Jump to content

Rusham Park

Coordinates: 51°24′58″N 0°32′42″W / 51.416°N 0.545°W / 51.416; -0.545
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Obina (talk | contribs) at 18:20, 26 June 2020 (→‎Procter & Gamble). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Rusham Park
North Entrance
LocationEgham, Surrey, England
Coordinates51°24′58″N 0°32′42″W / 51.416°N 0.545°W / 51.416; -0.545
OS grid referenceTQ 00564 70069
Builtc. 1900
Rusham Park is located in Surrey
Rusham Park
Location of Rusham Park in Surrey

Rusham Park is an industrial site in Egham, Surrey, England. It was formally owned by Shell, Richardson Vicks, and Procter & Gamble. It is now owned by Royal Holloway University.[1] It was named after Rusham Farm

The four acre site consists of ten buildings built and renovated at different times, giving it a collegiate look. It also contains gardens, green space and a multi-story carpark.

The University has considered its options and now wishes to proceed with an alternative-use redevelopment strategy for this major developed site in the Green Belt.[2] The intent is to seek outline planning permission to redevelop the Rusham Park site as a new Student Village after Procter & Gamble have vacated the site in 2021. Phase 1 will compensate for the loss of the 1,400 study bedrooms.

Shell

From 1956 through to about 1978, Shell Central Laboratories consolidated combustion research to Rusham Park. From 1960, this included a combustion laboratory, built by architects Walker Howard and Cranswick. [3]

Richardson Vicks International and Norwich Eaton

Richardson Vicks International moved into the site circa 1960.

Procter & Gamble

P&G acquired RVI in 1986. During the time P&G owned it, it was called Egham Technical Centre, Rusham Park Technical Centre, London Innovation Centre, and Greater London Innovation Centre. In July 2015, P&G sold 43 of its beauty brands to Coty in a £15 billion deal, and Coty became a major tenant of the site. P&G put the site up for sale, likely so they were not landlord to their competitor who took over many of the buildings.

A view of a P&G lab building.

Royal Holloway University

Royal Holloway acquired the site in July 2016, but leased it back to P&G and Coty.

References

  1. ^ Strudwick, Matt (18 July 2016). "Royal Holloway buys Procter & Gamble's Egham research centre". getsurrey. Retrieved 21 June 2020.
  2. ^ "Royal Holloway, University of London Rusham Park student village: overview" (PDF). royalholloway-estateplan.co.uk.
  3. ^ "Combustion Laboratory at Egham". THE ENGINEER: 658–659. October 1960. {{cite journal}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |1= (help)