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Augustine House

Canterbury Christ Church University unveils its brand new £35 million cutting edge library and resource centre. View Transcript
View Synopsis LAURENCE CAMERON reports.

It's taken 255,000 hours to build, 1,000 tones of steel were used in its construction and 94 double-decker buses can fit into its atrium. This is Canterbury Christ Church University's new library and support services building, which opens its doors to students this academic year.

KEITH GWILYM, Pro-Vice Chancellor, Learning & Equality: 'It's primarily designed as a learning space for students and a space that they can get any question that they want answered. We've been thinking about it and dreaming it for several years, but it's actually been two years in the making. There's over 12,000 square metres of space. If you look down into the atrium on the ground floor, you see what we call the "i-zone". It's the focus of the ground floor and it's where students can go in person; they can get questions answered either electronically or by phone, however. Our library is housed here but it's not just a library of books, yes of course it has books but we've geared it around the needs of students today so there are zones where they can quiet and singularly study, they can meet in groups, be noisy if they want to, use a mobile phone if they want to. We recognize that learning is a social activity now, so you'll notice that as you move through the building, there are spaces that the students can eat, get coffee, take it round with them into the group spaces, and we've got a beautiful terrace on the top floor and you can see that that is a area where students could congregate both to learn and to socialise.'

The new approach certainly seems popular with the students...

STUDENTS: 'It looks fantastic, you know, everything's in its place, got loads of computers, wireless which is good if you've got laptops. I don't know, I think I'll be coming here to do my studying most of the time.

'It's getting away from the old sort of fusty image of libraries and it's much lighter and airier and I think that's conducive to good studying and good reading really.

'We're international students and it's a lot fancier than our building back at home. It's going to be interesting to figure out the layout but I'm sure we'll figure it out.

'It's amazing looking, very cool, a little bit scary looking as well, it's massive, a lot bigger than it seems from the outside.'

The building is also being used as a testbed environment for new learning research.

KEITH GWILYM: 'We've got a special research project going on called "i-borrow", where students can carry laptops anywhere around the building and students will flag where they are in the building. Students will be able to just pick one up, take it anywhere around the building, utilise it, when they've finished, put it back and leave it charging ready for the next student or borrow one and we're going to monitor how students use technology in a very large space.'

For opening times and other information, visit the website www.canterbury.ac.uk/augustine-house.

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