Duke of Kent to open new building

An University of Bath product story
Edited by the Engineeringtalk editorial team Feb 4, 2004

The new building that houses the Centre for Power Transmission and Motion Control at the University of Bath is to be officially opened on Wednesday 4th February by HRH The Duke of Kent.

The new building that houses the Centre for Power Transmission and Motion Control (CPTMC) at the University of Bath is to be officially opened on Wednesday 4th February by HRH The Duke of Kent.

The CPTMC, which originated in 1968 as the Fluid Power Centre, is the leading institution in the UK in the area of fluid power systems engineering and has earned an international reputation for its research.

The new building has created an environment for a truly multidisciplinary and integrated approach to machine design, drawing not only on mechanical engineering disciplines, but also on chemical, electronic and materials engineering, information technology, ergonomics, biomimetics and management.

The Duke of Kent, who is a Royal Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering, will be welcomed by the Lord Lieutenant and will be escorted around the facility by the Vice-Chancellor, Professor Glynis Breakwell, and the Director of the CPTMC, Professor Clifford Burrows.

During the tour the Duke will meet technicians, researchers and their supervisors, senior staff, dignitaries and other guests, who will include representatives of industrial sponsors, the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC), and representatives of the Fluid Power Centres of Europe Network, of which the centre is a founder member.

The construction of the new building was financed by a Joint Infrastructure Fund of the Higher Education Funding Council for England (JIF) grant of GBP 3.12 million.

Additional grants and donations have been received for several features of the building, including network technologies, a videoconferencing facility, a virtual-reality suite and a multi-axis vibration test facility.

Professor Clifford Burrows commented: "The new building and facilities significantly improve the CPTMC's ability to integrate and consolidate basic and strategic research and design programmes aimed at next generation machines.

It will enable the centre to remain at the forefront of international developments".

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