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Encyclopedia > Plate glass universities
The University of York's Central Hall is an example of plate glass architectural design.
The University of York's Central Hall is an example of plate glass architectural design.

The term Plate glass university has come into use by some to refer to one of the several universities founded in the United Kingdom in the 1960s following the Robbins Report on higher education. The term reflects their modern architectural design, which often contains wide expanses of plate glass in steel or concrete frames. This contrasts with the (largely Victorian) Red Brick universities and the much older Ancient universities. The Central Hall at the University of York. ... The Central Hall at the University of York. ... The University of York (also known as York University) is a campus university in York, England. ... The 1960s, or The Sexy Sixties, in its most obvious sense refers to the decade between 1960 and 1969, but the expression has taken on a wider meaning over the past twenty years. ... The Robbins Report was a British government-commissioned report into the future of higher education in the country. ... Higher education is education provided by universities and other institutions that award academic degrees, such as university colleges, and liberal arts colleges. ... Modern architecture is a broad term given to a number of building styles with similar characteristics, primarily the simplification of form and the elimination of ornament, that first arose around 1900. ... The materials definition of a glass is a uniform amorphous solid material, usually produced when a suitably viscous molten material cools very rapidly, thereby not giving enough time for a regular crystal lattice to form. ... The old steel cable of a colliery winding tower Steel is a metal alloy whose major component is iron, with carbon being the primary alloying material. ... Placing a concrete floor for a commercial building Installing rebar in a floor during a concrete pour In construction, concrete is a composite building material made from the combination of aggregate and cement binder. ... The term Victorian architecture can refer to one of a number of architectural styles during the Victorian era: Neoclassicism Gothic Revival Italianate Second Empire Neo-Grec Romanesque Revival (Includes Richardsonian Revival) Renaissance Revival Queen Anne Jacobethan architecture (the precusor to the Queen Anne style) British Arts and Crafts movement painted... Red Brick is a name given originally to the six civic British universities that were founded in the industrial cities of England in the Victorian era and achieved university status before World War II. The civic university movement started in 1851 with Owens College, Manchester (now the University of Manchester... Ancient universities is a British term to indicate those of the universities that were founded in the middle ages. ...


While many of these institutions have interesting architecture, concrete often dominates to the dismay of modern observers.


The phrase New University often appears as a synonym for the Plate glass institutions, however this term also applies to the more recent Post-1992 universities (consisting mostly of former polytechnics). In the United Kingdom, the term New University has two meanings regarding British universities. ... In the United Kingdom, the term New University has two meanings regarding British universities. ... The term polytechnic, from the Greek πολύ polú meaning many and τεχνικός tekhnikós meaning arts, is commonly used in many countries to describe an institution that delivers vocational or technical education and training, other countries do not use the term and use alternative terminology. ...


List of plate glass universities

The list contains some of the United Kingdom's most prestigious universities such as the University of Warwick and the University of York. The University of Warwick is a campus university in the United Kingdom. ... The University of York (also known as York University) is a campus university in York, England. ...

Brunel University is one of the new British universities, having been founded within the last half century. ... The University of Bath is a campus university located in Bath, England at 51°22. ... The University of Bradford is a university in Bradford, West Yorkshire in the United Kingdom. ... The University of East Anglia (UEA) is a campus university located in Norwich, Norfolk, England, founded as part of the British Governments New Universities programme in the 1960s. ... University of Essex The University of Essex is a British university, one of the New Universities, so called, Glass Plate universities (like Warwick or York) and received its Royal Charter in 1965. ... The University of Kent (originally titled University of Kent at Canterbury and still often referred to as UKC) is a Glass Plate University in the United Kingdom. ... Keele Hall, formerly the ancestral home of the Sneyd family, is now part of Keele University Keele University is a well respected British university centrally located by the village of Keele just outside Newcastle-under-Lyme in north Staffordshire. ... Lancaster University (originally created as the University of Lancaster) is a campus university in Lancaster, England. ... Looking out over Airthrey Loch on the main campus of The University of Stirling Airthrey Loch frozen over on a snowy day The University of Stirling is a campus university created in 1967 and is based in a custom-built campus situated on a greenfield site in the outskirts of... The University of Sussex is an English campus university located near the East Sussex village of Falmer, near Brighton and Hove and on the edge of the South Downs. ... The University of Warwick is a campus university in the United Kingdom. ... The University of Ulster (UU) is a multi-site university located in Northern Ireland and is the largest university on the island of Ireland. ... The University of York (also known as York University) is a campus university in York, England. ...

See also

Campus university A Campus University is a British term for a University situated on one site - with student accommodation, teaching and research facilities, and leisure activities all together. ...


External links

  • Guardian article featuring the term plate glass university


 

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