Title: Science City
1Science City
- Announcement by Gordon Brown in Dec 2004
pre-budget statement that there would be three
Science Cities Manchester, Newcastle upon Tyne
and York - Budget Birmingham, Bristol and Nottingham
- Key objective to establish Britain as the
optimal place in the world for science-led
business
2Science City
- Lambert review December 2003
- Evidence from worldwide studies of the importance
of the physical nature of a place to its success
in undertaking science and technology - Focus on how science and technology policy and
expenditure could be integrated with physical
regeneration policy and expenditure
3Newcastle Science City
- Strategy for Success One North East
- Newcastle Universitys plans for its campus
development - City Councils plans for the development of the
Discovery Quarter in the west central area
4Timetable
- Dec 2004 three RDAs asked to develop plans to
take forward the Science City in their region - February 2005 initial document submitted to the
Chancellor - June 2005 deadline for submission of detailed
plans for consideration in 2006 spending review
5Structure
- Leadership group chaired by Paul Walker
- Task Group chaired by Pat Ritchie executive
management and co-ordination (senior
representatives of partner organisations) - Workstream Groups detailed development of each of
the main areas of activity
6Objectives of Newcastle Science City
- Development of internationally leading scientific
based research, business and education, in a
globally competitive environment, in the City of
Newcastle - Integration of science and technological research
in areas of current and future strength with
related commercial and business development - Thus providing a key driver for the development
of the City, the City Region, the NE of England
and the UK
7Newcastle Science City
- Hub to a wider network across the City Region and
Region - Partnership of City Council, ONE, the University
of Newcastle, NHS and businesses - Other stakeholders Northumbria and Durham
Universities, Central Government and Science and
Industry Council
8What are the advantages of being a Science City?
- Being named a science city helps to attract
investment in science and technology to the area.
- It allows universities and regional businesses to
bid for extra funds for research.
9Key Areas
- Stem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine
(collaboration of Newcastle University with ICfL,
Durham, Harvard and Monash Universities) - Ageing and Health especially assistive
technologies - Molecular Engineering (Chemical Engineering,
Chemistry, Physics, Engineering and
Nanotechnology (DTI UIC)) - Energy and the Environment
10Technology Village
Biology
Civil Engineering and Geosciences
Agriculture, Food and Rural Development
Natural Sciences
Mechanical and Systems Engineering
Chemical Eng. and Advanced Materials
We map squarely onto all the Centres of
Excellence and the Clusters
Mathematics and Statistics
Marine Science and Technology
Electrical Electronic and Comp. Eng.
Computing Science
Stephenson Centre, RCID, EDC, ISRU, Design Unit
11What will it cost?
- Stem cells 34m
- Ageing and health 25m
- Molecular Engineering 25m
- Energy and Environment 10.5m
- Technology Village 43m
- IHG relocation 15m
- Total 152.5m
12Where will the money come from?
- Specific Government grants
- ONE (dedicated secretariat)
- SRIF and its successor
- Private sector
13Workstreams
- Scientific research base (Malcolm Young)
- Commercialisation and Business support (Douglas
Robertson) - Physical development (Larry Heslop)
- Public engagement and Education (Erica Haimes)
14Branding
- Historical context Joseph Swan 125th anniversary
- From the darkness of the North he brought light
to London - York City and its taxi drivers
- NGI
- Stem cell publicity
- Launch of regional marketing strategy (7m over 3
years Passionate people, passionate places)
15Richard SykesFinancial Times March 11th 2004
- There is a big problem in this country.that all
the excellence is concentrated in the South of
England .Thats where the GDP is generated..You
cant just send it to the North-East of England.
People wont go
16Sir Richard SykesFT March 11th 2004
- You can't start funding things on geography,
you've got to fund things on the basis of
excellence and quality."
17THE INSTITUTE FORAGEING AND HEALTH Interd
isciplinary research to promote the health and
well-being of older people
18The North of England Science Initiative
- A major collaboration between the Universities of
Durham, Lancaster, Leeds, Liverpool, Manchester,
Newcastle, Sheffield and York - Part of the Northern Way
- Improving the economic performance of the North
of England
19The Northern Way Growth Strategy
- Discussed summer 2004 launched in October 2004
- Championed/led by John Prescott and Gordon Brown
- Primarily focused on improving the economy of the
North of England by c.29Billion/annum by 2025 - It will achieve this by addressing issues of
- Bringing more people into work - meeting the
skills needs - Housing and building sustainable communities
- Strengthening the knowledge economy to support
innovation building an entrepreneurial culture - Improving transport and access to ports and
airports - Marketing the North to capture a larger share of
global trade
20The North of England Eight Research Universities
- The Universities of Durham, Lancaster, Leeds,
Liverpool, Manchester, Newcastle, Sheffield, York - Total annual turnover is around 1.75 Billion
- Total Research income is over 620M
- 8,000 academic staff 160,000 students
- By comparison, the Universities of Oxford,
Cambridge, Imperial, UCL, London School of
Economics - Total annual turnover is around 1.75 Billion
- Total Research income is around 820m
- 7,200 academic staff 85,000 students
21Research Themes
- Ageing and obesity the quality of life of our
population - Profs. Tom Kirkwood Anne Dickinson
- Water and water quality, water governance,
flooding and erosion - Profs Enda OConell and Jim Hall
- The Molecular Engineering Industrial Toolkit
(chemistry, 21st Century chemical engineering,
catalysis, biomanufacture, nanotechnology,
photonics,) - Profs Nick Wright, Elaine Martin Trevor Page
- The Energy Thinktank - sustainability issues
and the Nuclear Question - Profs Alan Jack Paul Chistensen
- Tissue Regeneration, Stem Cells Tissue
Engineering - regenerative medicine - Prof Michael Whitaker
- these involve our leading researchers and at
least FOUR of our Research Institutes
22Timetable
- The timetable has been unbelievably tight, the
original expression of interest for ODPM was
submitted in lt3 weeks, with the final FIVE MAJOR
PROPOSALS being written in 7 weeks (including
Easter) - TODAY is the deadline for the bids to be
submitted - Following the election purdah, they are being
sent to the three RDAs, the three SICs, the DTI
the Treasury. - Funding decisions are expected within the next
few weeks. - Irrespective of success now, further proposals,
based on these bids, will go directly to the
Research Councils and the forthcoming EU FP7
programme their possible match to the strategic
forward looks of these bodies has already been
tested.
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