Student numbers and accommodation

The City of Durham Trust considers that the increase in Durham University student numbers has gone well beyond the ‘tipping point’ for community cohesion and balance. We are a local voluntary group concerned with appropriate development in and around the city, and we closely scrutinise planning documents such as the University’s Strategy and Estate Masterplan. The target in that Strategy is for growth to 21,500 students in the year 2026/27. But the (provisional) latest figure is that there are already 22,220 Durham University students.

How has this happened? In the post-war years the number of Durham University students grew very gradually to about 4,000 in the 1960s and to 6,500 in 1990/91. The then Vice-Chancellor regarded that as the right size for the University in this small host city. However, subsequent Vice-Chancellors grew the University to about 15,500 in 2013/14 with virtually no corresponding increase in College accommodation and no public engagement. That was deeply damaging, pursued without regard to the effect on the year-round residents of the city. Developers and landlords bought up much of the working class terraced housing in Durham, pricing out locals and resulting in whole areas without school-children, without neighbours for the elderly, without shoppers for half the year. For their part, the former Durham City Council and then Durham County Council for many years resisted any planning policies to control conversions of family homes into Houses in Multiple Occupation.

To its credit, the University produced a public Strategy document for the decade 2016/17 to 2026/27. Not so welcome was that it set out to increase student numbers in Durham city by a further 40% in just ten years, though with a comforting aspiration to accommodate between 50% and 55% in College accommodation. Under Stuart Corbridge the University has, thankfully, built two new Colleges and identified sites on its own estate for a further six purpose-built student accommodation (PBSA) developments.

Unsurprisingly, the property market sniffed opportunities, and there has been an eruption of private PBSA developments across the city. Generally, these are well-designed but too bulky for the local street-scene, and some seriously intrude in views of the Castle and Cathedral World Heritage Site despite the protection that UNESCO and County Durham Plan policies are meant to ensure. These PBSAs have enabled the worst imbalance of any English University city – more than half Durham’s population are students, and only 35% are in College accommodation compared with Oxford and Cambridge’s 70%. Indeed, Oxford City Council’s policy is that the two Oxford Universities should together have only 6,500 students living out. In Durham 14,000 live out, in a city a quarter the size.

Most recently, a PBSA has been proposed to replace the Apollo Bingo Hall in the Sherburn Road. The local community was very strongly against, as were the Parish Council, all three local County Councillors and the Member of Parliament. The Trust submitted that there is no need for more student accommodation, regardless of location, given that the University’s target for 5 years’ time has already been exceeded, and all those students are accommodated. Nevertheless, the County Council’s Planning Committee has approved this scheme! Far better use of the site would be retention of the bingo hall or development of much-needed affordable housing.

The massive question now is whether further increases in student numbers will be allowed or even encouraged. The Government planning inspector who scrutinised the County Plan in 2019-20 expressed major reservations about the city’s ability to cope with any increases beyond the 2026/27 target in the University’s Masterplan. While as a business the University must be tempted by the prospect of yet more income, the question of even further growth must be a top issue for the new Vice-Chancellor and Warden. An apparently compliant County Council needs to reflect on what kind of county town it truly wants. Bodies like the Trust must continue to be an independent voice for the exceptional heritage and civic qualities we must try to sustain.

The Trust’s objections to the PBSA proposed for the Apollo Bingo Hall in the Sherburn Road can be seen below:

1 comment

  1. Although two new colleges have been built on the Mount Oswald estate, one of those accommodates John Snow College, relocated from Stockton. The other former Stockton college, George Stephenson, was housed by relocating Ustinov College to the Sheraton Park estate, taking on the former New College site which was initially developed privately as a PBSA. In summary we have three new colleges in Durham, John Snow, George Stephenson and South College. Two of them are housed in new buildings built by the university, but two of them were relocated from Stockon, adding to the student numbers in Durham but not to the university’s overall student numbers. So depending on how you look at it there are either three new colleges, two, or just one!

    The completion of the Sheraton Park development is very welcome. The New College buildings had stood derelict after the plan for luxury apartments fell through with the recession. While it is a shame to lose the opportunity for much-needed general housing, it was a good idea to locate the university’s graduate college on this site, which is at the heart of a densely-packed estate of townhouses.

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