The Old and New in Cambridge UK - The New

avatar

The city of Cambridge in England has a long history, and evidence of settlement can be found to date back to as far as the Bronze Age in 3300 - 1200 BC. The modern day Cambridge started to grow in importance around the medieval times in the late 9th century when the Vikings arrived. To date, many of historical old buildings can still be found in the city. Today I want to show you some of the newer buildings in the town, plus a few that I found rather amusing.


OTHER BUILDINGS

The Old Schools University Office

I forgot to include this building in the previous post, but it's so grand that I felt it should have its place in this series of posts about Cambridge. Just look at underneath the archway, the decor is just gorgeous. Although Cambridge University operates on a collegiate system, there is still a main University administrative office. In fact this is probably the only building that the public can access, just pretend you want to ask them something about the University!!! You might not get far into the building, but perhaps the reception will suffice? 😊
By Cambridge standards, this building in itself isn't that special. What I want to show everyone, is how different departments are randomly thrown together in the same building. It happens a lot in Cambridge. Here is the Lab of Physical Chemistry, and Department of History and Philosophy of Science. Randomness at its best.
I never did science at school, and never imagined there would be a Department of Parasitology. Not sure if I could handle the parasites, yuck!! But hey, someone's got to do it. This building reminded me that I still haven't watched the Oscar winning movie Parasite yet.
This is the Department of Earth Sciences, I loved how they kept the statues safe with a face mask. Who said studying is boring?

THE NEW BUILDINGS

Cambridge isn't all old and stuffy, it's evolved and expanded over the years and has some interesting architects as well.


Cambridge's law school is ranked the third best in the world, behind Harvard and Oxford (ouch!). Out of the newer buildings, The David Williams Building, Faculty of Law is my favourite.

Have you ever heard of the story about a group of blind people touching different parts of an elephant and trying to describe what an elephant looks like? Some say it's like a big wall (body), some say it's like curtains (ears), some say is like a tree trunk (legs), some say its like a sharp sword (tusk), and some say it's like a piece of string (tail).

This is how I felt about this building. It has so many different facets, everywhere I looked, gave me a different impression. I couldn't tell you what shape it was, kind of like shapeless but with a form. Weird, but I liked it. And the best thing about it, was the modern design encasing one of the oldest professions in the world.


Built in the late sixties, the Seeley Historical Library is part of the Faculty of History at Cambridge. It's a grade 2 listed building now, but sadly my photo doesn't do the building justice.
One of the greatest thing about Cambridge University is the research it does, and much of the output is displayed in museums which are free of charge for entry!! The Museum of Zoology is one of them. Can you see the skeleton inside?
And finally I want to take you to one of the newer and more modern colleges at Cambridge - Churchill College. Churchill College was established in 1960 and is named after Britain's great statesman Winston Churchill. He only visited here once, in 1958 when the college was being built, and planted two trees here.

The college is located slightly outside of the city center, and has the largest campus of all the colleges. The vibe here is very different from the other traditional older colleges. It didn't have the grandeur nor history. And in its place was a sense of modernism, such as the zen feel accommodation block.

One of its most famous landmark at the college is the 4.3 meter tall bronze sculpture by the British artist Dame Barbara Hepworth called Four Square (Walk Through). Only four of these sculptures were cast in 1966 and one of them is located here at Churchill. It forms the backdrop for many graduating photos. It's actually really amazing to see such a valuable piece of artwork out in the open, where the public can freely access and walkabout. And when I say valuable, well I don't know how much it's really worth, but to give you an idea. Seven pieces of a smaller version measuring 61mm were created, and one of them sold for £488k in 2017!!!




You can checkout all my travel post on the Pinmapple here or click on Mr Pinmapple below



0
0
0.000
20 comments
avatar

Congratulations, your post has been added to Pinmapple! 🎉🥳🍍

Did you know you have your own profile map?
And every post has their own map too!

Want to have your post on the map too?

  • Go to Pinmapple
  • Click the get code button
  • Click on the map where your post should be (zoom in if needed)
  • Copy and paste the generated code in your post (Hive only)
  • Congrats, your post is now on the map!

0
0
0.000
avatar

Cool tour of the university! The campus is very unique with the buildings being so different. That's funny that they house different departments in the same building.

I agree about the parasite course. I couldn't handle that. The movie was really good though. I would recommend it 👍. I really like that director though.

0
0
0.000
avatar

I find these town Universities a lot more fun than campus universities as there's a lot of mish mash as they've expanded, and its interesting to see how they've managed the cohesiveness or not to make it one single university.

I really need to watch Parisite especially know you've added your 👍, been hearing really good things about it.

0
0
0.000
avatar

Loved the way you kept it so crisp yet informative and interesting for readers. Well done !!

0
0
0.000
avatar

Thanks for dropping by @travelingcocoon.

Your Everest camp trek looks very interesting, you should consider posting it directly from the haveyoubeenhere community https://peakd.com/c/hive-163772/created for the maximum support and exposure. We're the most active and popular travel community on Hive, so don't short change yourself!!!

0
0
0.000
avatar

Thanks for the suggestion, I really appreciate. Can I post the said post again tagging haveyoubeenhere community? I consider that might be duplicity on blockchain. Could u plz throw some light here

0
0
0.000
avatar

No!! Never re post content on Hive as that is considered spamming and milking the platform!!!

You can add the pinmapple code to your post before it's due for payout as it's nice to have all your travels on the Pinmapple map. Plus we at Pinmapple can't curate a post if it's not on the map, regardless of how good it is.

If you're curated by Pinmapple, in addition to support from Blocktrades and theycallmedan, you may also get support from OCD. So you could potentially get support from three of the largest account on Hive, if you post directly from the haveyoubeenhere community. You can check out the quality of posts we normally curate, and the support they get in return, to give you some idea on the level we're looking for.
https://peakd.com/hive-163772/@pinmapple/travel-digest-1267

My little tip, if I may, would be to lengthen your posts a little bit, that plus your content and travel experience will help to take it to the next level. Hope it helps. If you need any further information, do please let me know as we're here to support the travel community on Hive.

0
0
0.000
avatar

Trust me this is really helpful. Thank you for the insight and taking out time to convey. I have some more queries, plz help me out if there is anyway to connect with you. I am not so sure about connecting on Discord.

0
0
0.000
avatar

Do you use peakd.com? There's a chat function there? If not, I'm on Telegram.

0
0
0.000
avatar

Some of the buildings are quite modern. I actually have my Senior Cambridge and Higher School Certificate which was issued by the University of Cambridge.

0
0
0.000
avatar

Wow!! Did you study at high school in UK or was it some sort of distance learning programme?

0
0
0.000
avatar

Sarawak used to be a colony of Great Britain and so we inherited the British educational system. However, that was in the 1970s and now the British exam has been replaced by local exam now. I really treasured my certificates as these are issued by the University of Cambridge. I hope to be able to visit the University some day.

0
0
0.000
avatar

Ah yes, that makes sense, the good old colonial days - or not depending on who you talk to 🙃

0
0
0.000
avatar

Great post. The photo's are excellent! Like what you would expect to find in a brochure. The statue with the mask is classic! 🤣

0
0
0.000