University of Oxford

10/15/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 10/15/2025 02:37

Life and Mind building opens in Oxford

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Oxford University has opened a £200 million world-class teaching and research facilitywith the potential to tackle global challenges of life and mind.

The Life and Mind building, enabled by Legal & General (L&G), is one of the largest building projects in the University's historyand will be home tothe Departments of Biology and Experimental Psychology, as well as the IneosOxford Institute for antimicrobial research (IOI). Designed by internationally-renowned architecture practice NBBJ, itwill enable researchersto investigate the most fundamental questions of our age - from what it means to be human, to how we address the global challenges of climate change, biodiversity loss, mental healthand food security.

A state-of-the-art research lab (c) NBBJ/ Ty Cole

The Life and Mind building wasdeveloped andfunded by L&G and has beendelivered through the Oxford University Development (OUD) partnership - a £4 billion joint venture between Oxford University and Legal & General delivering academic and research facilities, alongside housing and associated infrastructure.

Opening to coincide with thenew academic year, the building offers over 269,000 sqftof transformative spaces for teaching, research, innovationand public engagement. It will provide a home for more than 1,400 scientists, academics, researchers, support staffand postgraduate students and become the main teaching location for around 1,000 undergraduate studentswith new lecture halls and teaching spaces.

One of the new lecture theatres (c) NBBJ/ Ty Coles

Researchers willstudy both 'life' - through the natural world - and 'mind' - by exploring the workings of the human brain and behaviour. Among the new research facilities are sleep labs, a virtual reality and motor lab, experimental classrooms, multisensory labs, rooftop glasshouses, licensed facilities for advanced plant science and controlled-environment laboratories, as well as a dedicated home for the University's botanical collections comprisingapproximately one million specimens.

The opening of this inspiring building is a proud moment in our partnership with Legal & General, and a wonderful milestone for Oxford. As we welcome a new academic year, I'm delighted to see its doors open to our students, researchers, and academics. The Life and Mind building isn't just a world-class facility - it's a place designed to bring people together.

By uniting biologists and experimental psychologists under one roof, it will spark fresh ideas, foster collaboration, and help us tackle some of the biggest challenges facing our world.


Professor Irene Tracey, CBE, FRS, FMedSci.,
Vice-Chancellor of Oxford University

Cutting-edge research
The new Life and Mind building will bring together biologists and psychologists to work on bold new interdisciplinary projects that explore areas such as the links between natural and artificial intelligence. By combining expertise in animal behaviour, ecology, and evolution with cutting-edge research in brain science, cognition, and AI, researchers will study how humans, animals, and even plants think, adapt, and interact. This collaboration will help us understand how natural intelligence works and how it can inspire better, more adaptable AI systems.

While AI is already powerful in specific tasks, living organisms remain far better at coping with the complexity of the real world. By examining how brains process complex information in natural settings, how individuals interact in groups, and modelling these processes with advanced technology, researchers hope to design AI that is more flexible, robust, and useful in everyday situations. These insights could transform areas such as healthcare, environmental conservation, robotics, and even new forms of biology-providing innovative solutions to global challenges.

The building will also be home to a pioneering research centre - the Oxford Centre for Emerging Minds Research - aimed at achieving better mental health outcomes for children, young people and families, thanks to a £27 million gift from The Paul Foundation.

Gareth Mee, Chief Investment Officer, Institutional Retirement, L&G, said, 'L&Gis committed to putting annuity-backed capital behind some of the UK's most ambitious and impactful projects. The Life and Mind Building isan exemplar - enabling world-class infrastructure that will attract and retaintop academic talentand supports the UK'sinnovation industries. This is capital with a purpose-drivingeconomic growth, creating jobsand improving local communities, while generating sustainable returns that meet our pension commitments.'

Anna Strongman, CEO of Oxford University Development, said, 'The Life and Mind Building is a fantastic achievement for all involved and will be a great addition to the university's teaching and research facilities as well as the wider Oxford ecosystem. The Life and Mind Building is one of the first projects to be completed as part of the OUD portfolio, demonstrating the power of our innovative partnership to support the future of the University and the City.'

">Video of Oxford's new Life and Mind Building
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