Flagship centre reinforces engineering excellence

State-of-the-art facility set to transform education, research and industry collaboration in engineering, as the University welcomes students and staff to a major new building.

An exterior view of the new Engineering Forum at King's Building
The Engineering Forum at the University's King's Building is now open to students and staff.

The Engineering Forum will support experiential learning and world-class research in fields such as renewable energy systems and future electronics.

Located at the King’s Buildings campus in the south of the city, it will bring together leading academics, students and sector partners in a purpose-built environment for the University’s School of Engineering.

Designed by architects Building Design Partnership and constructed by McLaughlin & Harvey, the building has been created to prioritise collaboration, sustainability and flexibility in a future-focussed centre.

The Forum incorporates advanced technical spaces, including high-specification laboratories, alongside innovation hubs and shared collaboration areas designed to foster interdisciplinary working.

External view of the Maria Watkins Teaching Room in the new Engineering Forum
The 'Maria Watkins' teaching room is named after the first woman to study electrical engineering at Edinburgh and former President of the Women’s Engineering Society.

Student specialism

The building offers new spaces for students to take part in hands-on teaching and learning, including a teaching studio, innovation lab and dedicated student support facilities.

Each of four teaching rooms is named for an influential woman engineer, including Maria Watkins, the first woman to study electrical engineering at Edinburgh and former President of the Women’s Engineering Society.

The Power Teaching Lab, a specialist teaching facility providing hands-on experience in power systems and electronics, will also relocate to the new building.

An external view of the Wolfson Electrical Power Conversion Lab in the Engineering Forum
The new Wolfson Electrical Power Conversion Lab, focussed on research into sustainable energy technologies in offshore renewables, will open this summer.

Cutting-edge research

The Institute for Energy Systems - a multidisciplinary research institute that brings together academics, research staff and postgraduate students from across the School of Engineering - has expanded its facilities within the building, adding new laboratories and workspaces to support its pioneering work in low-carbon energy systems, technology and policy.

A £2 million grant from the Wolfson Foundation will create a new laboratory within the Institute. Equipped with pioneering research equipment to support the development of sustainable energy technologies in offshore renewables, the Wolfson Electrical Power Conversion Lab is set to open this summer.

The Engineering Forum provides an outstanding environment for both teaching and research. Designed to support innovative approaches to integrated learning and discovery, it equips students with the skills and experience required to shape the future of engineering and technology. As a focal point for engineering excellence, it reinforces the University’s standing as a global leader in research and innovation, while enhancing the student experience and contributing to Scotland’s reputation as a centre for technological advancement.

Campus commitment 

Plans to create the impressive building have been developed over a 10-year period, with construction beginning in 2023. The Engineering Forum represents a long-term commitment by the University to enrich students’ experience on campus, extend research capability and drive growth through innovation.

It forms another key element of a wider physical transformation of the King’s Buildings campus, which also included the opening of the Nucleus Building in 2022 as a shared learning, teaching and social hub for College of Science and Engineering staff and students. 

We’re proud to have delivered our 7th project for our valued client, The University of Edinburgh. Working within a live campus environment can present its challenges, however, close collaboration with the university and our design partners has resulted in a cutting-edge learning space for future students studying at the University’s new School of Engineering building.

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2026