“The two universities have signed an agreement as the first step toward bringing the institutions together from August 2027, subject to regulatory approvals. Under the proposal, Cranfield University would become part of King’s College London, combining Cranfield’s specialist postgraduate expertise in engineering, applied research and industry partnerships with King’s broader interdisciplinary scale and international reach. University leaders said the merger would strengthen UK capability across areas including aerospace, advanced manufacturing, AI and robotics, clean energy, environmental science, health and life sciences, and security and defence. The combined institution would also span campuses in London and the Oxford-Cambridge Growth Corridor, which the universities said would strengthen collaboration with industry, government and research partners. “The UK’s universities are among our greatest strategic assets; engines of innovation, educators of future talent, and central to how the country responds to the challenges ahead,” said Shitij Kapur, vice-chancellor and president of King’s College London. “This proposed merger will bring together the complementary strengths of two institutions – both founded with a particular emphasis on service to society.” Kapur said the merger would create “new educational possibilities for students” and “a clear focus on working in partnership with industry and government to support national resilience”. Karen Holford, chief executive and vice-chancellor at Cranfield University, described the merger as “an exciting proposition” for Cranfield. “It is an intentional step, which brings Cranfield University’s outstanding applied research, nationally important facilities, sovereign capability, and long-standing industry links to King’s,” she said. “Together we will create a global university that is not only committed to excellence, but delivers it with purpose, drive, and scale.” Together we will create a global university that is not only committed to excellence, but delivers it with purpose, drive, and scale Karen Holford, Cranfield University The universities said the merger would support ambitions to expand interdisciplinary research and strengthen teaching provision across engineering, technology, business and management education. The announcement marks the second significant university merger proposed in the UK sector in recent years, following the merger announced by the University of Kent and the University of Greenwich in 2025. UK science minister Patrick Vallance said the combination of King’s and Cranfield had “huge potential” for the Oxford-Cambridge Growth Corridor and wider UK research and training capacity. “It will create a driver of innovation and growth, capitalise on the complementary strengths and specialisms of both institutions and increase access, capacity and resilience across teaching and research,” he said. Vivienne Stern, chief executive of Universities UK, said the proposal reflected how institutions were adapting to changing national priorities. “What the country needs from our universities is changing, and our universities are changing with it,” she said. “This is a significant announcement and will create an extraordinary powerhouse of a university.” The post King’s College London and Cranfield announce proposed 2027 merger appeared first on The PIE News .
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