The proposed Heavitree Road entrance viewed from Gladstone Road
A proposed vision to redevelop the University of Exeter’s St Luke’s Campus over the next 50 years will soon be open for public view.
The ambitious long term vision is designed to enhance the university’s local and global reputation as world-leading for health and wellbeing research and education.
In November 2023, the university invited colleagues, students, strategic partners and members of the local community to an early-stage engagement so they could share their views on how the campus should be developed. Now, a public display will showcase the proposed long term vision for the campus, which incorporate key aspects of the feedback shared.
The proposal for the campus aims to boost health-related education and research in the coming decades, directly benefitting the local community by creating more high-quality jobs, offering a world-class education on the doorstep, and generating research which will have direct impacts on patient care. The proposal seeks to ensure the campus is open and available as a community asset, upgrading both the appearance and utility of the site and adding economic benefit to the area.
The vision for the campus aims to greatly improve the look of the site by creating a modern and biodiverse landscape, whilst opening up the area with welcoming, publicly accessible spaces that are beneficial to the health of those that work, study and visit the campus.
The vision sets out proposals for seven potential new buildings over the coming decades, and the area, scale, height and distribution of public open spaces within the campus, as well as which buildings, features and green spaces will be retained. The vision will then be reviewed by Exeter City Council.
If endorsed, each building and area to be developed will go through the usual planning process and include further public consultation before any construction starts on site. .
The university’s health and wellbeing research has already led to a number of significant global breakthroughs, meaning better diagnosis and treatment in key areas. Specific examples include new ways of treating babies with neonatal diabetes across the world, finding new ways of diagnosing cancer to improve survival rates, and better ways of caring for people with early-stage dementia.
Professor Lisa Roberts, President and Vice Chancellor of the University of Exeter, said: “The future vision for our St Luke’s Campus will allow us to significantly grow our research in biomedical sciences so that we continue to make pioneering medical breakthroughs that benefit people across the world.”
St Luke’s was founded in 1854 as a teacher training college, an activity that is still going strong through the University’s School of Education. The campus has a proud 160-year history of delivering high-quality research and training, with an increasing focus on health and wellbeing since the University of Exeter Medical School was established a decade ago.
The new vision for the campus aims to build on the close proximity to key partners the Royal Devon University Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust and the Devon Partnership NHS Trust, to help stimulate an expansion of health-related activity, which would mean health and economic benefits for the area.
Public views are invited at two engagement events on Tuesday 16 April and Thursday 25 April from 13:00 to 19:00, at St Luke’s Campus on the first floor of Cross Keys café (location three on this campus map)
At the events, the local community, University colleagues and students will be able to view information on the proposed vision for St Luke’s. The project team will be on hand to answer any questions and attendees can provide feedback at the event or online.
The engagement event materials will be published on the university’s website and an online feedback form will be live from Tuesday 16 April until the end of the engagement period on Tuesday 7 May.
Feedback will be reviewed and incorporated into a proposal to be submitted to Exeter City Council for consideration as they develop the new Local Plan.
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