University campus opens £2.5m games facilities

Josh Lovatt/BBC Chris Rawden is standing in front of a monitor which is displaying an animated computer-generated design. Rawden has short brown hair and is wearing black-framed glasses and a blue shirt.Josh Lovatt/BBC
Chris Rawden said the facilities would give students transferable skills

A university has officially opened its £2.5m games development facility.

Anglia Ruskin University (ARU), which offers courses including in computer game design and art and games development, opened the new classrooms at its Cambridge campus on Wednesday.

The new facility would allow it to double capacity and student enrolment in these subjects by the 2028 academic year, ARU said.

Chris Rawden, head of faculty operations for arts, humanities and social sciences, said: "So much of the skills they will learn here are applicable to TV, film and other parts of that creative industry sector."

Josh Lovatt/BBC A small classroom has rows of tables with desktop computers and game chairs. There are four computers on each row and there is a monitor on the wall on the right.Josh Lovatt/BBC
New classrooms and digital spaces were officially opened on Wednesday

ARU was awarded a government grant for the facilities.

The grant is from a bigger pot of cash that has been awarded to institutions nationwide, for projects offering a boost to local and regional economies.

Rawden said: "I think success looks like really vibrant courses full of students who are really achieving the best they can.

"We know there are challenges around skills shortages in this sector and the games industry."

He said the course would allow students to develop transferable skills.

Josh Lovatt/BBC Alfie Johnson is standing in a room where there are several computers. Johnson has shoulder-length brown hair and is wearing a yellow T-shirt and blue shirt.Josh Lovatt/BBC
Alfie Johnson said it would be "absolutely magical" to work in the sector

Alfie Johnson is a student at the university, moving to Cambridge from Norwich to join a course.

He said the facilities were "a lot better" than previously and said the changes would make it "a lot easier to communicate" with students on different courses.

"Hopefully, in the future my work will just bring joy and that is the main goal," Johnson said.

"It would be absolutely magical, as you spend so much time and money to create it and seeing it out in the world would be absolutely amazing."

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