Newsletter

Fill in your details to receive our latest events!



Life in Birmingham Print E-mail

The Birmingham University Campus is near the center of the exciting and vibrant city of Birmingham, home to over 50,000 students.

Birmingham, Britain’s second city, is flourishing and is internationally recognized as a leader in leisure, entertainment, business, shopping, industry and sport. The city center is a fusion of attractive squares, modern shopping arcades, diverse pubs, clubs and restaurants and fine museums, theaters and art galleries – truly a World City.

 

BIRMINGHAM

  1. home to over 50,000 students – a fantastic student city
  2. the UK’s second largest and one of Europe’s liveliest and friendliest cities
  3. “Europe’s new Shopping Capital” with the new £500 million Bullring mall in the city centre, complete with the stunning Selfridges building
  4. massive choice of cultural, nightlife and sporting attractions – our students are never bored!
  5. 20 minutes bus from Birmingham University Campus.
  6. beautiful countryside only a short journey away and more parkland than any other UK city

“Nightlife in Birmingham is thriving, and the club scene is recognised as one of Britain’s best...”
The Rough Guide to Britain

 

Easily Accessible

Whether by road, rail or air, travelling to and from Birmingham is easy. The city is conveniently central to an extensive network of motorways and railways. Birmingham International Airport is ten minutes away whilst London is only a 90-minute journey on the train or around two hours’ drive. Getting around Birmingham once you’re here is straightforward, with cheap and efficient bus, train, tram and taxi services. Walking is just as easy, as the city centre is now almost totally pedestrianised and is a safe and welcoming place.

 

Eating Out

Student discounts are available in many pubs, cafés and restaurants throughout the city, so if you don’t want to cook there are plenty of cheap and tempting alternatives. All tastes are catered for, with thriving English, French, Cajun, Italian, Mexican, Spanish, Austrian, Greek, Indian, Chinese, Latin American, Thai and Japanese restaurants alongside the burger, pizza, vegetarian and gourmet restaurants that characterise any large European city.

Birmingham’s Chinatown boasts a wide range of restaurants and interesting specialist supermarkets, and for those who are fond of curries, Birmingham is the capital of the ‘Balti’ – inexpensive Kashmiri cuisine served in a wok-like metal dish.

 

Clubs, Pubs, Cafés, Live Music

There are so many places to go, and so much to do that you will always be spoilt for choice... Spend an evening in a canalside café, pub or restaurant, take a trip to the cinema, theatre or ballet or laugh the night away at the Glee and Jongleurs Comedy Clubs.

For the thirsty, there are numerous cafés, pubs and bars in and around the city centre. The Broad Street, Brindley Place/Mailbox area is popular with students and has lots of places to eat and drink beside the canals, for example Zinc Bar, Living Room, Bank, The Works, Flares, Hard Rock Café, Bar Epernay and Walkabout (amongst many others). Rumour has it that there are 100 pubs within a one-mile radius of the Aston University Campus. Numerous pre-club bars like Poppy Red, Ipanema, Hidden, and SoBar are also open late, as you would expect from a top-class entertainment city like Birmingham. The bars, cafés and clubs at The Arcadian Centre (near the Chinese Quarter) are also popular with students.

 Birmingham is bursting with clubs playing anything from dance, house, drum and bass and jungle, to hard rock, 70s, 80s, lounge, soul, jazz and garage. Clubs like Apt, The Medicine Bar, Air (home to GodsKitchen), The Works, Indi, Rococo Lounge and Gas Street play host to top DJs and attract clubbing aficionados from across the UK.

Most also offer a student night, where entrance prices and drinks start from as little as £1. Alternatively, the National Exhibition Centre (NEC) and the National Indoor Arena (NIA) frequently host some of the largest names in music, whilst the Birmingham Carling Academy (300 metres from campus) attracts ‘medium-sized’ indie, R&B and dance acts, as well as hosting student nights during the week.

For information on what’s going on in Birmingham and where are the best places to eat, drink or dance, pick up a copy of the City’s ‘What’s On’ magazine or ask our students on open days.

 

Classical and Jazz

If you prefer classical music or jazz, Birmingham is equally attractive. The Symphony Hall, one of the finest concert halls in the world, is home to the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra (CBSO) and offers cheap tickets for students (often just £5). The Hippodrome Theatre in the Chinese Quarter is a base for the Birmingham Royal Ballet and hosts many other touring musicals and events, while a number of pubs in the city centre host jazz and blues bands most nights of the week and the Jam House in the Jewellery Quarter is a famed jazz and live music venue.

 

Europe’s Shopping Capital – Birmingham City Centre

 Superb shopping facilities are as close as five minutes’ walk from the University campus. The new Birmingham Bullring shopping centre (Europe’s largest city centre shopping development) is an incredible place. It has the equivalent of over 26 football pitches worth of shops, boutiques and restaurants including the new Selfridges store, housed in one of the most striking and unique buildings anywhere in the world. The development has also proved popular with over 50 million visitors in its first year, creating a real buzz in the city centre.

All over the city centre the shopping choice is bewildering with high-fashion boutiques nestling alongside major ‘High Street’ names in a compact pedestrian centre with many undercover malls. New and exciting developments include the Birmingham Mailbox, a massive leisure and designer shopping emporium (including Armani, DKNY and Harvey Nichols stores) and home to the BBC Television Studios, right in the city centre.

 All over the city centre the shopping choice is bewildering with high-fashion boutiques nestling alongside major ‘High Street’ names in a compact pedestrian centre with many undercover malls. New and exciting developments include the Birmingham Mailbox, a massive leisure and designer shopping emporium (including Armani, DKNY and Harvey Nichols stores) and home to the BBC Television Studios, right in the city centre.

The historic Birmingham Jewellery Quarter (Europe’s largest), home to manufacturing jewellers, silver and goldsmiths since 1460, is an amazing place full of high quality bargains often direct from their skilled manufacturers. Located just north west of the city centre the Quarter has a signposted walking historic shopping trail.

Handy for students are the numerous markets (recently totally rebuilt), which offer over 1,000 stalls with an enormous variety of goods including fresh fish, meat, fruit and vegetables all at low prices. There is a splendid range of bookshops, including a palatial branch of Waterstones, which accommodates some four miles of bookshelves on four floors, including an academic section with links to the University, and a smaller Blackwells store on campus.

 

Festivals and Events

 The city hosts many festivals including an International Jazz Festival in the summer, a Film and Television Festival, Comedy Festival and ‘ArtsFest’ in the autumn. Broad Street is regularly used as a backdrop for street parades and other lively spectacles and throughout the year the Arcadian Centre in Chinatown is the setting for a variety of street entertainment and themed weekends.

The NEC and NIA host many of the country’s major events and exhibitions including The Motor Show, Clothes Show Live, Crufts and the BBC Good Food Show. Christmas is a magical time in Birmingham, when the city centre comes alive with lights and sounds, a Frankfurt German Christmas Market (Frankfurt is twinned with Birmingham), a 60m high Big Wheel and over 6 million shoppers and visitors.

“Birmingham city centre really is a great place, packed with shops, restaurants and bars. It is a great place to make new friends and spend some important years of your life. Living so close to Birmingham city centre is so convenient. You are only a 10-minute walk to excellent nightlife and shopping or just a short taxi ride. You can easily take a break from uni life without travelling expenses or long walks”
- Wai Khang, 2nd Year Civil Engineering -

 

Stage and Screen

Birmingham has one of the highest concentrations of live theatre outside the West End of London; the Alexandra, Birmingham Rep, Crescent, MAC, Hippodrome, Library and Old Rep Theatres stage both traditional and more innovative works. You can also choose from a wide range of cinemas, from the large multi-screen complexes to smaller cinemas (such as the newly refurbished and restored Electric Cinema, the oldest working cinema in the UK, dating from 1909) specialising in Arthouse, foreign language and avant-garde films. Again, student discounts are available for most performances.

The Star City complex, about 2 miles to the north of the city centre, boasts 30 screens and almost 6,000 seats (the UK’s largest cinema), and has restaurants, bars and shopping too. Star City is even large enough to have dedicated sets of screens for Asian (Bollywood etc.), Arthouse and classic films.

 

Museums and Art Galleries

Some of the finest art collections in the world are to be found in Birmingham. The City Museum and Art Gallery, the Gas Hall and the Barber Institute of Fine Arts provide spectacular settings for classical and modern works, while the IKON Gallery on Brindley Place hosts challenging exhibitions and serves great coffee.

Birmingham also has a wealth of museums. Cadbury World celebrates Birmingham’s chocolate industry whilst the Millennium Point and Thinktank (across the road from the campus) chronicles Birmingham’s industrial past and future and has lots of interesting buttons to press!

 

Sport and Leisure

Over the last four years or so, no other city in Europe has held more major sporting championships than Birmingham.

Currently, local football teams Aston Villa (Villa), West Bromwich Albion (The Baggies), Birmingham City (The Blues), Coventry City and ‘Wolves’ are competing in England’s top two Divisions (The Premiership and Championship) and all have their home grounds within easy reach. Warwickshire County Ground at Edgbaston (3 miles south of the city centre) provides Test and county cricket games and a number of local rugby teams compete in national divisions.

Major tennis tournaments are held at Edgbaston Priory and international golf tournaments at The Belfry, the National Golf Centre (including the Ryder Cup). The Alexander Stadium hosts international athletics, whilst the National Indoor Arena (NIA) is also the venue for over thirty indoor sports, including tennis’ Davis Cup and the 2003 World Indoor Athletics and World Badminton Championships. Leisure activities in and around Birmingham include go-karting, snowboarding and skiing (for example at Tamworth Snowdome), ice skating, tenpin bowling and paintball, whilst the city’s many parks and gardens offer space to relax in the open air. In fact, Birmingham has more square miles of open space than any other UK city, including Sutton Park, Europe’s largest urban nature reserve.

 

Business and Industry

Birmingham’s strong industrial links enable our students to benefit from Birmingham’s economic power throughout their studies. Being a major business, manufacturing and internationally important city our students gain additional valuable context and contacts during their time at Birmingham University, unlike other universities in smaller cities/towns or on campuses out of town.

Birmingham is a major UK and international center for business, commerce and industry. The city is home to numerous UK, merchant and overseas banks, over 500 law firms and is Europe’s second largest insurance market. The UK’s top accountancy and management consultancy firms have their largest offices outside London here. Birmingham has developed its reputation as ‘Europe’s Meeting Place’, attracting over 40% of the UK’s total conference trade, and over 25 million visitors a year. Birmingham is by far the UK’s largest manufacturing and engineering center, employing over 100,000 people and contributing billions to the national economy. Major manufacturing areas include electrical and mechanical engineering, telecommunications, motor vehicle manufacture and hi-tech research. In the public sector, Birmingham is home to three universities; major medical centers of excellence and employs thousands of people in national and local government.

 

Around Birmingham – beautiful open spaces close by

 Birmingham lies at the heart of England and is surrounded by a wealth of beautiful countryside. Historic towns and cities, picturesque villages, hills, valleys and rivers are all a short journey away. One of the most surprising features of Birmingham is that you can find real countryside within 10 miles of the city centre.

Directly to the north are the beautiful Derbyshire Dales, The Peak District National Park and the cathedral city of Lichfield. Thrill seekers need look no further than the Alton Towers theme park in Staffordshire, whilst for a relaxing day in the open air, Cannock Chase and  Sutton Park offer space to get away from the bustle of the city.

To the west you can visit Ironbridge – the cradle of the Industrial Revolution, surrounded by the rolling Shropshire countryside. Worcester, a historic city on the banks of the River Severn is famed for its porcelain, Elgar’s birthplace and the impressive Malvern Hills close by (less then one hour away from Birmingham). Further west, the mountains and lakes of Wales are only 90 minutes’ drive for world-class hiking, climbing and watersports, whilst only ten miles west of the city centre, the Clent Hills are perfect for a weekend stroll and a pub lunch.

 To the south lies Stratford-upon-Avon, Shakespeare’s home town (present day base of The Royal Shakespeare Company), and historic Warwick Castle. One step further are the Cotswold hills, renowned for their honey coloured stone villages and wooded valleys.

All worth a visit, these areas are located within easy and inexpensive reach of Birmingham by car, bus or train. Aston students appreciate the balance between vibrant city life and being able to get out into the country.

“I was astonished how beautiful Birmingham was. The buildings, the art, the use of water. It is an extraordinary jewel of a city...I was bowled over when I was there.”
Bill Clinton, US President 1992-2000 (The Times, 2/10/02)

 

A few essential Birmingham websites

sources from Aston University, Birmingham.

Last Updated on Monday, 29 June 2009 11:43
 
View archive


Information