New designs for buildings in Oxford Science Park were revealed last month, drafted by Foster + Partners and funded by the Ellison Institute of Technology (EIT).
The designs are part of The Daubeny Project, which involves the construction of three new buildings with “enhanced lab infrastructure designed to support cutting-edge research”, including over 70% of space on each floor available for laboratories. EIT owns the buildings, with revisions to the initial three building designs lodged in February.
These designs reduce the number of parking spaces available to the buildings, outline plans for a Generative Biology Institute (GBI) and a Plant Biology Institute (PBI), and include atria to connect the structures of The Daubeny Project. The first of the three spaces of The Daubeny Project had a “topping out” in April of 2025, which is usually when the tallest part of the structure is added. The Project was scheduled for completion in 2026, although it is unclear how the revisions affect those plans.
Oxford Science Park, located southeast of Oxford in Littlemore, is primarily owned by Magdalen College. It is a growing research area for almost 100 firms interested in STEM. The Park employs over 3,000 people, with 250,000 square feet of building development underway.
Foster + Partners, the architectural firm involved in this project and in EIT’s campus, designs a wide range of buildings internationally, including office parks and airports.
A spokesperson for EIT told Cherwell: “Foster + Partners has been a trusted, long-term and integral partner in the design of EIT’s master plan vision of a campus built for impact. EIT sought [Foster + Partners’] engagement for GBI & PBI because EIT knew they could deliver a unique and thoughtful design. They’ve thoroughly engaged with GBI & PBI to understand their requirements, and EIT very much look forward to executing this vision.”
EIT also owns land on the western section of the park, which it has allotted to its own campus. It includes both new and pre-existing buildings, some of which are already under construction. It will include teaching, meeting, clinical, and laboratory spaces. Event spaces include “a 250-seat auditorium” at Littlemore House (one of the originally existing structures) and “a wooden geodesic dome, with rotating solar shading” in a new structure. The campus is also “targeting BREEAM Outstanding and WELL Platinum accreditation”.
A “topping out” ceremony for Littlemore House was celebrated earlier in February. EIT’s Senior Director of Real Estate Matt Abney stated: “From the very beginning, EIT’s Oxford campus has been far more than just creating a functional space. It is being built as the future home for exceptional minds across the science, technology, and engineering disciplines – and as a catalyst for meaningful innovation.”
The EIT press office told Cherwell that the EIT campus buildings are set to be in use in 2027.
While funding from the institute was restructured and reduced last fall, EIT’s construction projects appear to continue. EIT’s Global President is Santa Ono, now a senior research fellow at Worcester College.
Foster + Partners has been approached for comment.

