
February 2003
In this issue...
Project Atlantis restores the scientific base Discovery House and sets up a museum on the South Georgia Island. more... |
Graduate George Craigie wins a UK award for his Crucial designs more... |
QMRC boosted by £1/2 million
The Queen Mother research fund has beaten off rival bids to secure a £1/2 million funding boost to set up a
"human interface research theatre" including a cybercafe designed for "silver surfers".
The generous donation from the Wolfson Foundation will provide a custom built laboratory dedicated to designing
computer technology to meet the needs and abilities of older people.
The research theatre will be linked to a cybercafe providing an ideal place for older people to meet, surf the
net, learn computing skills and share their particular needs and access problems first hand with researchers
etc.
The theatre will also serve as a training facility for designers and executives in industry, where they will be
taught to consider the needs of older people in their designs. As well as supporting academic endeavours, the
theatre will act as an evening venue for theatre groups with an interest in providing entertainment for older
people.
Professor Alan Newell welcomed the boost to the fundraising campaign saying: "I am grateful for the Wolfson
Foundation’s generous support of the Queen Mother Research Centre. With over 30 researchers, the department of
applied computing has the largest academic group in the world developing computer systems for older and
disabled people. The grant from the Wolfson Foundation will provide a significant boost to this activity and
lead to improvements to the quality of life of older people throughout the world."
The Wolfson Foundation is a charitable foundation set up in 1955 whose aims are the advancement of health,
education, the arts and humanities. Grants are given to act as a catalyst to back excellence and talent and to
provide for promising future projects.
This generous donation adds to the £1/2 million promise of infrastructure from Scottish Power and £200,000 in
SRIF funding.
An artist's impression of the Queen Mother Research Centre on campus. Designed by architects Page and Park
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