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Kent and Greenwich to join forces as new ‘super university’

South-east institutions to collaborate under multi-university group model – the first initiative of its kind in the UK sector

Published on
九月 10, 2025
Last updated
九月 10, 2025
University of Greenwich and Canary Wharf skyscrapers at background.
Source: iStock/Elena Zolotova

The universities of Greenwich and Kent have announced plans to form a multi university group in the first collaboration of its type since the start of the financial crisis in the UK sector.

Both universities will be brought under one structure, led by current Greenwich vice-chancellor Jane Harrington, but each institution will retain its own name and identity.

The newly formed entity is set to be called the London and South East University Group, subject to a consultation, and is being labelled a “super university”.?It hopes to start operating ready for the start of the 2026-27 academic year.

It will instantly become one of the largest institutions in the UK and the largest in south-east England. Kent has around 19,000 students across its campuses in Medway and Canterbury while Greenwich has just short of 30,000.

Harrington said: “Our vision is to deliver education without boundaries, from city to coast. Combining the strengths of two proud institutions gives us a greater foundation to transform lives and unlock opportunity across London and the south-east.”

Universities have been encouraged to consider new operating models amid a funding crunch caused by frozen tuition fees, declining international student enrolments and rising costs.

Kent has suffered financially in recent years, undergoing several rounds of redundancies and course closures. Earlier this year a voluntary redundancy scheme sought to save ?19.5 million and its last permanent vice-chancellor, Karen Cox, stepped down in May 2024. Earlier this year Greenwich said that it was facing “significant financial challenges”, announcing job cuts which the University and College Union said would cost more than 300 jobs, equivalent to a quarter of the academic workforce.

Under the new arrangement, students will continue to apply to, study at and graduate from their chosen university?but the group?will have one unified governing body, academic board and executive team.

“Students will remain at the heart of everything we do, as we continue to provide innovative teaching, personalised support and a culture that celebrates individuality,” Harrington added.?“As a civic university group, we will be a powerful force for our region – energising communities, upskilling local people and partnering with business to tackle the challenges of today and tomorrow.”

Georgina Randsley de Moura, Kent's acting vice-chancellor – who will step aside after the merger – said: “This exciting collaboration is about harnessing the combined power of two ambitious universities looking to the future, to ensure we are sustainable, impactful and can make a bigger difference to the communities we serve.

“Together, we can deliver world-class teaching, grow research that tackles real-world challenges, and create new opportunities for people and places across our wider region. From supporting health and wellbeing to driving innovation in food, sustainability and the creative industries, our work will have impact locally, nationally and globally. Importantly, we will foster a culture where staff and students thrive, collaborate and succeed together.”

But Jo Grady, general secretary of the University and College Union, said that staff and students would be “alarmed” by the announcement.

“It is clear this is the result of severe financial pressure – anyone attempting to say otherwise is deceiving the public – and urgent reassurance that jobs and student provision will be protected is now needed,” Grady said.

“This isn’t a merger; it is a takeover. Kent is an institution under severe financial stress and Greenwich is seizing control.

“If today’s announcement is indicative of how the government intends to deal with financial instability in the sector we should all be worried. It instead needs to present us with a clear and coherent strategy for how it will deal with the crisis in higher education.”

Vivienne Stern, the chief executive of Universities UK, welcomed news of the partnership.

“Right across the university system in the UK, leaders are thinking and working differently in response to sustained financial pressures. Income has been falling and costs going up. To adapt, we see university leaders thinking about how you can do things differently to be able to grow and thrive in the future. This is a perfect example of that creative thinking,” she said.

tom.williams@timeshighereducation.com

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Reader's comments (10)

First out of the trap in the Merger Stakes Handicap, Kent and Greenwich! Who will follow??
Many of the Welsh universities were forced to merge years ago. Newport and Glamorgan. Swansea Met/Lampeter/Trinity St.David's
Have you not heard of the nonun Asset Strippers?
I guess the adjective "Super" is here being used in the same way that Apple Stores deploy the adjective "Genius"
This is another example of back to the future - Manchester, Leeds and Liverpool all used to be one university, the Victoria University. I don't see any real problem in the idea as long as a range of courses are available locally.
Oh dear. Does Greenwich really know what they are taking on here, financially speaking at the very least? I hope they have applied proper due diligence, especially in relation to future legal costs. Such a merger, or “takeover” in this case according to many, may also make matters worse for both institutions. This is a monumental gamble for both sides, but not necessarily one with any positive outcomes, just varying degrees of damage. Let’s see. One thing is for sure though - severe turbulence is ahead, usually in the form of significant job cuts and workload increases etc, and all the nastiness that entails.
Call it KentGreen Uni or GreenKent Uni.......anyhow if it leads to a slashing of bureaucrats it will be a good thing....
I think they will call it The University of Greenwich
Not a merger of K & G nor a take-over of K by G given that the latter would involve G being lumbered under TUPE with the staff of the financially failing K. Is a (clever?) rebranding and creation of a new third-joint entity that might help with recruitment and especially if it captures all TE provision in the sub-region and also achieves some economy of scale in leadership/management overheads - and if in due course the Kent campus can be asset-stripped for housing development or whatever (are those 1960s buildings Listed?!)…
new
Going to see a lot more of this. Most Uk medium-sized cities have 1) an older university, and 2) a newer ex-poly one. (2) is frequently the larger one. (1) and (2) will soon merge in many cities.
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