Built in the 1970s and set in a stunning riverside location, this brutalist masterpiece is close to the city but offers a sprawling and versatile site packed with a variety of brutalist architecture and original features.
These features carry on throughout the interiors, which include a library, café, marble staircases, elaborate stonework and several meeting rooms with views over the exterior buildings. The stunning teak-clad dining hall, with its vast vaulted ceiling, could easily double for many governmental buildings.
The equally impressive wooden lecture hall is more modern in style and could double for most academic institutions. There are boiler rooms, an archive room, a professional kitchen and a college bar. Student rooms may also be available for filming during holiday periods.
Outside, the riverside location offers a punt harbour and a footbridge, giving a unique perspective on the buildings. The college has numerous formal gardens, as well as a wild meadow, a playground, sports pitches and tennis courts.
There are hardstanding car park areas for technical vehicles, a grassed field where crew parking may be permitted with matting, and an underground car park with interesting brutalist details. The college also features several early 20th century and late 20th century domestic properties, which may also be utilised for filming during holiday periods.