Vanbrugh College, York

Vanbrugh College is one of the nine colleges of the University of York.

Vanbrugh College
University of York
Grimston House, Vanbrugh College
LocationHeslington West, York
Established1967
Named forSir John Vanbrugh[1]
PrincipalProfessor Andy Parsons[2]
Undergraduates2100
Postgraduates180
WebsiteVanbrugh College
JCRVanbrugh JCR

History

It was opened in 1967[1] and is named after Sir John Vanbrugh, designer of Castle Howard.[3]

In 2013 'Green Vanbrugh' was established. This group was created to increase awareness of the environmental issues within the college and to promote involvement from college members.

Buildings and services

The College is home to the History and History of Art departments, Language and Linguistics and Music together with some 2100 undergraduates and 180 graduate students.

The main college building, three storeys high and constructed in the 1960s in the CLASP system, consists of four blocks arranged within a square. The western, northern and eastern blocks are known, respectively, as A, B and C blocks, all of which were residential blocks when the college opened in 1968. The southern side, often known as the teaching block, contains offices for the History and History of Art departments plus two lecture theatres. It was also the base for the Mathematics department until the early 2000s. C Block also houses a Computing Service computer room, V058, previously known in abbreviated form as "vuft" when it belonged to the Computer Science department.

In addition, social space located in an extension off the teaching block includes a dining hall, V-bar, JCR, SCR, a Porter's Lodge and a corridor known as Vanbrugh Stalls, which takes its name from the frequent society and ticket-selling stalls that are set up there.

One of the interior grassed areas of Le Page Court

A further building to the west contains offices for the Students Union as well as Your:Books, the Students' Union second hand book store. Now called Grimston House, it was originally known as X Block. University buildings are named by their college or building name initial and then a block letter. As the fourth block in Vanbrugh, this would have been known as VD block. The University decided to call it VX instead. This was in part as the building, when viewed from above, was X-shaped. The building underwent major alterations in 1999, changing the shape of the east frontage, and was then renamed.

Vanbrugh students also can apply for off-campus accommodation at Fairfax House which is situated on Heslington Road, approximately 10 minutes walk from the main college building, housing approximately 90 students, in addition to around 30 Vanbrugh residents in the hall of residence on Fulford Road, Fulford House.

In 2005 it was decided that half of Block B and all of Block C would be converted into offices. In January 2006, 86 students moved into P and Q blocks of Alcuin College while retaining their membership of Vanbrugh College. These accommodation arrangements were only for the year 20052006 while the old Bleachfield site to the north-west of Heslington campus was completed.

Vanbrugh is made up of four main accommodation areas:

  • Donald Barron and Barbara Scott Courts - named after prominent former members of the university.
  • Eric Milner-White Court - in 2009, when Goodricke College moved to the Heslington East development, the original Goodricke site was divided between Vanbrugh College and James College. While James College received the old Goodricke nucleus and Cell Block C (Now N Block), Vanbrugh College received Blocks A and B, which were renamed Eric Milner-White court after the Very Reverend Eric Milner-White who died in 1963. From 2011 Wentworth E block was pinned to Eric Milner-White court for Vanbrugh undergraduate use after a renovation of blocks A-D by Wentworth College meant it did not meet postgraduate standard. Wenworth E block is an exact copy of the old Cell Block C, now James N block.
  • Fairfax House - originally constructed in 1922, Fairfax House was initially accommodation for Nurses working at The Retreat. When acquired by the University, it was merged with Vanbrugh College, and now serves as off-campus accommodation for 90 Students.
  • Le Page Court - Le page is the oldest accommodation on campus. Used as undergraduate accommodation, the former blocks A and B were renamed when the college let go of its old C block. The name is used in honour of the first Vanbrugh provost, Professor Robert Le Page. In 2012, the top floor of the 3 storey building was reclaimed as offices for the History department.

The paved area between Vanbrugh College and the lake, previously known as Vanbrugh Paradise, was renamed as Greg's Place in 2016 in honour of Greg Dyke who had been university chancellor till 2015.

Panorama of Vanbrugh "paradise" viewed from across the lake

University Radio York

Between A and X Block a shed, once used as cleaners cupboard, is used by University Radio York: the first legal independent radio station in the United Kingdom.[4] and which broadcasts radio locally at the 1350AM Radio frequency.

Organisation and administration

The Head of College is the Principal, a university academic who shares teaching duties with college responsibilities. Initially the head of Vanbrugh College was titled Provost, but from 2013 this was changed to Principal.[5] The incumbent principal is Professor Andy Parsons.[2]

List of Principals

There have been five Principals of Vanbrugh College:[6]

  • Professor Robert Le Page (1967-1972)
  • Reverend Dr Gerald Higginson (1972-1984)
  • Dr Allen Warren (1984-2008)
  • Reverend Dr David Efird (2008-2013) - currently Principal of James College
  • Dr Barry Thomas (2013-2016)
  • Professor Andy Parsons (2016-Present) [2]

Student life

Student representation

All undergraduate members of Vanbrugh College are members of the Junior Common Room, and continue to remain members throughout their time at the university. The JCR is run by the Junior Common Room Committee (JCRC) which consists of about 38 members. There is additionally a Senior Common Room for the use of postgraduate students.

Events

Volume was a disco-type event run by Vanbrugh JCRC. The event took place in the college bar, JCR and Vanbrugh Hall simultaneously, with each of which playing a different style of music. All areas have a late licence, usually until 1:00 am. Occasionally this is extended until 1:30 am. With a capacity of 600, it is the largest college venue on campus. Volume is the rebranded version of Planet V, which was scrapped at the end of 2007. In 2013, the decision to drop Volume.

However, as of the start of the 2016 Fresher's Week, the JCRC brought back Planet V to huge success, exceeding capacity of over 500. The event has now been set up a termly event and has become a key characteristic of the central college.

gollark: No, I mean the spacing in your code.
gollark: The indentation in that is *interesting*.
gollark: Presumably the end to end encryption thing? Although it would still have a lot of metadata.
gollark: That would somewhat defeat the point of having a decentralized platform thing.
gollark: Well, I might look at joining matrix or whatever then. One of the reasons I don't have any fediverse/whatever stuff set up is that I currently only have access to a free domain which might randomly decide to to unexist, and I don't want that to get stuck in remote config files everywhere.

References

  1. "History of Vanbrugh College". Vanbrugh College. Retrieved 5 March 2015.
  2. "College Staff". Vanbrugh College. Retrieved 5 March 2015.
  3. "Sir John Vanbrugh". Vanbrugh College. Archived from the original on 22 January 2015. Retrieved 21 January 2015.
  4. "The Arts at York". University of York. 8 January 2009. Archived from the original on 6 January 2010. Retrieved 3 January 2010.
  5. "Students to pay for college membership". Nouse. Retrieved 26 January 2015.
  6. "Past Provosts". Vanbrugh College. Retrieved 5 March 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.