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Economic Development

University of Manchester presses ahead with 3,300 Fallowfield bedrooms even as students look to city centre

Student homes to be built in 'neighbourhood clusters'

How the new halls of residence in Fallowfield could look under the redevelopment of University of Manchester campus(Image: Sheppard Robson for University of Manchester)

University chiefs have confirmed that more than 1,000 additional students will soon be living in Fallowfield, despite a significant migration from south Manchester to the city centre. The University of Manchester has plans to revamp its Fallowfield campus, constructing 3,300 student bedrooms across 23 new accommodation blocks, which will be organised into five 'neighbourhood clusters'.

These new structures will replace the 2,350 rooms in Woolton Hall, Oak House, and Owens Park halls of residences, which are slated for demolition. The university already has 'outline' planning permission for the demolition and new blocks, with final details formally submitted to the council last week (March 17).

The university argues that the current accommodation, primarily built in the 1950s and 60s, 'is now reaching the end of its functional life' and needs to be razed. Following the council's granting of outline planning permission, the demolition of Owens Park Tower began last year, marking the end of the 18-storey building's 60-year tenure as a symbol of south Manchester.

A 'village green' was proposed to replace the 1965 modernist structure, complete with 'chaise lounges'.

The vision was never fully realised, with only new Unsworth Park and Uttley House coming to fruition. Both were constructed on vacant land behind existing halls, so no demolitions took place.

However, since a 2015 plan for that area fell through, an increasing number of students have relocated from south Manchester to the city centre. In the four years since 2018, the number of students residing in Fallowfield homes has decreased by a fifth.

This exodus led the council to 'manage a pipeline of student accommodation' in and around the city centre and university campuses, as stated by executive councillor for housing, Gavin White.

"As the city's universities have consolidated their campuses towards the Oxford Road corridor, more students are opting to live closer to their studies and the allure of city centre living," he commented in January.