*** Welcome to piglix ***

Durham Students' Union

Durham Students' Union
Durham Students' Union logo.jpg
Institution Durham University
Location Dunelm House, Durham, United Kingdom
Established 1899 as Durham Students Representative Council
Sabbatical officers
  • President: Alice Dee
  • Academic Affairs Officer: Lisa Whiting
  • Activities Officer: Kara-Jane Senior Community Officer: Jo Gower Development Officer: Adam Jarvis
Trustees
  • Alice Dee, Adam Jarvis, Jo Gower, Kara-Jane Senior, Lisa Whiting (sabbatical trustees)
  • David Evans, Daniel Fox, Holly Foxon, Charles Walker (student trustees)
  • Anthony Baker (Chair), Oliver Colling, Martin Parker, Louise Shillinglaw (co-opted trustees)
Members c. 17,500
Affiliations National Union of Students,
Website Durham Students' Union homepage

Coordinates: 54°46′24″N 1°34′18″W / 54.77333°N 1.57167°W / 54.77333; -1.57167

Durham Students' Union, commonly referred to as the DSU, is the students' union of Durham University in Durham, England. It is an organisation, originally set up as the Durham Colleges Students’ Representative Council in 1899 and renamed in 1969, with the intention of representing and providing welfare and services for the students of the University of Durham.

The Students' Union occupies and manages Dunelm House, a university-owned building in the centre of Durham where a wide variety of student activities take place. Designed by Architects Co-Partnership, the Brutalist, angular concrete building was completed in 1966 under the supervision of architect Sir Ove Arup, whose Kingsgate Bridge, adjacent, opened two years earlier. Built into the steeply sloping bank of the River Wear, Dunelm House is notable internally for the fact that the main staircase linking all five levels of the building runs in an entirely straight line. This was intended by the building's architects to create the feeling of an interior street.

In 1968 Dunelm House won a Civic Trust award, though it has been described by students as "The ugliest building in Durham". On the other hand, Sir Nikolaus Pevsner, the noted architecture historian, considered the building, "Brutalist by tradition but not brutal to the landscape ... the elements, though bold, [are] sensitively composed." Durham City Council's Local Plan notes that the "powerful" building, together with Kingsgate Bridge, "provides an exhilarating pedestrian route ... out into open space over the river gorge".


...
Wikipedia

...