] It is the only private British university in Cyprus.[34]

University of Lancashire Cyprus offers bachelor's degrees in business administration, advertising and marketing communications, accounting and finance, hospitality and tourism management, computing, mathematics, English language studies, law, web design and development, sport and exercise science and psychology.[35] It offers master's degrees in business administration, business management, marketing management, education leadership, teaching English to speakers of other languages (TESOL) with applied linguistics, financial and commercial law, computing, cybersecurity, data analytics, sport & exercise science and forensic psychology.[14]

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Student life

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Students' Union

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The Students' Union venue, 53 Degrees.

The nightclub and live music venue at the Students' Union, '53 Degrees', has two floors with a bar on each and occasionally hosts musical performers. Across two rooms, total capacities are 1,100 & 350 for club nights and 1,400 and 350 for all live gigs. The adjoining bar, 'Lampworks', is open seven days a week during term times. '53 Degrees' is no longer owned by the Students' Union however Freshers' Week events are still run in the venue.

Sports

There are over 35 sports clubs run by the students’ union. Many have block bookings at the Sir Tom Finney Sports Centre and Sports Arena in term-time for training and matches. The sports clubs participate in British Universities and Colleges Sport competitions and have home and away fixtures.

The university outdoor sport facilities can be found at Sports Arena (USA) which is located two miles away and was opened in 2000 by The Princess Royal. The £12 million[citation needed] arena provides facilities for rugby league, rugby union, football (five grass pitches), hockey (two floodlit all-weather pitches), netball, tennis (four floodlit courts), and cycling (1 mile (1.6 km) circuit), as well as an eight-lane athletics area, equipped for school, club, and county competitions.

The university's Motor Sports Engineering and Operations students run a motor racing team, UCLAN Racing.[36]

Media

The Pulse was a student media brand at the Union. It consisted of a student newspaper which printed six times a year, and began in 1985 as the Ribble Echo; Pulse Radio, founded in 1999 as Frequency Radio; and a TV station. The Pulse stopped broadcasting in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, however efforts were taken in 2024 to relaunch the organisation.[37]

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Notable people

Alumni

Academics

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See also

References

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