"Keep the Cat Free"

23.02.2012

FELIX

The student voice of Imperial College London since 1949

Imperial doesn't seem to care about its postgraduates

News about Clayponds and the Holland Club highlight inadequacies in Imperial's view of postgraduate students
Thomas Phillips
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Griffon Studios – the best a postgrad can get?

After finishing my undergraduate degree, I’m now in my fifth year at Imperial studying for a PhD. Recent news about the future of Clayponds and the Holland Club has led me to believe that Imperial is disconnected from the lives and needs of postgraduate students.

The college has confirmed that it intends to close Clayponds, the postgraduate student estate in South Ealing. Its replacement is Griffon Studios, a new, purpose-built development offering “high quality and affordable accommodation options” in Clapham. Unlike Clayponds, there is no pastoral care system at Griffon Studios – a key benefit of living in university accommodation that is particularly attractive to students new to London or the UK.

A 19 square metre studio there will set you back £235 per week. £300 per week will get you a 22 square metre studio that’s apparently suitable for couples. In contrast, a single room in Clayponds ranges from £104-£148 per week and a single studio is from £181.

To put that in context, I’m a postgraduate student in the Plastic Electronics Doctoral Training Centre and my stipend is £1,299 per month. Living in the smaller studio would cost me a whopping £1,018 per month and leave me with £281 for living costs. No wonder they haven’t filled all the rooms. My girlfriend and I privately rent a flat in Southfields twice the size of Griffon Studios for £230 per week – a much better deal than anything Imperial offers.

Imperial appears to have completely forgotten to investigate what a typical PG can afford

The Rector responded to criticism from Clayponds subwarden Craig Court by saying that a focus group found students wanted to be within 30 minutes of South Kensington. Who doesn’t? But not at these obscene prices. Imperial appears to have completely forgotten to investigate what a typical PG can afford. Furthermore, in a move that will undoubtedly be a bitter blow to current Clayponds residents, proceeds from its sale will be used to subsidise accommodation in Griffon Studios to the tune of £25 per week. What is the point in building new accommodation that is so expensive it has to be subsidised from the proceeds of selling existing housing that has great feedback from residents?

The second development to cause me to doubt Imperial’s commitment to PGs is the recent news that college catering is planning to convert the Holland Club, the staff and PG bar in the basement of the Sherfield building, into yet another catering outlet. The response has been overwhelmingly in support of the Holland Club. At the time of writing, the Save the Holland Club Facebook page has nearly 800 fans and there are 57 comments on a college announcements blog post – all against the plans.

Jane Neary, head of Commercial Services, told Felix that catering was unable to meet demand last year. How can Neary explain that I can go into any catering outlet at 1pm and find cabinets unfilled? I worked as a bookseller for six years and when the shops didn’t meet customer demand, we didn’t build a new shop, we restocked the shelves or changed the products. Perhaps catering should try this approach before trying to assimilate a well-loved and excellent place to drink into another soulless, drab Taste Imperial clone?

I can understand that Neary wants to provide facilities for taught PGs, but destroying the best place on campus for PGs to relax with colleagues and friends (and blag free beer off their supervisors) is not the way to go about it. At best, catering’s plans are misguided; at worst (and more cynically) it is an attempt to increase the size of their food and drink monopoly and make even more money.

There is a common thread running through both of these issues: Imperial needs to become more aware of the financial realities of postgraduate life and needs to listen more carefully to the needs of students and, in the case of the Holland Club, staff. It is unacceptable that the Union was not consulted about Clayponds and that the bar manager, Kevin Young, and the Holland Club committee were not consulted about catering’s plans from the very beginning. Postgraduates are responsible for the bulk of the world class research that makes Imperial the great institution it is. I urge the college management to not let them down.

Comments (11 comments)

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Another PG

Friday January 27 2012 10:29

Excellent piece that captures most PGs sentiments accurately.

The problem is it is 100% certain that:

1. Clayponds will shut.
2. The Holland Bar will shut (the decision was from higher places that Jane Neary - for once she isn't fully to blame).
3. College are going to provide halls of residence in Elephant and Castle in the very near future... I'm sure students really want that...

Thomas Phillips (Author)

Friday January 27 2012 11:10

Unfortunately, due to a bug in the Felix web site, this article is wrongly attributed to the medic Tom Phillips, rather than me Tom W Phillips in Physics. Matt, Editor, is trying to fix it.

ME

Friday January 27 2012 11:35

Your article forgets to mention the new PG development at Imperial West...

Angry geek

Friday January 27 2012 13:40

I think we should have a demonstration outside the rector's office! we could complain about the Holland Club, Clayponds and the rector's high salary!

Kadhim Shubber

Saturday January 28 2012 10:01

Fantastic piece

Matthew Allinson

Saturday January 28 2012 10:12

Oh brilliant work ME, not leaving a real name and making an unsubstantiated and vague comment. Cheers.

Imperial West is at the design stage, and Tom's argument in this article is still valid. College need to avoid blowing another mid-bending wodge of money on a project that will leave the PG community feeling cold.

Manuel

Saturday January 28 2012 12:00

A very good overview of the situation and what many PGs feel at the moment.

Marcus A Shepheard

Friday February 10 2012 18:14

"The Rector responded to criticism from Clayponds subwarden Craig Court by saying that a focus group found students wanted to be within 30 minutes of South Kensington. Who doesn’t?"

Postgrads at Hammersmith, Charing Cross, St. Mary's, Silwood even? You write a good article, but don't forget the several thousand of us who are not based in South Ken.

Thomas Phillips (Author)

Saturday February 11 2012 15:27

@Marcus A Shepheard: I'm not forgetting about those students who don't work at the SK campus - I was simply replying to the Rector's comment about SK. Criticise the Rector instead!

Thomas Phillips (Author)

Saturday February 11 2012 15:29

@ME: What's your point? I bet Imperial West will be just as expensive as Griffon and Southside.

Marcus A Shepheard

Wednesday February 15 2012 19:53

@Thomas Phillips: We're just bitter because we never get invited to focus groups :p

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