Sheffield Hallam University (SHU) is a public
research university in
Sheffield,
South Yorkshire, England. The university is based on two sites; the City Campus is located in the city centre near
Sheffield railway station, while the
Collegiate Crescent Campus is about two miles away in the Broomhall Estate off
Ecclesall Road in south-west Sheffield.
The university is the
largest university in the UK (out of ) with students (of whom 4,400 are international students),
4,494 staff and 708 courses.
History
Foundation and growth
In 1843, as the
industrial revolution gathered pace and Sheffield was on the verge of becoming the steel, tool and cutlery making capital of the world, the Sheffield School of Design was founded following lobbying by artist
Benjamin Haydon. The day-to-day running was controlled by the local council, whilst the Board of Trade in London appointed the head. Tuition began in a 60x40ft rented room off Glossop Road. In 1850, the School of Design was renamed Sheffield School of Art.
In 1905, the City of Sheffield Training College (later renamed Sheffield City College of Education) on Collegiate Crescent admitted its first 90 students. During the
First World War, the Collegiate Hall was requisitioned by the
War Office to create the 3rd Northern General Hospital, a facility for the
Royal Army Medical Corps
The Royal Army Medical Corps (RAMC) is a specialist corps in the British Army which provides medical services to all Army personnel and their families, in war and in peace. The RAMC, the Royal Army Veterinary Corps, the Royal Army Dental Corps a ...
to treat military casualties.
A new city centre campus was constructed during the 1960s. During construction, in February 1962, a
tower crane on site collapsed during the
Great Sheffield Gale. It crashed into the side of what would become the Owen Building, causing serious damage and setting back construction.
In 1967, the Owen Building was completed. Built in a functional 1960s design, it has since been modernised and comprehensively renovated with an atrium linking it to four adjacent buildings. In 1969 the Sheffield School of Design merged with the city's College of Technology to form Sheffield Polytechnic. In 1976, Sheffield Polytechnic merged with the city's two teacher training colleges (Sheffield City College and Totley Hall College) and was renamed Sheffield City Polytechnic. In 1987 Sheffield City Polytechnic became a founding member of the
Northern Consortium.
[see ]
University status to present day
In 1992, Sheffield City Polytechnic became Sheffield Hallam University (SHU), with the right to award its own degrees.

In 2005, SHU was reorganised into four faculties. The new Faculty of Development and Society, with an emphasis on 'people, places and spaces', brought together education, geography, humanities, law, and social sciences. At the same time, with the intention of further developing research and teaching in the new Faculty of Health and Wellbeing, a new Clinical Academic Group was launched. The building that had been designed and constructed to house the
National Centre for Popular Music became the university's students' union building (the HUBS). The Nelson Mandela Building, the former students' union building (when opened in 1978 was known as the Phoenix building), was sold and has since been demolished.
In 2007, SHU took over the teaching of nursing and midwifery from the
University of Sheffield. These activities are now based at the Collegiate Crescent Campus. The following year the
Psalter Lane
Psalter Lane was the location of a former campus of Sheffield Hallam University in Sheffield, England. One of the former polytechnic's three bases, the campus officially closed on 31 August 2008 and work to demolish all but the old Bluecoat Scho ...
campus (formerly the Sheffield College of Art) was closed, and the activities transferred to the City Campus. The £26 million energy-efficient Furnival Building opened in September (renamed Cantor Building in 2011 in recognition of a major donor to the university). The building, which includes teaching spaces and an
art gallery
An art gallery is a room or a building in which visual art is displayed. In Western cultures from the mid-15th century, a gallery was any long, narrow covered passage along a wall, first used in the sense of a place for art in the 1590s. The lon ...
has been described as "the impressive new entry point to the campus".
Organisation and governance
Colleges

In 2020, the university relaunched its structure moving away from four faculties and re-organising academic departments into colleges.
College of Business, Technology and Engineering (BTE)
Formerly known as the Sheffield Business School and prior to that the Faculty of Organisation and Management (OM). The new college incorporated parts of the old Faculty Science, Technology and Arts (STA) previously known as the Faculty of Arts, Computing, Engineering and Sciences (ACES)
*Sheffield Business School
**Department of Finance, Accounting and Business Systems
**Department of Management
**Department of Service Sector Management
*Department of Computing
*Department of Engineering and Mathematics
College of Social Sciences and Arts (SSA)
Formerly known as the Faculty of Social Sciences and Humanities (SSH). The new college incorporated parts of the old Faculty Science, Technology and Arts (STA) previously known as the Faculty of Arts, Computing, Engineering and Sciences (ACES)
*Department of Art and Design
*Department of Media Arts and Communication
*Department of the Natural and Built Environment
*Sheffield Institute of Education (SIOE)
*Department of Education, Childhood and Inclusion
*Department of Teacher Education
*TESOL Centre (Teaching English to Speakers of other Languages)
*Department of Psychology, Sociology and Politics
*Department of Humanities
*Department of Law and Criminology
College of Health, Wellbeing and Life Sciences (HWLS)
Formerly the Faculty of Health and Wellbeing (HWB)
*Department of Allied Health Professions
*Department of Biosciences and Chemistry
*Department of Nursing and Midwifery
*Centre for Leadership
*Centre for Postgraduate Medical and Dental Education
*Academy of Sport and Physical Activity
*Department of Social Work and Social Care and Community Studies
Research
Research centres
* Advanced Wellbeing Research Centre (AWRC)
* Biomolecular Sciences Research Centre (BMRC)
* Centre for Behavioural Science and Applied Psychology (CBSCAP)
* Centre for Development and Research in Education (CDARE)
* Centre for Regional Economic and Social Research (CRESR)
* Centre for Sport and Exercise Science (CSES)
* Centre for Sports Engineering Research (CSER)
* Design Futures Centre for Industrial Collaboration (Design Futures)
* Humanities Research Centre (HRC)
* Lab4Living
* National Centre of Excellence for Food Engineering (NCEFE)
* Sport Industry Research Centre (SIRC)
* Sport and Physical Activity Research Centre (SPARC)
Research institutes
* Cultural, Communication and Computing Research Institute (C3RI)
** Art, Design and Media Research Centre (ADRC)
** Communication and Computing Research Centre (CCRC)
* Materials and Engineering Research Institute (MERI)
** Centre for Automation and Robotics Research (CARR)
** National HIPIMS Technology Centre
** Polymers, Nanocomposites and Modelling Research Centre
** Structural Materials and Integrity Research Centre
** Thin Films Research Centre
* Sheffield Business School Research Institute (SBSRI)
* Sheffield Institute for Policy Studies (SIPS)
* Sheffield Institute of Education (SIoE)
Groups and networks
* Voluntary Action Research Group
* Film, Television, Theatre and Performance Research Network
* Health and Social Care Research
* Law Research Group
* Natural and Built Environment Research Group
* Outdoor Recreation Research Group
* Physical Activity, Wellness and Public Health Research Group (PAWPH)
* Sheffield Addiction Research Recovery Group
* Sport and Human Performance Research Group
* Sports Engineering Research Group
* Sports Industry Research Group
Through the research centres a number of spin-off companies have been formed, including:
* Sheaf Solutions – automotive and aerospace organisation
* Hallam Biotech – biotech analysis and synthesis
* Materials Analysis & Research Services (MARS) – materials analysis and solutions
* Bodycote – materials coating
* Design Futures – product design, packaging design, research & strategy
Chancellors
British barrister, broadcaster, and life peer of the House of Lords,
Helena Kennedy, was installed as chancellor in a ceremony at
Cutlers' Hall on Thursday 26 July 2018.
*Bryan Nicholson 1992–2001
*
Robert Winston, 2001–2018
*
Helena Kennedy, 2018–present
Academic profile
Lifelong Learning Network
SHU is the lead partner for
Higher Futures, the
Lifelong Learning Network (LLN) for South Yorkshire, North Derbyshire and North Nottinghamshire.
Rankings and reputation
In the National Student Survey, several subject areas at SHU have performed very well in terms of overall student satisfaction with their courses: for example, architecture and geography have both been placed first, and planning has been placed second.
In the university league tables, Sheffield Hallam University was placed 47th out of 121 UK universities by ''
The Guardian University Guide 2021''; 65th out of 131 by ''
The Times & Sunday Times Good University Guide 2020''; and 67th out of 130 by the ''
Complete University Guide 2021''. In 2019, it ranked 485th among the universities around the world by ''
SCImago Institutions Rankings''.
Hallam received a First Class award and was ranked 15th out of 151 universities in the People & Planet University League 2015 which assesses universities on their environmental credentials. In 2020, the university was awarded ''
The Times and Sunday Times'' University of the Year award for teaching quality.
Notable alumni

*
Nazir Ahmed, Baron Ahmed,
Labour Party Peer.
*
Kid Acne
Kid Acne (real name Ed Bradbury, born 1978) is an artist, illustrator and hip-hop musician. He was born in Lilongwe, Malawi.
He grew up in Lutterworth, Leicestershire, and currently lives and works in Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England. He ...
, artist and musician
*
Andy Akinwolere, TV presenter on ''
Blue Peter
''Blue Peter'' is a British children's television entertainment programme created by John Hunter Blair. It is the longest-running children's TV show in the world, having been broadcast since October 1958. It was broadcast primarily from BBC Tel ...
''
*
Roma Babuniak, artist
*
Graham Barnfield
Graham Barnfield (born 5 November 1969 in Leicester) is a British academic and pundit associated with the hard left Revolutionary Communist Party (1981–1997).
In 1993 he began writing on cultural politics in the United States under Presiden ...
, pundit and
happy slapping analyst
*
Lee Blackett
Lee Blackett (born 21 November 1982 in Chester, Cheshire, United Kingdom) is an English former rugby union footballer. Educated at King Edward VII and Queen Mary School in Lytham, he played some of his earlier rugby at Fylde Rugby Club. His usu ...
,
Leeds Tykes rugby union player
*
Peter Booth
Peter Booth (born 2 November 1940) is an Australian figurative and a surrealist painter, and one of the key late-20th-century Australian artists. His work is characterised by an intense emotional power of often dark narratives, and esoteric sy ...
Australian modern bleak landscape painter.
*
Richard Caborn, former Labour MP for Sheffield Central, and former Minister of Sport
*
Andy Carthy
Andrew Carthy (born 10 February 1972), better known by his stage name Mr. Scruff, is an English record producer and DJ. He lives in Stretford, Greater Manchester and studied fine art at the Psalter Lane campus of Sheffield Hallam University. B ...
, AKA Mr. Scruff, British DJ and artist
*
Joanna Constantinidis
Joanna Constantinidis née Connell, (12 December 1927 – 1 August 2000) was an English potter and ceramic artist.
Biography
Constantinidis was born in York and grew up in Sheffield
Sheffield is a city status in the United Kingd ...
, ceramist
*
Eric Dancer
Sir Eric Dancer (born 17 April 1940) is a British businessman and formerly Lord-Lieutenant of Devon.
Biography
Dancer was born in Sheffield in 1940. He won a scholarship to King Edward VII School and went on to Sheffield Polytechnic where he ...
, Lord Lieutenant of Devon
*
Felicia Dorothea Kate Dover
Felicia Dorothea Kate Dover (1855 – 26 March 1925) was an English woman who was tried for murder and convicted of manslaughter in 1882 following the death of Thomas Skinner from arsenic poisoning. She was trained as an artist at Sheffield Sch ...
, 1870s student of Sheffield School of Art, and arsenic poisoner
*
Richard O'Dwyer, TV Shack creator
*
Graham Gristwood
Graham Gristwood (born 1984) is a British orienteering competitor and world champion.
Graham is a member of the Great Britain Orienteering Squad and also runs for IFK Lidingö SOK. In 2004 Graham first made the senior World Champs team. His fir ...
and
Emily Benham, World Champions in
Orienteering
Orienteering is a group of sports that require navigational skills using a map and compass to navigate from point to point in diverse and usually unfamiliar terrain whilst moving at speed. Participants are given a topographical map, usually a s ...
.
*
Steven Hall, award-winning novelist
*
Mark Herbert
Mark Herbert is an English film producer and joint CEO of the Sheffield-based production company Warp Films.
He was born in Doncaster, and studied Film Studies at Sheffield Hallam University
Sheffield Hallam University (SHU) is a public resear ...
, (Film Studies 1991–94) film producer, and head of Sheffield-based Warp Films
*
Stephanie Hill
Stephanie Hill (born 8 January 1995) is an English academic, singer, actress, model, dancer and beauty pageant titleholder who won Miss England 2017. She represented England at Miss World 2017 held in Sanya, China on 18 November 2017 and was 2n ...
, classical-crossover singer and Miss England 2017
*
Andrea Hirata
Andrea Hirata (born October 24, 1967) is an Indonesian author best known for the 2005 novel ''Laskar Pelangi'' ("The Rainbow Troops") and its sequels.
Biography
Hirata was born in Gantung, Belitung. While he was young, his parents changed his n ...
, Indonesian Writer of "The Rainbow Troops"
* Dame
Kelly Holmes, double Olympic medallist 2004
*
Chris Jones, Sale and England international rugby player
*
Ben Jones-Bishop, Leeds Rhinos rugby league player
*
Sean Lamont, Northampton and Scotland international rugby union player
*
Tom Meeten, comedian and actor
*
David Mellor CBE, international designer and cutlery-maker
*
Martin Narey, CEO of Barnardo's, and former Director General of the Prison Service
*
Kim Noble
Kim Noble is a comedian and artist, and was one half of the BAFTA-nominated comedy duo Noble and Silver, who won the 2000 Perrier Award for Best Newcomer. Kim has featured in shows such as ''The Mighty Boosh'', ''Garth Marenghi's Darkplace'' ...
and
Stuart Silver
Stuart Silver is a screenwriter, television writer, actor and director. He works solo and collaboratively and is co-founder of the BAFTA-nominated, performance duo Noble and Silver, who won the 2000 Perrier Award (now the Foster's Edinburgh Co ...
, (Noble and Silver), comedians, winners of 2000 Perrier Award for best newcomer
*
Bruce Oldfield OBE, fashion designer
*
Nick Park CBE, animator, creator of
Wallace and Gromit and Oscar winner
*
Stanley Royle
Stanley Royle RBA, (1888–1961) was an English post-impressionist landscape painter and illustrator who lived for most of his life in and around Sheffield (England), and in Canada, and was inspired by views of landscape, sea and snow.
Early ...
, 20th-century landscape artist
*
Steve Peat, World Championship winning downhill mountain biker
*
Kenneth Steel
Kenneth Steel (RBA, SGA, 9 July 1906 – 1970) was a British painter and engraver, noted for his works of art in watercolor. As an accomplished draughtsman his work is noted for its intricate detail, which can be best seen in his landscapes view ...
, artist and engraver
*
David Strettle, Harlequins and England international rugby player
*
Joakim Sundström, sound designer
*
Leon Taylor, Olympic diver (silver medal)
*
Andy Whitfield, actor best known for his role in TV drama ''
Spartacus''.
*
James Whitworth
James is a common English language surname and given name:
*James (name), the typically masculine first name James
* James (surname), various people with the last name James
James or James City may also refer to:
People
* King James (disambiguat ...
, (English 1992–95) national cartoonist & writer: ''
Private Eye
''Private Eye'' is a British fortnightly satire, satirical and current affairs (news format), current affairs news magazine, founded in 1961. It is published in London and has been edited by Ian Hislop since 1986. The publication is widely r ...
'', ''
Prospect
Prospect may refer to:
General
* Prospect (marketing), a marketing term describing a potential customer
* Prospect (sports), any player whose rights are owned by a professional team, but who has yet to play a game for the team
* Prospect (mining ...
'', ''
Sheffield Star'' & ''
Sheffield Telegraph''. Author of DCI Miller crime novels.
*
Howard Wilkinson, Football Association technical director, former
Leeds United and
Sheffield Wednesday manager
*
Reuben Wu, artist and musician
*
Astrid Zydower
Astrid Zydower MBE (4 August 1930 – 27 May 2005) was a British sculptor.
Biography
Zydower was born in 1930 in a small village in what is now Poland, which at that time was within the borders of Germany. As a Jewish family, the Zydowers faced ...
, sculptor.
Notable staff
*
Alison Adam
Alison Adam is a British researcher in the field of Science and Technology Studies and is known for her work on gender in information systems and the history of forensic science. She is Professor Emerita of science, technology and society at She ...
, professor of science, technology and society.
*
Geoff Cartwright
Geoff Cartwright is an actor, director, award-winning audio book reader, poet, author and high school teacher. Cartwright is notable for his recurring role as Dr. Rob Bowen in the Australian drama '' All Saints'', and for his roles in ''White Col ...
, senior lecturer in Environmental Conservation 1995–2012: joint winner of the 2011 Individual award in the Environment Awards of the ''Sheffield Telegraph'' for his work on the development of a nature reserve at Blackburn Meadows on the site of the former Tinsley sewage farm.
*
I.M. Dharmadasa
I.M. Dharmadasa is Professor of Applied Physics and leads the Electronic Materials and Solar Energy (solar cells and other Semiconductor Devices) Group at Sheffield Hallam University, UK. Dharme has worked in semiconductor research since becomi ...
, applied physicist and researcher of low cost solar cells
*
Hywel
Jones, materials scientist and inventor in advanced ceramics and metals, Principal Research Fellow
*
Marina Lewycka (1946– ), senior lecturer in Media Studies 1998–2012, author of several novels including ''
A Short History of Tractors in Ukrainian'' (2005)
*
F.B. Pickering (1927–2017), metallurgist
*
Jane Rogers, winner of the 2012
Arthur C. Clarke Award for the 'best science fiction novel of the year' for ''
The Testament of Jessie Lamb''
*
Jawed Siddiqi
Jawed Siddiqi FBCS is a Pakistani British computer scientist and software engineer. He is professor emeritus of software engineering at Sheffield Hallam University, England. He is the president of NCUP National Council of University Professors ...
, Professor of Software Engineering and Political Activist
*
Frances Spalding, art historian, former lecturer
* Dave Wickett (1947–2012), lecturer in Economics, served on the industry and economics committee of the
Campaign for Real Ale
The Campaign for Real Ale (CAMRA) is an independent voluntary consumer organisation headquartered in St Albans, England, which promotes real ale, cider and perry and traditional British pubs and clubs. With just under 155,000 members, it is th ...
; in 1981 he established the Fat Cat (a real ale pub on Kelham Island) and in 1990 he launched
Kelham Island Brewery
The Kelham Island Brewery was a small independent brewery based in the Kelham Island Quarter area of Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England. It closed down in May 2022.
In 1990 the brewery was opened (the first for 100 years to open in Sheffie ...
; in 2004 his golden ale, Pale Rider, won Camra's Champion Beer of Britain award; in 2010 he set up a post-graduate course in brewing at
Sheffield University, and in 2011 he was given a lifetime achievement award by the
House of Commons all-party parliamentary beer group.
* Mike Wild (1939– ), senior lecturer in Environmental Studies 1969–1997, founder of the Five Weirs Walk group; co-founder of the Sheffield Wildlife Trust; and 2010 winner of the Lifetime Achievement Award in the ''Sheffield Telegraphs Environment Awards
See also
*
Armorial of UK universities
*
Hallam FC
*
List of universities in the UK
This is a list of universities in the United Kingdom (alphabetical by substantive name). Below that are lists of university colleges and other recognised bodies (institutions with degree awarding powers), followed by a list of defunct institution ...
*
National Centre for Popular Music
*
Post-1992 universities
*
Psalter Lane
Psalter Lane was the location of a former campus of Sheffield Hallam University in Sheffield, England. One of the former polytechnic's three bases, the campus officially closed on 31 August 2008 and work to demolish all but the old Bluecoat Scho ...
Campus
*
UTC Sheffield City Centre and
UTC Sheffield Olympic Legacy Park
*
University of Sheffield
References
External links
*
Sheffield Hallam Students' Union
{{authority control
Educational institutions established in 1992
1992 establishments in England
University Alliance
Buildings and structures in Sheffield
Tourist attractions in Sheffield
Universities UK