Plate glass university
A plate glass university is one of a group of universities in the United Kingdom established or promoted to university status in the 1960s. The original plate glass universities were established following decisions by the University Grants Committee in the late 1950s and early 1960s, prior to the Robbins Report in 1963. However, the term has since expanded to encompass the institutions that became universities as a result of Robbins' recommendations.
Origin of terminology
The term plateglass was coined by Michael Beloff for a book he wrote about these universities, to reflect their modern architectural design which often contains wide expanses of plate glass in steel or concrete frames. This contrasted with the redbrick universities and the very much older ancient universities.Beloff applied the term specifically to the new creations of the 1960s, not including the institutions promoted from university colleges or colleges of advanced technology, or created by division of existing universities "as Durham shed Newcastle". All of the original plateglass universities were created de novo as universities.
Beloff's plateglass universities
Beloff listed seven universities in his book. These were the seven universities approved by the UGC prior to the Robbins Report.- University of East Anglia
- University of Essex
- University of Kent at Canterbury
- University of Lancaster
- University of Sussex
- University of Warwick
- University of York
Naming
Unlike earlier universities in the United Kingdom, which were typically named after the city in which they were located, several newer universities were named after the counties or wider regions they served. For example, universities founded in Colchester and Brighton were named after the counties of Essex and Sussex, respectively. The university in Canterbury initially adopted the name University of Kent at Canterbury, combining the county name with the city name, although this was later simplified to the University of Kent. The university on the outskirts of Coventry, Warwickshire was named after the county town of Warwick. The university in Norwich, which is in the county of Norfolk, was instead named for the wider area of East Anglia which also includes Suffolk and Essex. The universities in Lancashire and Yorkshire were located in the county towns of Lancaster and York respectively. There were already universities within those counties.Since the passage of the Further and Higher Education Act 1992 several new universities and university colleges have been created within the same city as a plate-glass university and have been named after the city: Brighton, Canterbury Christ Church, Coventry, Norwich University of the Arts, Writtle and York St John.
Common references
Certain aspects of the design of these universities acknowledges the formation of the group; for example, at Sussex the first batches of student residences to be built were named after some of the other new universities, i.e. "Essex House", "Kent House", "Lancaster House", "Norwich House", and "York House".Other universities, sometimes referred to as plate glass universities
Research at the Department for Education in 2016 categorised universities into four age groups: ancient, red brick, plate glass, and post-1992.The institutions that gained university status in the 1960–1992 plate glass period are listed below. Almost all of these were promoted to university status, rather than created as universities like the institutions in Beloff's original list; ten were previously colleges of advanced technology.
- Aston University – formerly Birmingham CAT
- University of Bath – formerly Bristol College of Science and Technology
- University of Bradford – formerly Bradford Institute of Technology
- Brunel University – formerly Brunel CAT; became a member institution of the University of London in 2024 and now operates as "Brunel University of London"
- University of Buckingham – formerly University College at Buckingham
- City University, London – formerly Northampton CAT; became a college of the University of London and renamed "City, University of London" in 2016
- Heriot-Watt University – formerly School of Arts of Edinburgh
- Keele University – formerly North Staffordshire University College
- Loughborough University – formerly Loughborough CAT
- Newcastle University – formerly King's College, University of Durham
- Open University – de novo creation as a distance-learning university
- University of Salford – formerly Salford CAT
- University of Dundee – formerly Queen's College Dundee, part of the University of St Andrews
- University of Stirling – de novo creation as a university
- University of Strathclyde – formerly the Royal College of Science and Technology
- University of Surrey – formerly Battersea CAT
- New University of Ulster – de novo creation as a university; merged with the older Magee University College in 1969; merged with Ulster Polytechnic and renamed "University of Ulster" in 1984
- Cranfield Institute of Technology – formerly the College of Aeronautics; granted university status and renamed "Cranfield University" in 1993
- London Business School – established 1964, joined University of London 1965
- Royal College of Art