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Bid to demolish ‘heritage’ building in York rejected – but it’s not safe yet

Thu 27 Mar

University House, otherwise known as Vice Chancellor's House, in Spring Lane, Heslington, York. Photograph: Stuart Newmanite / Wikipedia

Thu 27 Mar 2025  @ 5:04am
Joe Gerrard – Local Democracy Reporter
News

The University of York is still commited to tearing down a building valued by heritage groups, even after its demolition plans were refused.

City of York Council rejected the application to tear down University House, in Spring Lane, Heslington, due to a lack of information about the site’s ecology and restoration.

Afterwards a university spokesperson said they would review the decision and provide the information so they could move forward with the project.

Seventeen objections, including one from the York Civic Trust, were lodged against the demolition of the 1960s home. They called on the council to save it on heritage grounds.

The house fell out of use as a residence for vice chancellors after summer 2021, according to the 20th Century Society.

It has been used as a kitchen overflow and student accommodation since then, according to the organisation which campaigns to preserve buildings constructed after 1914.

The home was built in 1964 as the residence for its first vice chancellor Lord Eric James of Rusholme and his wife Lady Cordelia James.

Its contemporary design, drawn up by architects Robert Matthew Johnson-Marshall and Partners in consultation with Lady James, aimed to reflect the university’s meritocratic ideals.

The university’s application stated that the building was now vacant and redundant and their plans proposed knocking it down and turfing over the site.

A university spokesperson previously said a refurbishment had been deemed too costly and it was unsuitable for alternative uses, with plans for the site’s future yet to be decided.

But objectors to the demolition said the pioneering home was an important part of the university’s modernist campus and it should be preserved.

York Civic Trust called for the building to be adapted for a new use for the benefit of university students, staff and the wider public.

A university spokesperson said following the refusal: “The council has requested additional information from us on a couple of points in our application, which we will review and respond to in order to move forward with the project.”


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