The challenge
The University of Manchester's ambition to commercialize the discovery of graphene called for new state-of-the-art facilities.
The University of Manchester's ambition to commercialize the discovery of graphene called for new state-of-the-art facilities.
Working with the University since 2012, Arcadis has led the delivery of three multi-million, award-winning buildings that truly reflect the University’s ambition.
Together, the National Graphene Institute, GEIC and Henry Royce Institute will form a new ‘Graphene City’, providing new jobs, skills and a competitive edge.
Graphene. Stronger than steel, but one million times thinner than a human hair. It could potentially make sea water drinkable and batteries so tiny they could be sewn into skin, revolutionizing everything from transport, engineering and electronics to medical science. The University of Manchester is at the heart of these new developments, pioneering research into how graphene and other advanced materials can change the world. However, if it is to continue leading the race to commercialize graphene, the University needs new state-of-the-art facilities to house its growing research and innovation base.
Arcadis has a long-standing relationship with the University of Manchester, having first worked with the team in 2012 to create the technical design brief for the world-leading National Graphene Institute. This £61 million, state-of-the-art facility opened in 2015 and is now the world's most advanced building for graphene research. Our role as Project Manager and Full Design Team saw us working closely with the University and leading scientists to bring their vision of a cutting-edge facility to life.
Together, the National Graphene Institute, GEIC and Henry Royce Institute will form a new ‘Graphene City’. Home to more than 350 scientists, manufacturers, engineers and innovators, the buildings will provide the critical mass necessary to drive forward innovation, research and development in graphene and advanced materials.
As a flagship project in the Government’s Northern Powerhouse agenda, Graphene City will not only enhance industrial competitiveness, it will cement Manchester and the UK as a world leader in advanced materials research. With it, new skills, new jobs, a boost to the local economy, and innovations that will surely deliver on a mission to shape more sustainable societies.