Study with us
At the Department of the Natural and Built Environment, we aim to give you the knowledge and skills you need to develop your career – whether you're just starting out or want to progress from your current role.
Pratikshya Sharma
Lecturer
Useful websites
Here Sheffield Hallam University Sport Industry graduates can access the most useful websites for their discipline, craft or sector
Hertha Ayrton STEM Centre
The latest addition to Sheffield Hallam University is the stunning Hertha Ayrton STEM Centre. With its modern interior and light and airy atmosphere, this vibrant new space offers the perfect setting for a range of events.
Tegel: Speculations and Propositions
This book and DVD is the outcome of as an open-ended enquiry and, as such, embodies new perspectives on – and approaches to – urban renewal, regeneration, social organisation, mobility, and the legacy of modernist architecture.
Sarah Ward
Sarah is a Senior Administrator at CRESR and provides administrative support to the centre.
Julie Westerman
Julie Westerman works across sculpture, drawing, film, animation, and as a curator. Often involved in cross disciplinary research, this has led to collaborations in art science to produce Fly Birdie Fly for the Olympic year, and an IAS Fellowship, Durham University 2014 on the theme of Light, to develop research on Art/Science/Light. Curatorial projects investigated the rethinking of utopian modernist architecture in the contemporary urban cityscape providing artists the forum to imagine the both the utopian and dystopian futures of European Cities. Tegel: Flights of Fancy and Tegel Speculations and Propositions. Current research Urban Exploration, a series of cross-disciplinary walks around Lisbon.
GMPR 3D Scanning Technologies
The GMPR research group is focused on 3D image acquisition and understanding, whose research is spread in the areas of calibration, image registration, and image reconstruction.
Things Wellcome Collection London
Keith Wilson built an empty museum-scale display structure, filled by visitors bringing single objects to the exhibition