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Official opening of Clarice Pears building  Picture: Photo: Martin Shields
Official opening of Clarice Pears buildingPhoto: Martin Shields

Clarice Pears building opens on Byres Road

New home for University of Glasgow’s School of Health and Wellbeing

The Clarice Pears building has been officially opened on the University of Glasgow’s Gilemorehill Campus next to Byres Road.

The building is the new home for the university's School of Health and Wellbeing and brings together academics who previously worked across ten locations.

Housing experts working in public health, primary care, health economics, mental health, social sciences, clinical trials and health data science, the building creates a single centre for world-leading research, focussed on improving health and reducing health inequalities. 

It also facilitates collaboration between researchers, local and national public sector bodies, the NHS and the private sector.

Accessible

The ground floor of the building is publicly accessible, with spaces for holding community meetings, as well as public engagement and exhibition facilities.

Professor Jill Pell, Head of School of Health & Wellbeing, University of Glasgow; Mark Pears, Trustee, Pears Foundation; Professor Sir Anton Muscatelli, Principal and Vice-Chancellor, University of Glasgow. Photo: Martin Shields
Professor Jill Pell, Head of School of Health & Wellbeing, University of Glasgow; Mark Pears, Trustee, Pears Foundation; Professor Sir Anton Muscatelli, Principal and Vice-Chancellor, University of Glasgow. Photo: Martin Shields

The building is named after Clarice Pears, mother of the three founders and trustees of the Pears Foundation, which donated £5 million towards its construction. 

Professor Jill Pell, Head of the School of Health & Wellbeing at the University of Glasgow, said: “We are delighted to officially open the Clarice Pears building, the home of the University of Glasgow’s School of Health & Wellbeing. 

“The School of Health & Wellbeing at the University of Glasgow has always sought to address the greatest challenges facing society in the UK and around the world, and this building will help us tackle disease, improve health and wellbeing and reduce inequalities globally. 

 

We are delighted to officially open the Clarice Pears building, the home of the University of Glasgow’s School of Health & Wellbeing. 

Professor Jill Pell

 

“I’d like to sincerely thank our donors, especially the Pears Foundation and Medical Research Council, whose generous support has been invaluable in realising this world-leading new facility that will help change lives.”  

Mark Pears, Trustee of the Pears Foundation, said: “I am tremendously proud to officially open this new building, which bears the name of my mother, Clarice Pears.

“The mission of the University of Glasgow’s School of Health & Wellbeing closely mirrors that of the Pears Foundation, to tackle key issues relating to the wellbeing of people and communities around the world. On behalf of the Pears Foundation, I look forward to working closely together with the University of Glasgow to meet those challenges in coming years.”

Professor Sir Anton Muscatelli, Principal and Vice-Chancellor, University of Glasgow; Mark Pears, Trustee, Pears Foundation; Professor Jill Pell, Head of School of Health & Wellbeing, University of Glasgow. Photo: Martin Shields
Professor Sir Anton Muscatelli, Principal and Vice-Chancellor, University of Glasgow; Mark Pears, Trustee, Pears Foundation; Professor Jill Pell, Head of School of Health & Wellbeing, University of Glasgow. Photo: Martin Shields

The Medical Research Council’s Director of Capital and Estates, Susan Simon, said: “This building will be the home for different groups of researchers applying their skills and knowledge to tackle a common goal – the improvement of human health but addressed through different lenses than in our other Institutes and Units. It is designed to encourage interaction and collaboration between scientists, and its position adjacent to other important research facilities of the University of Glasgow is promising exciting new research. 

“The MRC is very proud to have been allowed to play a part in the making of this facility and I am certain that the MRC/CSO Social and Public Health Sciences Unit will thrive in this environment.”

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