1 / 36

Creating the A483/A55 Knowledge Industry Corridor

Creating the A483/A55 Knowledge Industry Corridor Proposals by Glynd ŵ r University to stimulate the knowledge based economy of the region Presentation to: The Mersey Dee Alliance - Strategy Group 24 April 2009. About Glynd ŵ r University. Full university status July 2008

odell
Télécharger la présentation

Creating the A483/A55 Knowledge Industry Corridor

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Creating the A483/A55 Knowledge Industry Corridor Proposals by Glyndŵr University to stimulate the knowledge based economy of the region Presentation to: The Mersey Dee Alliance - Strategy Group 24 April 2009

  2. About Glyndŵr University • Full university status July 2008 • Strong technological tradition since 1887 • Very high graduate employability rate (94%) • Judged by RAE to have “world leading” research in Materials Science and ICT • Close collaboration with industries in Wrexham and Deeside

  3. Strategic Direction • Over-arching strategic goal to support economic and social development • Meeting the needs of employers central to our strategy • Many courses delivered in partnership with industry and the public sector • Applied research jointly with/for industry • Aiming to establish/develop centres of new knowledge based economic activity along the A483/A55.

  4. To create centres of innovation along a new Knowledge Industry Corridor A proactive solution to help sustain regional industries and deal with the impact of the recession A483 / A55 Our A483/A55 Vision

  5. A 483

  6. St. Asaph: OpTIC Technium (Opto-electronics) Northop: Proposed Biosciences Centre Broughton: Proposed Composites Centre Wrexham: Centres for Creative Industries & E-Health

  7. More detail on each site…

  8. St. Asaph: OpTIC Technium (Opto-electronics) Northop: Proposed Biosciences Centre Broughton: Proposed Composites Centre Wrexham: Centres for Creative Industries & E-Health

  9. ST. ASAPH: OPTIC TECHNIUM

  10. OpTIC: Current Status • University has taken-over the assets and management of the OpTIC Technium • Currently hosts 3 Glyndŵr research teams: • Centre for Modern Optics • Centre for Solar Energy Research • Polymerization Reaction Engineering Centre • Plus teams from UCL, Cambridge and Cranfield collaborating in EPSRC funded IKC with OpTIC Glyndŵr

  11. Future Prospects / Activities • Currently building prototype mirror segments for the largest telescope in the world –the ESO ELT • Significant opportunities to develop further opto-electronics businesses in Phase 2 development • 3D holographic displays, advanced photovoltaics, fibre optic communications & related technologies

  12. St. Asaph: OpTIC Technium (Opto-electronics) Northop: Proposed Biosciences Centre Broughton: Proposed Composites Centre Wrexham: Centres for Creative Industries & E-Health

  13. NORTHOP: PROPOSED BIOSCIENCES CENTRE

  14. Northop: Our Vision • New partnership between the University, the Welsh College of Horticulture, and Deeside College of FE • Aims: • to develop centre for animal health, vet sciences and animal behavioural sciences • partnership with Liverpool University • to create an International Research Centre in Hydrocolloids and Functional Biopolymers and stimulate spin-off industries

  15. Hydrocolloids • Complex polymers derived from plant sources • acacia trees & others • Many potential uses • food stabilizers, wound dressings, oil well lubricants, adhesives • Sustainable chemical engineering (i.e. complex chemicals from renewable non-oil sources)

  16. Investments to date • San Ei Gen (Japan) have invested £1.6M with us in R&D • Other major research grants obtained • e.g. £800k for joint Glyndŵr Univ, UCL, Durham Univ. research on hydrocolloid muds for oil industry • Need significant further investment to set up the international Centre at Northop • Possible major investment by the Japanese if sufficient initial investment can be obtained locally

  17. St. Asaph: OpTIC Technium (Opto-electronics) Northop: Proposed Biosciences Centre Broughton: Proposed Composites Centre Wrexham: Centres for Creative Industries & E-Health

  18. BROUGHTON: PROPOSED COMPOSITES CENTRE

  19. Composite Materials Engineering • Composites = strong lightweight materials • Next generation airliners: Airbus A350 • We are developing: • Higher level skills programmes and degrees in composites engineering • MSc in “lean manufacturing” with Airbus • Joint MSc and PhD composites programme with NWCC (Glyndŵr is a full member of NWCC by invitation of Manchester University) • Building on existing successful FDSc

  20. Lancaster Bolton Manchester Liverpool Glyndŵr UNIVERSITY CONSORTIUM

  21. Our Vision • Advanced Composite Materials Centre near Broughton: • Research & development • Knowledge Transfer Centre • Business incubation Centre • Graduate skills training

  22. Key benefits of the Centre • Keep Airbus and supply chain at forefront of the technology and guarantee 8000+ jobs • Of equal importance, to stimulate the growth of new products and companies in the composites materials area • marine, automotive, sports, defence, construction

  23. St. Asaph: OpTIC Technium (Opto-electronics) Northop: Proposed Biosciences Centre Broughton: Proposed Composites Centre Wrexham: Centres for Creative Industries & E-Health

  24. WREXHAM: GLYNDŴR UNIVERSITY MAIN CAMPUS NEW DEVELOPMENTS - CREATIVE INDUSTRIES - E-HEALTH DEVELOPMENT CENTRE

  25. Creative Industries at Wrexham • Constructing new Creative Industries Building • interdisciplinary academic centre: art and design, computing, engineering, media • aim also to have a Creative Industries Innovation Centre • potential areas of new economic activity e.g. computer games, digital fashion design, animation, CGI

  26. E-Health: The Vision • Using latest ICT to support the ageing population and rural communities • Ageing population a major issue for the health service (and governments worldwide) • Building on state of the art mobile technologies & existing Glyndŵr EU project • Developing strong links with “Informing Healthcare” (NHS IT Programme for Wales)

  27. Complementary actions • University establishing new Leadership and Management Centre on the Wrexham Industrial Estate • Intend to replicate this at St. Asaph, and possibly establish satellite centres at Northop and Broughton • e.g. to offer MBAs in Technology Management

  28. Innovation Connectivity NORTH WESTCOMPOSITESCENTRE OPTIC GLYNDŴR: OPTO- ELECTRONICS NORTHOP: BIOSCIENCES BROUGHTON: COMPOSITES DARESBURY: SCIENCE & INNOVATIONCAMPUS: Biomedical, Chemicals, Energy, Nano-technology GLYNDŴR UNIVERSITY WREXHAM: E-HEALTH WREXHAM:CREATIVE INDUSTRIES

  29. In Conclusion • Glyndŵr University aims to lead the economic and social development of NE Wales -with strong links to NW England • University investing in key personnel, science and technologies, & management devt centres • Support needed for new Innovation Centres to create a new Knowledge Industry Corridor • We welcome engagement with key regional bodies to take this forward.

  30. Diolch yn fawr. Thank you.

More Related