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University of Chester unveils foundations for growth in town centre

08/03/2021

University has now completed the purchase of a property on Barbauld Street

The University of Chester has detailed its plans for town centre provision following the recently announced news that it will be relocating its teaching provision from the ‘Padgate Campus’ into Warrington town centre over the next 18 months.

Location, location, location

The University has now completed the purchase of a property on Barbauld Street and has agreed terms for a lease of a new unit in Time Square.

The Time Square space will be refurbished and equipped to be operational from mid-September 2021 and is to be the ‘shop front’ for the University in Warrington. It will host an information point for members of the public to engage and understand the learning opportunities available from the University. It will also include bookable learning space for students with laptops and digital resources, breakout spaces for seminars and a small lecture space for talks and events. This town centre location will also work with partners to showcase the opportunities available for both learners and businesses and will include offers from Further Education partners and key business support programmes, such as the Accelerate skills programme, working with Cheshire and Warrington Local Enterprise Partnership.

It is proposed that the former office building on Barbauld Street currently called ‘Mersey Bank House’ will house the majority of the teaching provision, namely Education and Nursing, and will be renamed the ‘Sarah Parker Remond Building.’ Significantly, this announcement is being made to coincide with International Women’s Day (March 8.)

What’s in a name?

The University has decided to name its new building after Sarah Parker Remond (1826-1894), a prominent anti-slavery and women’s rights campaigner from America, who after arriving in Liverpool, was hosted in Warrington and gave a series of lectures at Warrington Music Hall and the Red Lion Hotel. Remond’s first lecture, free to enter, was described by contemporary accounts as the best attended public event in the town’s history and following the lecture series she spoke of the reception and sympathy she had found in Warrington. Remond’s speeches and writings also speak of her wider commitments to education, human rights and women’s suffrage and her later career as a doctor enabled her to put these into action.

By naming the building after Remond the University signals a continuing link with Warrington and the local community, whilst supporting and promoting the University’s mission, vision and foundational values, which have such resonance today.

Building a greater future

Professor Eunice Simmons, Vice-Chancellor, said: “The University’s desire to grow its Warrington presence in the heart of the town is aligned to its Citizen Student strategy to provide a ‘premium, personalised and purposeful’ experience to its learners. The town centre location helps to realise the ambition to broaden the reach and accessibility of the University in Warrington whilst supporting Warrington Borough Council to focus on areas of growth, providing strategic support for the post-COVID economic and cultural recovery.”

Find out more about the University of Chester here