Campus close-up: University of Bristol

New hilltop facility’s made-to-measure features aim to help biological research achieve liftoff

December 18, 2014

“It was like the maps of great tits in Wytham Woods,” says Jane Memmott, head of the University of Bristol’s School of Biological Sciences, about the territorial behaviour of the school’s academics in its previous building, and referring to the great tit population in the University of Oxford’s Wytham woodland, whose territories have been studied by scientists for almost 70 years.

“Everything was highly territorial,” she says. “Even if they did not have a [research] group any more they still had their lab, and the new people coming in were having [to work in the] broom cupboard,” she explains. During the undergraduate summer holidays, she adds, she would often decamp to the teaching laboratories because of the apparent lack of space.

But in the school’s new £56.5 million Life Sciences Building there are no such problems, as the space has been allocated according to need. Memmott admits that this has not got rid of tensions altogether, but has instead created other things that researchers must adapt to. There is now 100 per cent laboratory coat use, for example, and the layout of the space encourages more mixing between research groups than happened previously.

The 13,500 sq m building, which sits at the top of St Michael’s Hill overlooking Bristol’s city centre, offered the school a chance to “change habits in a fairly major way”, she adds. Opened by Sir David Attenborough in October, the building’s state-of-the-art assets include acoustic chambers for research on bats, vibration-free facilities and insectariums for work on bees and ants.

On its roof is a “GroDome”, in which researchers can control light, humidity and temperature when growing plants for research. Classrooms are set on the corner of the building, and their large windows allow passers-by to see what is going on inside.

Modern facilities

A new teaching laboratory that can accommodate 200 students at once means that practical classes need be repeated only once instead of twice, as was the case in the school’s previous facilities in the grade II-listed Fry Building, which is now being refurbished for use by the department of mathematics.

“It was a very old fashioned building, which made it very difficult to work in from a teaching and science point of view,” Memmott says. “We feel at an advantage here [in the new facility].”

During practical classes, for example, instructors use cameras that stream what they are doing on to screens so that students can see. “On open days it has been great. You had to apologise for the labs in the old building. Now, it looks like this is where modern real science happens,” she says.

But building such a development in the city centre site was far from simple, not least because it sits next door to the Bristol Centre for Nanoscience and Quantum Information, a vibration-free building, which means the Life Sciences Building is suspended so that its vibrations do not affect the neighbours. Planning restrictions also dictated that the facade had to look like a Georgian terrace from the bottom of the hill. It also could not exceed the existing skyline in height, so space had to be carved out below ground.

The building has been designed with researchers in mind. When the architects spent a week at the old laboratories observing how scientists used the facilities, they noticed that fridges and freezers took up a lot of floor space. But they were seldom used, mainly only to get things out and put them away at the start and end of each day. Now much of this equipment is stored in smaller ancillary rooms across the corridor from the main laboratories, thereby freeing up space.

With all these new facilities, Bristol’s biological scientists are expected to raise their game, Memmott observes.

“We have to effectively double our research income in the next few years. We are under particular pressure,” she says, admitting that the school’s game “needed raising”.

This has spurred a significant increase in grant applications last year, the results of which are already starting to come through, she says.

holly.else@tesglobal.com

In numbers

1km of bench space inside the new Life Sciences Building at the University of Bristol

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