Tuesday, April 29, 2025
Blog Page 1453

Bodleian gets a new chair

0

For the third time in its history, the Bodleian library has commissioned a new chair design, after the winner of a prestigious competition was announced.

After an initial 60 designers had been whittled down to just three, the award went to Edward Barber OBE & Jay Osgerby OBE with manufacturer Isokon Plus.  The chair will be developed over the next year to meet industry standards and will be launched in October 2014 alongside the newly refurbished Weston Library.

The chosen design is a three-legged oak chair which the Bodleian described as “a contemporary response to the brief which combines a strong sense of craft heritage, sculptural form and complex reader requirements”. Although made from wood, the chair has been cleverly designed so as to allow tilting backwards and forwards, for those readers who are so inclined.

According to the Bodleian, “The duo [Barber and Osgerby] identified the rear view of the chair as critical to the concept of the design – this is the aspect that will be most visible when the chair is in situ. Thus a strong vertical timber, echoing the spines of books on shelves, forms one of the three legs that attaches to the sled base. The generous circular form of the seat frame is echoed in the armrest and sled base – producing a strong but remarkably light oak chair.”

The first chair designed for the Bodleian was a wooden Windsor chair in 1756, and cost 8s 6d per chair. 180 years later, Giles Gilbert Scott won the competition for a new chair and designed a leather-clad bucket one.

At the moment, the Bodleian uses a mishmash of chairs, from a range of eras and in a variety of styles. This new chair looks to bring unity to a wildly disparate seating system.

The news has had a positive response among students who agree that the current stock of chairs is too uncertain. Alice Rickett, a second year Classics and English student, commented, “Chairs are more important than we think. For too long, the Bodleian seems to have been following a less than vigorous chair selection policy, but hopefully this is now at an end. Now, chairs are the least of our worries, which is how it should be.”

Rhodes Trust receives landmark £75 million donation

0

The McCall MacBain Foundation, a grant-making organisation, announced its decision to donate £75 million to the Trust on Thursday. The money will be used to further the expansion of the Rhodes Trust, whose scholarship programme is considered to be the most prestigious international graduate scholarship programme in the world.

The donation will consist of a £25 million grant, a £25 million challenge and match donation to encourage additional fundraising and a further £25 million to be used for the expansion of the graduate programme into new geographies.

Since it was founded in 1903, the Rhodes Trust has provided scholarships for nearly 8,000 young leaders from around the world, making it possible for them to come and study at the University of Oxford. Scholarship holders include Bill Clinton, six Commonwealth Prime Ministers and three Nobel prize winners.

Speaking to Rhodes Scholars at the 110th anniversary of the founding of the Rhodes Trust, John McCall MacBain – the founder of the McCall MacBain Foundation – said, “Receiving the Rhodes Scholarship and attending Oxford were among the highlights of my life.

“These Scholarships have been helping develop future leaders for over a century. With the world facing ever-increasing challenges, the need to help develop leadership skills is more important than ever. I hope that this gift will help secure them for another hundred years.”

In recognition of the donation, John McCall MacBain will be named a Second Century Founder of the Rhodes Trust and the Rhodes Scholarships. The Chairman of the Trust, John Hood, said, “We are deeply grateful to John, Marcy and the McCall MacBain Foundation for their determined leadership in this new capital campaign to build the endowment for the Rhodes Trust.

“The Rhodes Scholarships work to inspire future generations of young leaders, which does not only have a profound impact on those individual lives, but also on their communities and the wider world.”

His opinion was shared by the Vice-Chancellor of the University of Oxford, Andrew Hamilton, who stated, “For over a century, the Rhodes Trust has played an integral part in the life of the University. Indeed, it is hard to imagine the one existing without the other. I am absolutely delighted that the McCall MacBain Foundation has taken this step to ensure the future health of the Rhodes Trust with its magnificent donation.”

Prime Minister David Cameron, an Oxford graduate, also welcomed the donation. He said, “It is great news for the UK and our world class, higher education system that such a prestigious programme looks set to be secured for the long term.”

Controversial Castle Mill development to open

0

The five-storey buildings will provide 439 graduate accommodation units, set to be put into use by Oxford University this term.

However, concerns about contamination of the former railway sidings site have prompted the Oxford City Council to reassess the construction. The Council has advised that the University will be occupying the development “at its own risk” before the discharging of planning conditions.

The environmental impact of the development has sparked opposition from local groups, including the Campaign to Protect Port Meadow, in addition to the Campaign to Protect Rural England (CPRE).

The CPRE will take its case regarding its concerns over the flats to the High Court, sitting in Birmingham, on 23 October.

Members of Protect Port Meadow campaign, which has held a number of demonstrations in opposition to the development, have vowed not to protest on the Castle Mill site once students have moved into the accommodation.

In a statement, a spokesperson from Protect Port Meadow said, “We are extremely surprised that the University is moving in students before planning conditions are discharged, but our campaign has no intention of protesting directly around the students and their families.

“We will continue to campaign actively against the University until you have done far more to mitigate the views that these dreadful buildings and shabby planning process have ruined, but we will not do so on or around a site where students and their families may have occupied.”

An Oxford University spokesperson said, “The University is to house students for the next academic year in the new graduate accommodation at Castle Mill as planned. We are confident both that the site is fully environmentally suitable for residential use and, after taking independent legal advice, that we are acting reasonably and responsibly in using the accommodation for its intended purpose. The City Council has been informed as part of our continuing dialogue on the project.

“We have addressed all contamination issues on the site in their entirety and carried out all necessary remedial work, to the satisfaction of the city and environmental authorities. City officials have confirmed that the site contamination has been properly addressed and that the ongoing monitoring arrangements offered by the University meet the Council’s requirements.

“We are conscious of the City Council’s requirement that the University should place fewer than 3,000 of its students in private rented accommodation to reduce pressure on Oxford’s housing market and the purpose-built Castle Mill accommodation enables us to achieve this goal.

“The University will continue its discussions with the City Council and local residents to refine proposals for landscaping.”

A spokesman for Oxford City Council, told Cherwell, “We have advised the University that it would be occupying the development at its own risk and that planning conditions have not been discharged.

“Our legal advice is that the discharge of planning conditions, where linked to occupation, creates an unusual circumstance where a further screening opinion is required. Whilst we understand there may be different approaches in this context, the Council was obliged to act on our legal expert’s opinion in this case.

“The Council is also taking legal advice on the options for enforcement, although we know the Courts are reluctant to support early action until all options have been explored.”

In a statement, Helen Marshall, director of CPRE Oxfordshire, said, “Serious planning and environmental issues, including concerns over contamination, remain unresolved.

“The planning permission granted to the university expressly says that the buildings should not be occupied until a number of important planning conditions are met.

“If Oxford University is at all serious about seeking to resolve the disastrous impact of these buildings, it will defer student occupation.

“However, if they should seek to go ahead, the city council should use its enforcement powers to prevent student occupation.”

Review: Joe Bedell-Brill – Drifters

0

“We could be two drifters let the seasons shift us til we need to rest.” Drift, a collection of three tracks of electronic music released by Joe Bedell-Brill, a recent Oxford English graduate, featuring current English student Natasha Heliotis, evokes the places that love affairs are conducted in and through — parks, trains and evenings — while also attempting to capture their transience, their drift.

Soundcloud player to hear Joe Bedell-Brill

The first track, ‘Drifters’ falls somewhere inbetween Metronomy and the XX, but flirts too with synth pop. A pared back electronic arrangement with a strong rhythmic drum track backs a poppy chorus where Heliotis’ excellent female lead vocals are nicely enhanced by the introduction of the subdued male backing of Bedell-Brill. The central hook is a dreamy lyric, ‘If you want to come with me / I will take you places / tired eyes and faces’. The sum makes for a genuinely catchy pop song which finishes with an excellent 80s era synth solo as the track slowly fades out.

‘Like a Load’, the second number, is a largely instrumental track that starts with an eery echo vocal, followed by a combination of synth and percussion. This time the brass effect gives it a different atmosphere, the music moving in tandem with the lyrics to a place less pop and more gospel, “We’ll carry you up like a load / And wipe the dust off from the road / Cradled in arms of stone / And four walls to build your home”. The song is laid-back and soulful with intermittent crescendos providing moments of euphoria.

‘Thousand words’ is perhaps the most ambitious part of the piece. Singing is abandoned for a sort of gregorian chant superimposed on a regular percussion. The prose poem that is read is a stream of consciousness of selected moments of a love affair, intense images of everyday lyricism, from “I’ll try to dream of you under kaleidoscope meshes of fabric bodies lifted and wilted and wound” to “thoughts of love among the thoughts of flying insects sex and meshed hummus on plastic”.

Most listeners may well be drawn principally to ‘Drifters’, the first track, where Heliotis’ excellent singing (honed as a singer in DFO, where Bedell-Brill was drummer) and the catchiness of the chorus combine to create an excellent pop song. But the EP is most striking when listened to in full: where the almost religious lift of ‘Like a Load’ is put in contrast with the spontaneous and earthy reality described in ‘Thousand Words’. An intelligent and ambitious piece of electronic music excellently produced, Drift makes a powerful case for listening to more music by students at Oxford.

Cameron visits Brasenose

0

David Cameron returned to his alma mater, Brasenose College, on Friday evening, where he officially opened the college’s ‘Project Q’ renovations.

The Prime Minister, who studied at Brasenose from 1985-88, graduating with First Class honours in PPE, gave a short speech in the college’s Old Quad.

Cameron defending the increase in tuition fees. He said: “I know how unpopular tutition fees can be but it really matters that we can fund the growth of our universities at a time when governments all over the world are battling to level up taxes and spending.”

He then posed for photographs with students and attended a drinks reception, though he left Brasenose before the official dinner, to which alumni, fellows and current students were invited.

Cameron’s undergraduate tennis partner, Tory Co-Chairman Andrew Feldman, likewise a Brasenose alumnus, attended the reception. Vernon Bogdanor, the constitutional scholar who tutored Cameron in his undergraduate days, also attended.

[mm-hide-text]%%IMG_ORIGINAL%%8238%%[/mm-hide-text]

The Prime Minister is introduced by Brasenose Principal Alan Bowman

“David was one of the nicest and ablest students I ever taught,” Bogdanor told the Guardian in an interview four years ago. “But I’m not responsible for his views.” Bogdanor is known to be skeptical towards the Conservative Party policy of scrapping the Human Rights Act. In government the policy has been neutered by the Liberal Democrats, who support the Act.

In his speech Mr Cameron told students that “Don’t think for a minute that when you leave [Oxford] your tutorials stop. Let me tell you that is not the case.

“Vernon Bogdanor often gives me a tutorial. Recently he wrote me a brilliant letter explaining, as he told me twenty years ago, that democracy is government by explanation. He was referring of course to the Syria vote and he thought that I needed to do more work as a teacher, as a politician, and he’s absolutely right.”

With a nod to the 7.7% unemployment rate, Mr Cameron said that he still “bumped into” his old economics tutor, Peter Sinclair, now Professor of Economics at Birmingham University.

“He still tells me why the labour market isn’t clearing properly and what I need to do about it, and that is hugely valuable.”

Mr Cameron said that he hadn’t kept in touch with his old philosophy tutor, John Foster, but recalled that “He was always trying to convince me that you couldn’t prove the existence of anything apart from the thoughts in your head. There are moments in this job when that would be a lovely reality to have.”

[mm-hide-text]%%IMG_ORIGINAL%%8240%%[/mm-hide-text]

Cameron talking to Oxford University Chancellor, and former Conservative Minister, Chris Patten

Brasenose students were kept in the dark about the Prime Ministers expected visit. An email to Brasenose undergraduates about the opening of ‘Project Q’ renovations referred only to a “senior Cabinet Minister”.

The renovations began shortly after the 500th anniversary of the college’s founding in 2009 and were completed at the end of Hilary term last year.

[mm-hide-text]%%IMG_ORIGINAL%%8239%%[/mm-hide-text]

Cameron talks to the Emir of Qatar

As Leader of the Opposition Cameron last visited Brasenose in November 2009, six months before becoming Prime Minister.

Street style at London Fashion Week: Part II

0

[mm-hide-text]%%IMG_ORIGINAL%%8222%%[/mm-hide-text] 
Victoria Sekrier, model and stylist
Sophia Webster clutch, Maison Martin Margiela shoes, Cote jumper and skirt

 

[mm-hide-text]%%IMG_ORIGINAL%%8223%%[/mm-hide-text]
Marie Jensen, blogger at Nemesis, Babe and street style photographer for Nastygal
Secondhand jacket and top, Nastygal shoes andbackpack, H&M skirt 

 

[mm-hide-text]%%IMG_ORIGINAL%%8224%%[/mm-hide-text]
Adriano Cisani, photographer for Vogue Italy
Barbour jacket, vintage Levis 501 jeans, Vans shoes 

 

[mm-hide-text]%%IMG_ORIGINAL%%8225%%[/mm-hide-text] 
Keira and Ivy, University of the Arts London students
Keira wears vintage with American Apparel stockings, &Other Stories shoes
Ivy wears American Apparel bag, Vintage jacket, Dress by an independent designer

 

[mm-hide-text]%%IMG_ORIGINAL%%8228%%[/mm-hide-text]
Irina Lakicevic, blogger at Portable Package 
BLK DNM jacket, Ostwald Helgason jumper, Vanessa Bruno skirt, Saint Laurent bag, Celine heels, RayBan sunglasses

 

[mm-hide-text]%%IMG_ORIGINAL%%8231%%[/mm-hide-text] 
Tina Leung, actress
Topshop Unique dress

 

[mm-hide-text]%%IMG_ORIGINAL%%8226%%[/mm-hide-text] 
Photographer for Vogue Italy

 

[mm-hide-text]%%IMG_ORIGINAL%%8229%%[/mm-hide-text] 

 

[mm-hide-text]%%IMG_ORIGINAL%%8230%%[/mm-hide-text] 

 

 

All pictures courtesy of Dina from She Loves Mixtapes

Cherwell scoops awards nominations

0

Cherwell’s website has been nominated for the Best Website in the Student Media Awards 2013 as the shortlist was announced yesterday on the Guardian’s website. In further success, two Cherwell staff members were nominated for individual awards, Sophie Hall Luke for the Student Critic of the Year, and Tom Beardsworth for Student Columnist of the Year.

Cherwell’s website is developed by alumnus Adam Hadley, whilst Bang!, Cherwell’s sister publication also run by OSPL (Oxford Student Publications Limited), has likewise been nominated for Best Website.

Tom Beardsworth, defying his harsh treatment at the hands of other Oxford media outlets, was modest in victory, “I’m flattered to be shortlisted for the award. However having twitter-stalked the other nominees, who without exception appear far more intelligent and verbose than I am, I doubt it’ll go any further.”

Hall Luke, meanwhile, was equally pleased with her nomination. “I’m chuffed to bits to be shortlisted for the Critic of the Year category. I can’t wait to start working on my so-happy-for-you clap in preparation for the ceremony. I only hope that criticising the year 2014 will prove to be as rewarding as criticising 2013 did.

It was a somewhat dry set of results for the Oxford Student. James Restall (former OxStu editor) was their only presence on the list of nominations, where he was listed for Best Student Reporter. This followed on from the 2012 shortlist where two separate OxStu editors, Isaac Delestre and James Rothwell, were shortlisted in this category.

Restall told Cherwell, “I’m very proud to have been short listed for this award. The last two years have been incredible working with such a talented group at the OxStu.”

Delestre, speaking to Cherwell, put the Student Media Awards in perspective, by saying, “I guess it’s kind of impressive, but when you’ve been dubbed history’s second worst Oxonian by a publication with the clout of the Oxford Tab, anything the Guardian has to offer really pales in comparison.”

The Oxford Medical School Gazette, “the oldest student medical journal in the world” was nominated for Student Publication of the Year, displacing both Cherwell and OxStu who had been nominated in this category the previous year.

Current Editor of Cherwell, Nick Hilton, commented, “The success of the website is testament to our continued position as Oxford’s top online news outlet. I’d also like to extend my congratulations to my predecessor, Tom Beardsworth, for his nomination in a category that many of us did not think he would be eligible for. He is indeed a man of many talents.”

Follow the nominees on Twitter:

@sophie_hl

@tbeardsworth

@restyrestall

@adamihad

 

Interview: Debut Novelist Lauren Johnson

0

Forget men-in-tights and damsels-in-distress, Ridley Scott and Russell Crowe. 

The Arrow of Sherwood, debut novel of historian and Oxford graduate Lauren Johnson puts a new spin on the Robin Hood legend. Combining carefully imagined fiction with factual detail, she places Robin of Sherwood firmly within the dark, brutal context of Richard I’s reign, reimagining the well-known myth as historical fiction. Her work vividly evokes a medieval landscape crippled by political turmoil and economic unrest, to which crusader Robin has just returned…

Johnson graduated from Wadham in 2007 with a Masters in History, and currently works as a research manager for costumed interpretations at Hampton Court and the Tower of London. Here, she talks to Cherwell about the challenges of a first novel, the resurrgence of historical fiction and the twelfth century world in which her story’s set.  

How much did a degree in History help you when it came to writing a novel? Does having to hone such a sharp set of critical skills make it difficult to be creative?

Since this novel was historical fiction, a degree in History was very useful! So a large part of the research that went into my preparation for the book required similar skills to those used during my degree. I already had a basis of knowledge about the twelfth century, when The Arrow of Sherwood is set, but during my further research I would approach my reading with specific queries in mind: What happened at the Siege of Nottingham, for instance? What weapons did they have available? What was the lay of the land? And then you lay that research to one side and try to create something exciting in terms of narrative — which is definitely very different from writing a history essay.

Of the many challenges that face the first-time writer, what did you find the toughest? 

The usual challenges I anticipated, like rejection, and I have faced in the past when approaching agents and publishers. That’s tough but you have to just really try and not let it get under your skin. What has been surprising as a first-time writer – and challenging even as someone who has done a fair bit of performing for the public over the years — is how much promotional work is needed just to try to get people reading the book in the first place. I think there are something like 150,000 books published a year, so just snaring people’s interest is a major hurdle. You have to suppress any stereotypical English mortification at ‘selling yourself’ and try to talk about your work as much as possible. Until a year ago I wouldn’t even have admitted to writing privately, so it’s a big change to now be doing it all the time!

And what has been the most rewarding part of your experiences?

Hearing people’s feedback on the book has so far been great. It’s very strange to share something you’ve spent years thinking about secretly, squirrelled away writing, and suddenly it’s out in the public domain. And obviously the really exciting thing is having a physical copy of a book — not just pages of manuscript or typed up proof copies, but a real bound book. That’s pretty awesome.

Why do you think there has been such a strong resurgence in the historical semi-fiction genre in the last few years?

I think people have enjoyed stories set in the past for a very long time. Even before this current wave of historical fiction, our screens were full of adaptations of Dickens and Austen. Perhaps there’s such an interest now because of the political climate — there is a lot of uncertainty, and the past offers refuge. We know how things turned out then, so we know there will be a resolution in those stories, which is reassuring. Also, there is the simple fact that other eras of history look exciting from the outside — a somewhat alien culture, dressing differently, with different priorities, but still sharing the same human concerns. And there are some fantastic writers who have turned their attention to historical fiction — Hilary Mantel and C.J. Sansom, to name just two.

What sort of things did you try to bring to your historical novel? The press release describes your setting as both “lucidly imagined and carefully researched” – are these always compatible?

Good question! Personally, I like historical fiction — in fact, fiction generally — that immerses me in a world. That could easily be a modern world but in another country, or an experience in Britain that I’ve never had, but it equally applies to historical settings. History-writing is a process of intense research, analysis and interpretation, and what ends up on the page is always the result of some degree of selection, even if it’s as simple as, ‘I chose to write a book about this one year period rather than the same events over a two year period’. But with historical fiction I do tend to prefer works that are not misleading – by which I mean, that don’t actively select interpretations of the past that are unlikely. Obviously, I am dealing with fictional characters who happen to exist in a real historical world, which gives me some latitude, but I tried not to do anything too absurd with them. Nonetheless, I felt able to deal with the fictional locations in a way I would not have treated the real ones – we know that Nottingham was not burnt to the ground in 1194, but that doesn’t mean the whole of the county, and its fictional environs, got off so lightly. By having fictional characters in a real world, you can simultaneously recreate the rich historical environment, but have the jeopardy of not knowing how things end for those characters.

Finally: why Robin? Is there anything that we can add to his legend?

Inevitably, part of this answer will seem like a cop-out. I wrote about Robin because it was the story I wanted to tell, because it kept whirring away in my head and I knew I needed to get it on the page. The legend of Robin Hood is incredibly versatile — we’ve had the Errol Flynn adventurer version with lurid tights and moustachioed grin, the sombre Russell Crowe film, pantomime villains and, more recently, the story being told from the perspective of his ‘merry men’. For me, I wanted to root the mythic characters in the reality of the twelfth century — with all its complexity, and sometimes its brutality. The late twelfth century saw the formation of the Common Law, and was just in advance of Magna Carta, so an outlaw figure with his own morality — sometimes in opposition to society — fits into that world brilliantly. My hope is that I take the legend and fuse it with history, to tell a new story. 

The Arrow of Sherwood is published by Pen and Sword Fiction and is available here

The Great Job Hunt

0

As children begin returning to school and Michaelmas 2013 draws ever closer, a new cycle begins:  the job/internship-application-psychometric-testing cycle.

I’ll admit it.  I’ve not had a ‘life-long’ career ambition.  However, I am determined that on entering the graduate job hunt I will have a sense of direction great enough to strike fear into the feathers of a scrupulously-trained champion homing pigeon.

On a visit to the Oxford Careers Service website, I look in awe at the variety of possible career paths I could take – is it bad that a multitude appeal to me and I find myself thinking that I would simultaneously love to be both a Rainforest Conservationist and an Actuarial Advisor?  (I could be an Actuarial Advisor in a Rainforest)  …I’m doing a History degree… which, by-the-by, to my relatives and non-historian friends means that my career is sorted:  a lifetime on ‘digs’ (‘Time Team’-style).  As I conclude that my hair cannot begin to compete for airtime with the likes of Phil Harding, I am propelled back to reality.

The fact is that if I want to differentiate between jobs, I’ll need greater insight into them.  Internships provide a useful way to gain further insight into careers which initially appeal on paper.  Hopefully they provide an opportunity to see whether the real thing appeals as much as the career in the advert, and if this is the case, to give a ‘foot-in-the-door’ when the final migration away from Oxford comes.  Recently, the death of the young intern Moritz Erhardt, who was working for Bank of America Merrill Lynch, has driven the subject of the ‘fairness’ of internships into the centre of a media storm.  While it has been claimed that his 72-hour stint as an intern trying to impress a prospective employer played a large part in his death, conclusions should not be so hastily made.  Nevertheless, internships remain controversial.  Aside from the much-debated obvious bone of contention (payment), it should be noted that the attainment of many internships is on the basis of merit – a fair policy. 

In the naïve days of an eighteen-year-old who had just finished A Levels, I thought that a carefully prepared CV and Cover Letter would constitute the majority of an internship application process.  Au contraire!  For many firms it would appear that competition is so fierce that it is necessary for candidates to undergo rigorous ‘Psychometric Testing’. Many a tale has been told of the panic when confronted by a timed numerical, verbal or ‘E-Tray’ test – the latter being my personal favourite.  Despite any initial feelings of uncertainty, such tests should be seen in a positive light.  They test competencies which are difficult to teach, for instance how quickly and accurately a person thinks when under pressure, and as such each candidate is on a rather even playing field.  This style of selection process, based on competency and not connections or privilege, is fair.  Indeed, it would appear that this system of testing candidates to ensure the best are the ones who are successful is not limited to a couple of firms.  Many large firms appear to apply such meritocratic testing to their internship, as well as employee, selection process. 

Although pessimists would stubbornly state that companies are only deploying such tests as a cost-cutting exercise, this would be too cynical.  Assuming the applicant does not have a benevolent helper next to them during the test, testing remains significantly advantageous as it allows the employer to see the ‘true’ suitability of the candidate in situations comparable to the workplace.  Furthermore, successful candidates are often required to repeat the test at an assessment centre, where the employer can be sure they receive no help.

Even when such tests are not used, it does not necessarily mean a less meritocratic selection process:  measures such as evaluation of qualifications and performance at interview, rather than immediate appointment based on personal connections or payment, are used in vast numbers of recruitment processes to appoint the most able.  Indeed, the appointment of the most efficient person for a job ensures money will not be wasted on the appointment of less efficient workers.

Amidst all this furore of internships (which is becoming a characteristic element of the British summer), a large pile of books with three sheets of paper on top in the corner of the room reminds me that, for now, I should not devote excessive time to the internship / job application cycle or else I’ll risk compromising my degree.  And since my life revolves around studying History, maybe I should succumb to the Time Team stereotype and cultivate a camera-grabbing hairstyle…

Living it Up at the Holiday Inn

0

Following serious accomodation delays, a number of Oxford Brookes students will be forced to start their university careers from a room at the three-star Oxford Holiday Inn.

Although those who chose Brookes as their first choice university have been guaranteed accomodation, some students admitted through Clearing or via their Insurance choice are beginning the term in the hotel.

It’s a far cry from the purpose-built accommodation many had expected, due to be completed in October, though for as long as the university contributes to their costs, the forty students directly involved are unlikely to be complaining.

Students will be expected to pay a small fee, which includes breakfast and shuttle trips to the campus, while the university subsidises the cost of the room. An on-site warden is available for help with any housing – or hotelier – issues.

In a city with extremely high demand for places in university accommodation, Oxford Brookes has historically guaranteed a place in halls only to those who placed them as their first choice.

This year registrar Paul Large said that the university had “proved a popular choice”, leading to a larger proportion of students wishing to stay in halls than in previous years.

Accommodation construction on Chapel Street was underway, with the capacity to house almost 200 students from universities across Oxford, scheduled for completion in October.

Students in Oxford have long been aware of a shortage of houses, with letting agents this year reporting increased interest in private lets.