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PRIVACY
Regional Development

University of Leicester Business School completes £16m renovation

Brookfield House was built in 1870 and served as the home of Thomas Fielding Johnson, founding benefactor of the university

L-R – Professor Dan Ladley (Dean of the University School of Business), Professor Henrietta O’Connor (Pro Vice-Chancellor and Head of College of Social Science, Arts and Humanities) and VIP guest Sam Barnett plant a ceremonial tree to mark the formal opening of the Brookfield Campus

The University of Leicester has completed the £15.8 million restoration of its business school.

The Brookfield campus (ULSB) is set in seven acres of land in the historic Stoneygate Conservation Area, off the A6 and close to the university’s main campus.

It has been renovated to include modern learning and teaching spaces, including a Harvard-style lecture theatre and the ULSB Trading Room – home to 16 dual-screen Bloomberg terminals – aimed at students and researchers alike.

Brookfield House was built in 1870 and served as the home of Thomas Fielding Johnson, founding benefactor of the Leicester, Leicestershire and Rutland University College. Descendants of the prominent Victorian business leader unveiled a specially-commissioned portrait in his honour during the campus’s formal opening ceremony.

The event also featured a keynote speech and questions to Sam Barnett, a Leicester alumnus and successful entrepreneur in the field of technology and big data – areas of strategic focus for the business school.

Speaking at the ceremony, President and Vice-Chancellor Professor Nishan Canagarajah said: “The transformation of our Brookfield campus has been a flagship project for the University, and I am delighted to see the tremendous facilities already being put to great use by our students and researchers.

“For us to cut the ribbon here in our centenary year is especially significant; this campus is directly linked to one of our founding fathers, and we have been conscious to honour the legacy of Thomas Fielding Johnson in this sympathetic renovation of his former family home.

“We hope that, through a mix of old and new, these facilities may also stand for the next 100 years in providing research-led education for our future leaders and entrepreneurs.”