Map of the University Science Area

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Map of the University Science Area A 10 55 B C D E 1 1 42 C H A D L I N L I N TO N R D C G H T O A R N L R B O U A R N D Y O R R R I O V T A E H D R M C O H O E R R W BA N B U RY R D R RAWLINSON RD E O L A L D 48 2 WOODSTOCK RD BARDWELL RD 2 ST MARGARET’S34 RD 7 8 N O R H A M R D CANTERBURY RD W I N C 15 H 2 E S T 24 E N PARADE AVE R R D 3 14 CH U R CH W K 45 D R BA N B U RY R D R D 20 O 14 K F 49 3 C S 3 L E 52 N G D 23 A M R H 1 4 N O WOODSTOCK28 RD 44 BEVINGTON RD PLANTATION RD WA LTO N W 27 EL L ST BERNARD’S RD R D University Parks 32 9 OBSERVATORY47 ST 27 28 PA R K S R D T O S N 57 35 X O J U 53 T 15 S M 66 R A I H V N 38 E A R R 60 4 C WA LTO N S T C 4 University Science Area H K E B L E R D E R 16 W (See detailed map) E L B L A L L A B C 13 E F E 34 K R T H T S A L S N L ST CROSS RD T O R D D N 51 72 R E L L A T CLARENDON ST C L 50 SOUTH PARKS RD T L A I R E E L N G 42 W G T 19 O 64 65 39 M 6 13 R N 12 29 S A C S N Q TO 29 N A L 62 S G 36 43 W F I E 37 11 L S T G I L E S’ D 17 44 I R 30 I CH M O N D R D 26 R S T J O H N S T D V 25 31 PA R K S R D PUSE Y S T M A N O R R D 26 PUSE Y L N E S T E R PL WO R C 3 38 WA LTO N S T 35 9 41 21 31 10 5 46 J OW E T T W K 5 OX F O 22 R D C A N A M N M 5 A A L G D H O LY W E L L S T 43 W BEAUMONT ST A J L O C E A R 33 N 39 T C 70 T 21 E S E T S S Bridge R 2 T T E G l o u ce s t e r E R of Sighs E 68 B R OA D S T E W 71 T R E G r e e n L T E S T D Y 54 H 11 R D LONGWALL ST RADCLIFFE Q 8 U E E N ’ S L N G E O R G E S T T U R L S T 58 SH I P S T SQUARE CORNMARKET ST 12 BRASENOSE LN HYTHE BRIDGE ST NEW INN HALL ST K 67 18 32 Water 41 ST MICHAEL ST 4 Meadows Clarendon 17 Shopping M A R K E T S T Covered 16 Market 1 25 PA R K Centre U E N D S T T 22 H I G H S T L E Y R D I B O T D M A O R N E W R D R 40 HOLLYBUSH ROW 56 S 36 I E 40 H H I G H S T B ECK E T S T W L Carfax L 69 S ST THOMAS ST N Tower T 59 6 Town Hall O R I E L S Q 18 6 B O N N S Q Q U E E N S T & Museum B E A R L N Magdalen of Oxford T 23 R S Bridge OA M E R TO N S T B LU E B Westgate C 63 Shopping Q 20 R OSE L N M C A S T L E S T 7 K E L Centre WA R N ’ S PE M B R O K E S T T M A R O D S E A N D T E W B PEMBROKE SQ A E P L B H A L S T E S T CL EM EN T S T 24 K I 19 S Merton Field L L N E O S W T 6 P R T L E S B H R D R E R C K W E E E 61 R S I V L G T R C E O ST ALDATE’S O R T I FFL E Y R D W F E LE R Y 5 Y F L R O Magdalen D O R P N X I Y P A College E E N R Sports L S S R R OA D WA L K W D B O S Ground 33 C T B SPEEDWELL ST 30 Christ Church T H A M E S S T Meadow 7 7 S A M E T H ER I V R ABINGDON RD Folly Bridge 5 Minute walk (approx.) X A B C D E 37 Index Colleges and Halls Departments 39 Rothermere American Institute 59 IT Services Other Places 1A SOUTH PARKS ROAD C4 BLUE BOAR COURT C6 Ruskin School of 60 Language Centre 1 All Souls (Research) 1 African Studies Centre 40 O Ashmolean Museum 12 WOODSTOCK ROAD B4 HIGH STREET D6 13 BEVINGTON ROAD B3 Drawing & Fine Art HARKNESS BUILDING, 74 HIGH STREET D6 Learning Institute (DEVELOPMENT SITE) B4 2 Balliol Ageing, Institute of Population 61 2 SUITE 3, LITTLEGATE HOUSE, BROAD STREET C5 66 BANBURY ROAD B3 41 Saïd Business School P Christ Church Cathedral 16–17 ST EBBES STREET B7 PARK END STREET A6 C6 Blackfriars* Anthropology & Museum ST ALDATE’S 3 3 62 Mathematical, Physical ST GILES’ B5 Ethnography 42 Social Policy and Intervention Q Christ Church Picture Gallery BARNETT HOUSE, and Life Sciences C6 Brasenose 51–53 BANBURY ROAD B3 ORIEL SQUARE 4 32 WELLINGTON SQUARE B4 Divisional Office RADCLIFFE SQUARE C6 Area Studies R Old Road Campus 4 Socio-Legal Studies 9 PARKS ROAD C5 (SEE DETAILED MAP) 12 BEVINGTON ROAD B3 43 and Hospital Sites 5 Campion Hall* MANOR ROAD BUILDING, 63 Medical Sciences HEADINGTON (OFF MAP) E6 BREWER STREET C7 Archaeology MANOR ROAD D5 5 Divisional Office 36 BEAUMONT STREET B5 S Rhodes House 6 Christ Church Sociology JOHN RADCLIFFE HOSPITAL, 44 SOUTH PARKS ROAD C5 ST ALDATE’S C6 6 Centre for Criminology MANOR ROAD BUILDING, HEADLEY WAY (OFF MAP) E6 MANOR ROAD D5 7 Corpus Christi MANOR ROAD BUILDING, MANOR ROAD D5 64 Occupational Health Service T Sheldonian Theatre BROAD STREET C5 MERTON STREET C6 7 Chinese Studies 45 Social & Cultural Anthropology 10 PARKS ROAD C5 (SEE DETAILED MAP) DICKSON POON BUILDING, 51–53 BANBURY ROAD B3 University Church, St Mary’s 8 Exeter CANTERBURY ROAD B2 65 Safety Office U HIGH STREET C6 TURL STREET C6 46 Taylor Institution 10 PARKS ROAD C5 (SEE DETAILED MAP) 8 China Centre 9 Green Templeton** DICKSON POON BUILDING, (Modern Languages) 66 Security Services V University Club CANTERBURY ROAD B2 ST GILES’ B5 11 MANSFIELD ROAD D5 WOODSTOCK ROAD B4 THE OBSERVATORY, 10 SOUTH PARKS ROAD 10 Harris Manchester 9 Classics Centre 47 Theology and Religion C4 (SEE DETAILED MAP) W University of Oxford Shop IOANNOU CENTRE FOR CLASSICAL MANSFIELD ROAD D5 GIBSON BUILDING, 106 HIGH STREET C6 AND BYZANTINE STUDIES, 66 ST GILES’ B5 67 Social Sciences WOODSTOCK ROAD B4 X University Sports Centre 11 Hertford Continuing Education Divisional Office CATTE STREET C5 10 48 Voltaire Foundation HAYES HOUSE, UNIVERSITY SPORTS, JACKDAW LANE, EWERT HOUSE, EWERT PLACE, 99 BANBURY ROAD B2 75 GEORGE STREET B6 IFFLEY ROAD E7 12 Jesus College SUMMERTOWN (OFF MAP) B1 TURL STREET C6 Continuing Education 49 Wellcome Unit for 68 5 Worcester Street 11 5 WORCESTER STREET B5 13 Keble REWLEY HOUSE, the History of Medicine B3 PARKS ROAD C4 1 WELLINGTON SQUARE B5 45–47 BANBURY ROAD • Educational Media 14 Kellogg** 12 Continuing Professional Administration 69 The Malthouse 62 BANBURY ROAD B3 Development THE MALTHOUSE, TIDMARSH LANE B6 11 WELLINGTON SQUARE B4 and Services 15 Lady Margaret Hall • Estates Directorate NORHAM GARDENS C3 13 Economics • Telecommunications MANOR ROAD BUILDING, MANOR ROAD D5 University Offices 16 Linacre** 50 Counselling Service ST CROSS ROAD D4 WELLINGTON SQUARE B4 70 14 Education 3 WORCESTER STREET B5 17 Lincoln 15 NORHAM GARDENS C3 • Alumni Office 71 Student Union Offices TURL STREET C6 Engineering Science 15 • Clubs Committee 2 WORCESTER STREET B5 THOM BUILDING, PARKS ROAD B4 18 Magdalen • Council Secretariat 72 Dartington House HIGH STREET D6 Engineering Science WELLINGTON SQUARE B4 16 • Education Policy Support 19 Mansfield SOUTHWELL BUILDING, OSNEY MEAD (OFF MAP) A6 • Facilities Management MANSFIELD ROAD D4 • Facilities Management English Faculty • Graduate Accommodation 20 Merton • Finance Division 17 ST CROSS BUILDING, MANOR ROAD D5 D6 • IT Services MERTON STREET • Graduate Admissions History Faculty 21 New College • Legal Services 18 OLD BOYS HIGH SCHOOL, GEORGE ST B6 • International Strategy HOLYWELL STREET D5 • Telecommunications History of Art • Legal Services 22 Nuffield** 19 SUITE 9, LITTLEGATE HOUSE, • Undergraduate Admissions NEW ROAD B6 • Oxford University ST EBBES STREET B6 Development Office 23 Oriel Human Sciences University Museums ORIEL SQUARE C6 • 20 THE PAULING CENTRE, Oxford University Society B3 24 Pembroke 58A BANBURY ROAD • Personnel Services Ashmolean Museum ST ALDATE’S C6 International Development A 21 • Planning and Resource of Art and Archaeology 25 Queen’s College (The) QUEEN ELIZABETH HOUSE, D5 Allocation BEAUMONT STREET B5 HIGH STREET D6 3 MANSFIELD ROAD • Proctors’ Office Bate Collection of 26 Regent’s Park* Internet Institute B 22 B5 PUSEY STREET B5 1 ST GILES’ • Public Affairs Directorate Musical Instruments Japanese Studies ST ALDATE’S C7 27 St Anne’s 23 • Research Services B3 THE NISSAN INSTITUTE OF JAPANESE C Botanic Garden WOODSTOCK ROAD • STUDIES, 27 WINCHESTER ROAD B3 Student Administration and ROSE LANE D6 28 St Antony’s** Services Latin American Centre Museum of the WOODSTOCK ROAD B3 24 D 1 CHURCH WALK B3 • Student Funding Services History of Science 29 St Benet’s Hall* Law Faculty • BROAD STREET C5 ST GILES’ B5 Undergraduate Admissions 25 ST CROSS BUILDING, ST CROSS ROAD D5 • Oxford University Museum 30 St Catherine’s Vice-Chancellor & Registrar E Linguistics, Philology of Natural History MANOR ROAD E5 26 Admissions Information and Phonetics 51 PARKS ROAD C4 (SEE DETAILED MAP) Centre 31 St Cross** CENTRE FOR LINGUISTICS AND B5 LITTLE CLARENDON STREET B4 F Pitt Rivers Museum ST GILES’ PHILOLOGY, WALTON STREET B5 PARKS ROAD C4 (SEE DETAILED MAP) Careers Service 32 St Edmund Hall Mathematics 52 QUEEN’S LANE D6 27 56 BANBURY ROAD B3 ANDREW WILES BUILDING, University Libraries 33 St Hilda’s WOODSTOCK ROAD B4 IT Services 53 B4 COWLEY PLACE E7 Mathematical Institute 13 BANBURY ROAD 28 Bodleian Law Library 34 St Hugh’s ANDREW WILES BUILDING, 54 Equality and Diversity Unit G ST MARGARET’S ROAD B2 WOODSTOCK ROAD B4 5–6 WORCESTER STREET B5 ST CROSS BUILDING, MANOR ROAD D5 35 St John’s Medieval and Ewert House 29 55 Bodleian Library - Old Library ST GILES’ C5 Modern Languages EWERT PLACE, SUMMERTOWN H (OFF MAP) B1 BROAD STREET C5 36 St Peter’s 41 & 47 WELLINGTON SQUARE B5 • Bodleian Social Science Library NEW INN HALL STREET B6 Music Faculty Isis Innovation I 30 MANOR ROAD BUILDING, ST ALDATE’S C7 • 37 St Stephen’s House* Land Agent’s and MANOR ROAD D5 16 MARSTON STREET (OFF MAP) E7 Accommodation Office 31 Oriental Institute Bodleian Library - Weston B5 J 38 Somerville PUSEY LANE • Regional Liaison Office Library WOODSTOCK ROAD B4 32 Oxford Man Institute Examination Schools BROAD STREET C5 A3 56 39 Trinity EAGLE HOUSE, WALTON WELL ROAD HIGH STREET D6 Radcliffe Camera (Bodleian) BROAD STREET C5 K 33 Oxford Martin School • Academic Administration RADCLIFFE SQUARE C6 40 University College OLD INDIAN INSTITUTE, C5 Division Radcliffe Science Library HIGH STREET D6 34 BROAD STREET L PARKS ROAD C4 (SEE DETAILED MAP) • University Card Office 41 Wadham
Recommended publications
  • Old Road Campus
    Old Road Campus 4a, 4b, 4c, U5 n o t Oxford City Centre g OLD ROAD n i d 4a, 4b, 4c, U5 a e H K O L L A D R O W AD E M I L 4,4a,4b,4c, U1X,U5 A41 42 4,4a,4b,4c,U5 Rin D 4 g R oad 6 7 1 13 3 11 C H U R C H I L L 900 D 2 R I 700, 900 V E E O x f o 5 A C rd 12 C i ty 10 C e n t re B 8 CAR PARK C 9 h u r c R F h i O l l O S H E o V s N E p L i T t DRI a VE ENTRANCE ROOSEVELT DRIVE l 900, ST2 Index 1 The Triangle Nursery 9 Old Road Campus Estates Annexe 13 Boundary Brook House Interserve Joint Research Office Kennedy Institute 2 - Research Services, Medical Sciences Division Old Road Campus Research Building 10 - Clinical Trials and Research Governance 3 New Richards Building Department of Oncology - Human Tissue Governance CRUK/MRC Oxford Institute for Radiation Oncology - Medical Sciences Division Business Development 4 NDM Research Building Institute of Biomedical Engineering Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences Target Discovery Institute Jenner Institute Medical Sciences Divisional Safety Officers Centre for Tropical Medicine and Global Health Bodleian Knowledge Centre (Library Services) Medical Sciences Division IT Services 5 Wellcome Centre for Human Genetics (WHG) Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research Structural Genomics Consortium 6 Henry Wellcome Building for Molecular Physiology Nuffield Department of Surgical Sciences Loading Bays and Delivery Offices of the Nuffield Professor of Medicine ENTRANCE VIA BUILDING 5 11 Big Data Institute A Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics 7 Henry Wellcome Building for Particle Imaging
    [Show full text]
  • Comments on the Proposed Boundary Changes to South-East
    Comments on the proposed boundary changes to south‐east Oxford As the Chair of Rose Hill and Iffley Low Carbon Community Group, I would argue that the proposed changes make little sense and that the existing ward boundaries should be retained, with the leeway for change mentioned below. Councillors should represent communities, not raw numbers. The natural boundaries of our ward (Rose Hill and Iffley) are the river, ring‐road, Rose Hill/Henley Avenue and Donnington Recreation Ground ‐ or Donnington Bridge Road if a greater number of residents is needed. If a lower number of residents is needed, the area around Westbury Crescent could be moved into Cowley ward as most people regard it as Cowley. We should keep all the houses on both sides of Rose Hill (the road) as it wouldn't make sense to live on Rose Hill and not in it! Our group would be badly affected by the proposed boundary change as we based our choice of name on the fact that they constitute one ward. We have active members in both Rose Hill and Iffley and this helps to bring the two communities together. It has always been helpful to ask known Councillors to represent us on key issues and to build a working relationship with them. It would be very complicated if we had to refer to multiple Councillors in a number of different communities. Rose Hill and Iffley share common resources ‐ the river, the church, Iffley Meadows, the No 3 bus into the town centre, the allotments, the recreation ground and now Rose Hill Community Centre, which provides facilities such as the gym to the whole community.
    [Show full text]
  • PUB-RESTAURANT SUMMERTOWN, OXFORD The
    PUB-RESTAURANT SUMMERTOWN, OXFORD The Bicycle Shed, 204-206 Banbury Road, Oxford OX2 7BY Summary • A3 Free of tie Pub -restaurant • Ground floor and basement lock up • Outside seating/beer garden • Turnover circa £700,000 • Excellent condition • Great opportunity to develop business Leasehold: Premium £150,000 Viewing is strictly by prior appointment with sole agents Davis Coffer Lyons: dcl.co.uk Paul Tallentyre 020 7299 0740 [email protected] PUB-RESTAURANT SUMMERTOWN, OXFORD Location Summertown is an affluent suburb of north Oxford. It benefits from immediate proximity to the A40 arterial route, between the city centre and the A34. The subject premises are prominently located on Banbury Road, Other nearby occupiers include Majestic Wine, Sainsbury’s, M&S Simply Food, Tesco Express, Boots, Costa, Farrow & Ball. Google Street View The Property A ground floor and basement lock up with enclosed beer garden at the front of the property. Business Rates The property is listed in the VOA business rates list as having a rateable value of £51,000 with effect from 28 September 2018. Legal Costs and Confidentiality Each party is to bear their own legal costs incurred in this transaction. All prices quoted may be subject to VAT provisions. The staff are unaware of the impending sale and therefore your utmost discretion is appreciated, especially if you are intending to inspect as a customer in the first instance. Please note that the staff will transfer Business with the sale of the business in accordance with TUPE. The business has been fully refitted to a high standard. Currently run under management there is a great opportunity to develop the current turn over and operation License The Business trades as follows: Monday to Saturday 10.00am to 23.30pm Sundays 12.00pm to 23.30pm Lease A3 Use.
    [Show full text]
  • The Field Names of Cowley.Pdf
    The field names of Cowley Christopher Lewis Cowley and its common fields When I refer to ‘Cowley’ I usually mean the area defined by the Enclosure Commissioners in 1853, encompassing all those detached areas of other parishes.1 The common fields of Cowley stretched from the banks of the Cherwell, south-eastwards to the old Roman Road and the borders with Horspath, Littlemore and Iffley, with a small detached portion on the slopes of Shotover Hill, known as Elder Stumps. A brook, now known as Boundary Brook, runs east to west across this area. Originally it meandered across the fields slightly south of its present course, but it was straightened, and probably deepened, at the time of the Enclosure. Our knowledge of the field names, and where they are in the landscape, mostly comes from maps made for Corpus Christi College, Christ Church, and Pembroke College, and then later in a series of Tithe maps and Enclosure maps. Field boundaries, parish boundaries, and roads are not necessarily coincident, and the boundaries of the open fields are not always shown on the maps. The earliest map that shows the borders of the fields was made for Christ Church by William Chapman in 1777 and names the larger fields as Millam, Long Mead, Compass Field, Ridge Field, Bartholomew Field, The Lakes, Cowley Marsh, and Lye Hill all north of the brook, and Wood Field, Fur Field, Broad Field, and Church Field to the south.2 Other names appear in the documents, sometimes as alternative names for the same pieces of ground, and sometimes seeming more important than the names on the Chapman map.
    [Show full text]
  • Endoscopy Disease Detection Challenge 2020
    ENDOSCOPY DISEASE DETECTION CHALLENGE 2020 Sharib Ali1 Noha Ghatwary7 Barbara Braden2 Dominique Lamarque3 Adam Bailey 2 Stefano Realdon4 Renato Cannizzaro 5 Jens Rittscher1 Christian Daul6 James East 2 1 Institute of Biomedical Engineering, Big Data Institute, University of Oxford, Old Road Campus, Oxford, UK 2 Translational Gastroenterology Unit, Experimental Medicine Div., John Radcliffe Hospital, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK 3 Universite´ de Versailles St-Quentin en Yvelines, Hopitalˆ Ambroise Pare,´ France 4 Instituto Onclologico Veneto, IOV-IRCCS, Padova, Italy 5 CRO Centro Riferimento Oncologico IRCCS Aviano Italy 6 CRAN UMR 7039, University of Lorraine, CNRS, Nancy, France 7 University of Lincoln, UK ABSTRACT improve current medical practices and refine health-care Whilst many technologies are built around endoscopy, there systems worldwide. However, well-annotated, representative is a need to have a comprehensive dataset collected from publicly available datasets for disease detection for assessing multiple centers to address the generalization issues with research reproducibility and facilitating standardized com- most deep learning frameworks. What could be more im- parison of methods is still lacking. Many methods to detect portant than disease detection and localization? Through diseased regions in endoscopy have been proposed however our extensive network of clinical and computational experts, these have been primarily focused on the task of polyp we have collected, curated and annotated gastrointestinal detection in the gastrointestinal tract with demonstration on endoscopy video frames. We have released this dataset and datasets acquired from at most a few data centers and single have launched disease detection and segmentation challenge modality imaging, most commonly white light. Here, we EDD20201 to address the limitations and explore new di- present our multi-class, multi-organ and multi-population rections.
    [Show full text]
  • 35 Lakeside Oxford, OX2 8JF 35 Lakeside Oxford, OX2 8JF
    35 Lakeside Oxford, OX2 8JF 35 Lakeside Oxford, OX2 8JF DESCRIPTION & SITUATION A completely renovated four bedroom family home with the huge benefit of high specification sound proof windows with integrated blinds. The accommodation comprises; entrance hall, kitchen/breakfast room, sitting/dining room with wood burning stove, cloakroom, and integral single garage with utility area on the ground floor. On the first floor there are four bedrooms with the master bedroom offering an ensuite bathroom and an additional family shower room. The property offers scope for further development subject to the usual planning consents. To the exterior is ample parking, a stylish low maintenance front garden and the rear garden has raised decking, with a lawned area with mature fern trees to the rear and a feature fruit tree laden with fruit. Situated in North Oxford and set back from the Banbury Road, the property is near to the 104 acre Cutteslowe Park and North Oxford Golf Course. The situation provides good access to all the day to day shopping facilities of Summertown including Marks & Spencer, bars, restaurants and a theatre with slightly further afield the comprehensive amenities of Oxford city centre. The Woodstock and Banbury Roads join directly to the Oxford ring road connecting to the A40 and M40 to London. The Oxford rail station has regular services directly to London Paddington and the forthcoming Oxford Parkway station opening in 2015 will lead into London Marylebone. DIRECTIONS From the office of Penny and Sinclair in Summertown proceed north on Banbury Road and proceed over the roundabout second exit. Take the first turning on the left into Five Mile Drive turning right into Linkside Avenue and Lakeside with be found on the left side.
    [Show full text]
  • Oxfordshire Local History News
    OXFORDSHIRE LOCAL HISTORY NEWS The Newsletter of the Oxfordshire Local History Association Issue 128 Spring 2014 ISSN 1465-469 Chairman’s Musings gaining not only On the night of 31 March 1974, the inhabitants of the Henley but also south north-western part of the Royal County of Berkshire Buckinghamshire, went to bed as usual. When they awoke the following including High morning, which happened to be April Fools’ Day, they Wycombe, Marlow found themselves in Oxfordshire. It was no joke and, and Slough. forty years later, ‘occupied North Berkshire’ is still firmly part of Oxfordshire. The Royal Commission’s report Today, many of the people who live there have was soon followed by probably forgotten that it was ever part of Berkshire. a Labour government Those under forty years of age, or who moved in after white paper. This the changes, may never have known this. Most broadly accepted the probably don’t care either. But to local historians it is, recommendations of course, important to know about boundaries and apart from deferring a decision on provincial councils. how they have changed and developed. But in the 1970 general election, the Conservatives were elected. Prime Minister Edward Heath appointed The manner in which the 1974 county boundary Peter Walker as the minister responsible for sorting the changes came about is little known but rather matter out. He produced another but very different interesting. Reform of local government had been on white paper. It also deferred a decision on provincial the political agenda since the end of World War II.
    [Show full text]
  • Dr. Arturo Reyes-Sandoval Associate Professor / Profesor Asociado the Jenner Institute Nuffield Department of Medicine University of Oxford
    CURRICULUM VITAE Dr. Arturo Reyes-Sandoval Associate Professor / Profesor Asociado The Jenner Institute Nuffield Department of Medicine University of Oxford Associate Professor at the University of Oxford since 2015. Principal investigator leading a group of scientist composed by 4 postdoctoral scientists, 2 PhD students and a project manager. 56 publications in international journals, H-index 22 and 2133 citations to his research work. 15 grants awarded for a total of £11 million pounds awarded by British Institutions and CONACyT. 8 patents and registrations, 6 as inventor. Educational Qualifications: Degree Award Subject University Year PhD Graduated Doctoral Thesis in Molecular National Polytechnic 2005 with honours Medicine Institute M.Sc. (Hons) Graduated Cytopathology National Polytechnic 1995 with honours Institute University Prize as best Microbiology National Polytechnic 1993 degree student. Institute Finished 1st of 150 students Academic Positions Held: Institution Position Held Start Date End Date University of Oxford Associate Professor 26/03/2015 - The Jenner Institute Wellcome Trust 01/02/2012 01/02/2017 Nuffield Department of Clinical Career development Medicine, University of Oxford Fellow (During this period I received the titles of University Research Lecturer (1 December 2012) and Associate Professor. (26 March 2015). The Jenner Institute Senior Postdoctoral 01/01/2011 31/01/2012 Nuffield Department of Clinical Research Scientist / Medicine, University of Oxford NDM Research Fellow Junior Postdoctoral 24/09/2004 31/12/2010 Research Scientist The Wistar Institute Pre-doctoral trainee 24/09/1999 24/09/2004 Philadelphia Recognition I: Prizes, honours and awards 2016 Nominated by the Mexican Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Mexican Embassy to the UK for the 2016 prize on Science and Technology.
    [Show full text]
  • Drawings by J. B. Malchair in Corpus Christi College
    Drawings by J. B. Malchair In Corpus Christi College By H. MINN HERE have recently come to light in Corpus Christi College library T eleven volumes of drawings by J. B. Malchair and his pupils, drawn between the years 1765-1790.1 Malchair was a music and drawing master, and resided in Broad Street. A full account of all that is known of him will be found in an article by Paul Oppe in the Burlington Maga<:ine for August, 194-3. This collection appears to have been made by John Griffith, Warden of Wadham College, 1871-81, and consists of 339 water-colour, indian ink, and pencil sketches; of these no less than 138 are views in and about the City and drawn by Malchair himself. A full list of all the drawings depicting Oxford or neighbouring places will be found in the Appendix; the remainder of the drawings depict places outside the range of Oxonunsia. Malchair's drawings of the City are very valuable records, and it is satisfactory to note that most of his known drawings are now to be found in Oxford; for, in addition to this collection, there is a fine collection in the Ashmolean Museum and a few other drawings are among the Bodleian topographical collection; but there were others of great interest in existence in 1862 (see Proceedings of the Oxford Architectural and Historical Society, new series, I, 14-8), and it is to be hoped that these, if still in existence, may some day find a home in Oxford. The value of Malchair's drawings is much enhanced by his habit of writing on the back the subject, the year, day of the month and often the hour at which the drawing was made.
    [Show full text]
  • Extremeearth Preparatory Project
    ExtremeEarth Preparatory Project ExtremeEarth-PP No.* Participant organisation name Short Country 1 EUROPEAN CENTRE FOR MEDIUM-RANGE WEATHER FORECASTS ECMWF INT/ UK (Co) 2 UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD UOXF UK 3 MAX-PLANCK-GESELLSCHAFT MPG DE 4 FORSCHUNGSZENTRUM JUELICH GMBH FZJ DE 5 ETH ZUERICH ETHZ CH 6 CENTRE NATIONAL DE LA RECHERCHE SCIENTIFIQUE CNRS CNRS FR 7 FONDAZIONE CENTRO EURO-MEDITERRANEOSUI CAMBIAMENTI CMCC IT CLIMATICI 8 STICHTING NETHERLANDS ESCIENCE CENTER NLeSC NL 9 STICHTING DELTARES Deltares NL 10 DANMARKS TEKNISKE UNIVERSITET DTU DK 11 JRC -JOINT RESEARCH CENTRE- EUROPEAN COMMISSION JRC INT/ BE 12 BARCELONA SUPERCOMPUTING CENTER - CENTRO NACIONAL DE BSC ES SUPERCOMPUTACION 13 STICHTING INTERNATIONAL RED CROSS RED CRESCENT CENTRE RedC NL ON CLIMATE CHANGE AND DISASTER PREPAREDNESS 14 UNITED KINGDOM RESEARCH AND INNOVATION UKRI UK 15 UNIVERSITEIT UTRECHT UUT NL 16 METEO-FRANCE MF FR 17 ISTITUTO NAZIONALE DI GEOFISICA E VULCANOLOGIA INGV IT 18 HELSINGIN YLIOPISTO UHELS FI ExtremeEarth-PP 1 Contents 1 Excellence ............................................................................................................................................................. 3 1.1 Vision and unifying goal .............................................................................................................................. 3 1.1.1 The need for ExtremeEarth ................................................................................................................... 3 1.1.2 The science case ..................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • NORTH OXFORD VICTORIAN SUBURB CONSERVATION AREA APPRAISAL Consultation Draft - January 2017
    NORTH OXFORD VICTORIAN SUBURB CONSERVATION AREA APPRAISAL Consultation Draft - January 2017 249 250 CONTENTS SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANCE 5 Reason for appraisal 7 Location 9 Topography and geology 9 Designation and boundaries 9 Archaeology 10 Historical development 12 Spatial Analysis 15 Special features of the area 16 Views 16 Building types 16 University colleges 19 Boundary treatments 22 Building styles, materials and colours 23 Listed buildings 25 Significant non-listed buildings 30 Listed parks and gardens 33 Summary 33 Character areas 34 Norham Manor 34 Park Town 36 Bardwell Estate 38 Kingston Road 40 St Margaret’s 42 251 Banbury Road 44 North Parade 46 Lathbury and Staverton Roads 49 Opportunities for enhancement and change 51 Designation 51 Protection for unlisted buildings 51 Improvements in the Public Domain 52 Development Management 52 Non-residential use and institutionalisation large houses 52 SOURCES 53 APPENDICES 54 APPENDIX A: MAP INDICATING CHARACTER AREAS 54 APPENDIX B: LISTED BUILDINGS 55 APPENDIX C: LOCALLY SIGNIFICANT BUILDINGS 59 252 North Oxford Victorian Suburb Conservation Area SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANCE This Conservations Area’s primary significance derives from its character as a distinct area, imposed in part by topography as well as by land ownership from the 16th century into the 20th century. At a time when Oxford needed to expand out of its historic core centred around the castle, the medieval streets and the major colleges, these two factors enabled the area to be laid out as a planned suburb as lands associated with medieval manors were made available. This gives the whole area homogeneity as a residential suburb.
    [Show full text]
  • Parks Road, Oxford
    Agenda Item 5 West Area Planning Committee 8 June 2011 Application (i): 10/03210/CAC Numbers: (ii): 10/03207/FUL Decision Due by: 23 February 2011 Proposals: (i): 10/03210/CAC : Removal of existing ornamental gates and sections of railings fronting Lindemann building and to University parks. (ii): 10/03207/FUL : Demolition of former lodge building and removal of temporary waste stores. Erection of new physics research building on 5 levels above ground plus 2 basement levels below with 3 level link to Lindemann building. Creation of landscaped courtyard to South of new building and cycle parking to North. Re-erection of Lindemann gates to repositioned entrance to University Parks and of University Park gates to new entrance further north opposite Dept of Materials. Re-alignment of boundary railings. Site Address: Land adjacent to the Clarendon Laboratory, Parks Road, Appendix 1 . Ward: Holywell Ward Agent: DPDS Consulting Group Applicant: The University Of Oxford Recommendations: Committee is recommended to grant conservation area consent and planning permission, subject to conditions. Reasons for Approval. 1. The Council considers that the proposal accords with the policies of the development plan as summarised below. It has taken into consideration all other material matters, including matters raised in response to consultation and publicity. Any material harm that the development would otherwise give rise to can be offset by the conditions imposed. 2. The Council considers that the proposal, subject to the conditions imposed, would accord with the special character and appearance of the conservation areas it adjoins. It has taken into consideration all other material matters, including matters raised in response to consultation and publicity.
    [Show full text]