University sports students set to study at major Commonwealth Games venue

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Birmingham City University (BCU) has today announced a major £5 million investment to fit out the areas of the city’s Alexander Stadium that will serve as a world-class home for its sports and exercise-related courses.

The eyes of the world were on the iconic stadium last summer when it hosted key events as part of the Birmingham 2022 Commonwealth Games – including the opening and closing ceremonies.

And the stadium will now play host to an altogether different type of sporting success as BCU’s sports students will begin studying at the stadium in Perry Barr from January 2024. Work is currently underway to adapt the stadium’s East and West stands to house a range of specialist equipment and teaching facilities which will eventually be the base for up to 1,200 BCU students.

Leaders from Birmingham City University and Birmingham City Council met today to publicly sign the lease for the latest major milestone in the Alexander Stadium’s story, which will see BCU become one of the venue’s tenants alongside organisations including UK Athletics and the famous athletics club Birchfield Harriers.

Training the athletes and sports professionals of the future

The Alexander Stadium will house a comprehensive collection of cutting-edge equipment – including biomechanics labs, environmental chambers and anti-gravity treadmills – providing the best possible environment for elite sports and exercise teaching and learning.

Birmingham City University’s teaching space at the Stadium will provide the perfect setting for a new generation of sports therapists, sports scientists, nutritionists, sports coaches, and other sports professionals.

The University originally launched its sports and exercise courses in 2017. Since then, the courses have proven hugely popular with students preparing for careers in the sporting industries.

BCU’s history in the Perry Barr area dates back to the opening of North Birmingham Technical College in 1966, later incorporated into Birmingham Polytechnic in 1971.