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BUILDING THE FUTURE OF UEA

Thanks to philanthropic giving, the UEA campus and Norwich Research Park look very different from when The Difference Campaign began.

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Alongside its scientific research, the Quadram Institute is the largest gastrointestinal endoscopy facility in the UK, treating 40,000 patients each year.

A £3 million state-of-the-art neuroimaging research centre to answer fundamental questions about how the human brain works.

Former courtyard buildings at the home of Elizabeth Fry have been transformed into vital teaching spaces and the UEA Law Clinic. Here, students work with local charities to provide legal assistance in the community.

 04 NEW SCIENCE BUILDING

A new home for UEA’s 3,000 STEM students hoping to follow in the footsteps of Nobel Prize-winning alumni Prof Michael Houghton, Sir Paul Nurse and Dame Sarah Gilbert.

Spaces That Change Lives

Campus development has been a vital part of The Difference Campaign, helping the University further cement its place on the international stage for education and research between 2013 and 2022.

 05 PRODUCTIVITY EAST

UEA’s regional hub for future engineers features manufacturing laboratories, a computer-aided design studio and robotics facilities.

Our donor community have helped secure the past and future of the UEA campus. Historic buildings have been transformed, and the foundations have been laid for generations to come.

In fact, philanthropy has been at the heart of UEA since it was founded in 1963. Our most notable buildings have all been made possible thanks to visionary generosity.

Fundraising for campus development will continue to be of vital importance as the University continues to evolve. Philanthropic giving allows us to maintain our historically significant campus, whilst providing cuttingedge research and teaching facilities to compete at the highest level.

 06 BOB CHAMPION RESEARCH AND EDUCATION BUILDING

This £19 million medical research and teaching centre was named in honour of the Grand National-winning jockey, Bob Champion, following a donation by his charitable trust.

Our next capital fundraising project will see the iconic Lasdun Teaching Wall, which runs like a spine through the centre of campus, restored after more than 50 years of service. New spaces for learning will be created and the latest educational technology installed.

Thank you to everyone who has donated to fund buildings at the University of East Anglia and Norwich Research Park.