University of St Andrews has £142m campus plans approved

FIFE Council has approved £142 million plans by the University of St Andrews to renovate the former Madras College building and construct new buildings on the site.

Once completed, ‘New College’, as it is currently known, will be home to the new St Andrews business school as well as accommodating the learning institute’s school of international relations.

WilkinsonEyre is behind the design of the plans which include a full refurbishment of the Category A-listed former Madras College Building – including a glass roof over the quad to preserve the sandstone cloister beneath and provide a large indoor space.

There will also be a significant new building to the rear of the historic frontage. In addition to lecture theatres, meeting rooms, study space and conference areas, New College will feature community spaces, including a café and a Changing Places facility.

The university explained the project is strategically significant for St Andrews beyond the immediate benefits for the business school and international relations, because it will not only take forward teaching and research, but will unlock the capacity needed to facilitate development and modernisation of other areas of the university.

The £142 million costs will in large part come from St Andrews alumni and supporters through the university’s Making Waves fundraising campaign. The campaign appeal for New College has already raised more than £50m towards the capital build – with the biggest contributors so far being Oak Foundation with a £15 million grant and Garfield Weston Foundation with £5 million, as well as a recent gift of $5 million from long-standing US supporters and St Andrews residents, George and Wendy David.

Last week the university announced it had been awarded £950,000 from Scotland’s Public Sector Heat Decarbonisation Fund for a programme of advanced conservation works, including roof and stonework repairs and the refurbishment of original sash windows using vacuum glazing technology.

University principal professor dame Sally Mapstone FRSE, who is spearheading the project, said, “I am very pleased the plan has been approved. The former Madras College secondary school building has a very special place in the hearts of so many members of the St Andrews and North East Fife community, as well as our global alumni and donor network, and we are very grateful for their interest and support for the redevelopment plans. I know many people will now watch with interest as the vision becomes a reality.

“New College is part of our £300 million Making Waves fundraising campaign in support of our world-leading ambitions. Despite the very challenging financial circumstances facing the higher education sector, St Andrews recognises it is vital to invest in landmark projects that will not only create an inclusive and inspiring educational space but also bring tangible benefits to the St Andrews and wider Fife community, and help safeguard the future of the University.”

Stafford Critchlow, board director at WilkinsonEyre, added, “It’s been a rewarding three-year process of careful dialogue to ensure the design properly stitches New College into the historic fabric of central St Andrews. With the restored listed building at its heart, reinvigorated by a newly covered courtyard designed for year-round use in the Fife climate, the scheme delivers outstanding facilities for students, postgraduates and academics. The result is a contemporary academic environment with a strong and distinctive St Andrews character, enriched by a new landscape setting and public access.”