‘We need action. We need jobs. We need answers’ — Welsh student nurses face unemployment after 2,300 hours of unpaid training

Student nurses in Wales are facing the prospect of qualifying with no job to go to — just days after a similar crisis emerged for newly trained paramedics — after a key NHS recruitment process was delayed for the second time due to a critical shortage of available posts.

ITV News Wales first reported that the Royal College of Nursing Wales was raising the alarm over the shortage of Band 5 posts for newly qualified nurses, warning that up to 50% of nursing graduates across Wales may have no job at the end of their studies. Now the human face of that crisis has emerged from Carmarthen, where the S23 Adult Nursing cohort — 23 students — have written an open letter describing their situation as one of “deep desperation and disappointment.”

The students say they received an email on 7 April — the day before their planned streamlining date — informing them that the process had been pushed back from 8 April to 11 May 2026 due to a significantly low number of available Band 5 roles compared to graduating students. Even with the delay, they were told the gap was not expected to fully resolve. It is the second time the process has been delayed for this cohort.

“We were told that training as nurses would guarantee us employment, allowing us all to embark on a meaningful career that means so much to us,” the students wrote. “How have we been able to train for jobs that don’t exist?”

NHS Wales logo on a nurses uniform
(Image: NHS Wales)

The Carmarthen cohort is part of a far wider picture, with the students estimating that around 400 nursing students across all pathways and universities in Wales are entering the process with little guarantee of employment.

The students describe the personal cost in stark terms. Over three years they have worked days, nights, weekends and holidays across NHS trusts in Wales, completing 2,300 hours of unpaid clinical placements — administering medication, performing CPR, dressing wounds, and supporting families through some of the most difficult moments of their lives. Their NHS bursary requires them to work within Wales for two years after qualifying.

“We have done all this, without salaries, driven by the belief in our NHS, our desire to serve our wider community, and our understanding that we, as nurses, are in high demand,” they wrote. “Now, as we are preparing to qualify, we have been informed that there may be no jobs available.”

One student, Trystan Thomas, spoke to ITV News about the impact on morale. “We were sold a dream about becoming nurses, about becoming healthcare professionals — and now we’ve been told ‘thanks for all your hard work, you may or may not get a job,’” he said. “I used to walk in and see smiles and we’d be happy about where we are. Now I see long faces, me included.”

A busy hospital ward (Image: HEIW)

Health Education and Improvement Wales (HEIW), which co-ordinates the national process of matching final-year nursing, midwifery and Operating Department Practitioner students to Band 5 roles across NHS Wales, confirmed the delay. “This decision has not been taken lightly,” a spokesperson said, adding that the extension was intended to allow health boards more time to review workforce positions and validate vacancies. HEIW acknowledged it could not guarantee the gap would fully resolve, and confirmed students would be released from the two-year Wales work obligation if posts could not be found.

Professor Sandy Harding, Associate Director of Nursing at RCN Wales, said the situation exposed serious failures in workforce planning. “Our NHS is under intense pressure, yet hundreds of newly qualified nurses may have no posts to enter. This is simply unacceptable,” she said. “These students stepped forward for Wales, trained through immense challenges, and now face uncertainty at the very moment the system needs them most.”

The crisis sits in uncomfortable contrast with the recent history of NHS nurse recruitment in the region. Swansea Bay University Health Board — which covers Morriston and Singleton hospitals — spent the last four years running a major international recruitment drive to fill the very Band 5 nursing vacancies that domestic graduates are now being told don’t exist. A recruitment trip to Kochi in India in 2023 attracted 107 nurses to Morriston Hospital, with the health board at that time employing approximately 32 international nurses every five weeks. In total, 456 overseas nurses were recruited over four years, with a 96% retention rate. Head of Nursing Education and Recruitment Lynne Jones said at the time: “Our sources of Band 5 nurses are our student nurses and the regular recruitment of overseas nurses.” The student nurses are now here — but it appears the posts are not.

The Welsh Government said it was working closely with health boards, HEIW and universities to address the situation. A Welsh Labour spokesperson said the number of nurses working in NHS Wales was now at record levels and that vacancy rates were falling — but acknowledged this improvement must translate into “clear and timely employment pathways for graduates.” The Welsh Conservatives called the situation “completely unacceptable” and pointed to the paramedic crisis as evidence of systemic workforce planning failure. The Welsh Liberal Democrats called it “an extraordinary and unforgivable failure.” Plaid Cymru said it highlighted Labour’s failure to invest in and plan for the NHS workforce. The Greens and Reform UK Wales also condemned the situation, with both noting the parallel with the paramedic recruitment collapse.

The nursing crisis follows Swansea Bay News’s revelation last week that nearly £10 million of public money had been spent training paramedics at Swansea University who were then told there were no NHS posts for them in Wales — with some advised to look as far away as Canada and Australia. Together, the two crises suggest a deepening pattern of NHS Wales workforce planning failures across multiple healthcare disciplines.

The Carmarthen students were clear about who they do and do not hold responsible. “We do not blame our university. They have been honest, transparent and supportive throughout our three years,” they wrote. Their three questions for those responsible were direct: why was there minimal transparency allowing them to seek roles elsewhere? Are they free to work outside Wales if posts are unavailable? And why is Wales continuing to accept increasing numbers of nursing students if this situation is likely to continue?

Related stories from Swansea Bay News

Nearly £10m of public money spent training paramedics who are now being told to look for work abroad
The crisis that broke just days before — newly qualified paramedics at Swansea University told there are no NHS jobs for them in Wales.

Welsh Government under pressure over paramedic recruitment shortfall
Last year’s warning that this pattern was emerging — when only 20 of 67 paramedic graduates were offered posts.

India recruitment trip attracts 100 nurses to Morriston Hospital
Swansea Bay ran a major international recruitment drive to fill the Band 5 vacancies that domestic graduates are now being told don’t exist.

Health board says Swansea Bay is the place to stay for overseas nurses
The 456 overseas nurses recruited over four years — and the 96% retention rate that made the health board an NHS Wales exemplar.

#Carmarthen #featured #HealthEducationAndImprovementWales #HEIW #nurseRecruitment #nurses #nursing #nursingJobs #studentNursing #UniversityOfWalesTrinitySaintDavid #UWTSD

Former rugby international and movie actor to tackle iconic city building

Sililo Martens, a Tongan international who once graced the turf for both Swansea RFC and Bridgend RFC, is the man behind a proposal to breathe new life into the historic former Swansea Technical College in Mount Pleasant.

The Grade II listed building, a striking example of Tudor Gothic architecture that has watched over the city for more than a century, could be transformed into 18 one and two-bedroom apartments if the plans are given the green light.

Martens, who also had a role in the Clint Eastwood-directed movie Invictus and the Welsh soap opera Pobl y Cwm, has submitted an application for listed building consent to Swansea Council.

Documents lodged with the council reveal a vision to sympathetically restore the building, which has lain empty since the University of Wales Trinity Saint David (UWTSD) consolidated its city centre campuses.

The plans detail a meticulous refurbishment, including the installation of vintage lighting and Victorian-style coving, skirting boards, and doors to honour the building’s heritage.

A design and access statement submitted on behalf of Martens states: “The conversion will bring the property into beneficial use and utilise a high quality pallet of materials in its conversion.”

The statement also notes that the principle of converting the empty building into flats was deemed acceptable by planning officers during pre-application discussions.

The imposing red-brick structure, which first opened its doors in 1897, holds a special place in the hearts of many Swansea residents who studied there over the decades.

It stands adjacent to the former Swansea Grammar School for Boys, which was heavily damaged during the Second World War’s three-night blitz on the city.

A heritage impact assessment describes the technical college as “amongst the finest structures in Swansea”, praising how its design “cleverly responds to the topography on which it is built”.

The assessment adds: “The remaining historic fabric is still robust and despite substantial interior alterations of the late 20th Century, sufficient historic fabric remains to demonstrate the craftsmanship and exquisite detailing that contributed to this building.”

One of the most intriguing aspects of the proposed conversion is the plan to carefully dismantle a lecture theatre on the third floor, with its timber seats and panelling being repurposed and reused within the new apartments.

The proposal includes no new parking spaces, citing the site’s “excellent public transport” links and proximity to the city’s High Street railway station. Secure cycle storage will be provided in the basement.

Martens is no stranger to the Swansea business scene. In 2018, he opened ‘The Bookshop’, a popular bar and coffee shop in a former bookshop in the city’s trendy Uplands area.

This latest venture marks a significant step into property development for the former scrum-half, who also played for the Scarlets and Sale Sharks during a distinguished rugby career.

Swansea Council planners will now assess the listed building consent application before making a decision.

#apartments #Grade2Listed #GradeIIListed #MountPleasant #planningApplication #propertyDevelopment #Rugby #Swansea #SwanseaTechnicalCollege #UniversityOfWalesTrinitySaintDavid #UWTSD

Carmarthen’s old Debenhams reborn as ‘Atriwm’ — but opening pushed back to 2027

The former Debenhams store in St Catherine’s Walk is being transformed into a huge multi‑service hub called Atriwm (pronounced Ah‑tree‑oom), bringing everything from NHS clinics to a 24‑hour gym under one roof. But the project, already hit by delays and extra costs, won’t open until early 2027 after more problems were uncovered in the building’s façade.

The centrepiece scheme — heavily funded by both the UK and Welsh Governments — is one of Carmarthenshire’s biggest regeneration projects in years. But it comes just days after Swansea Bay News revealed the council needed an extra £2m to fix unexpected structural issues in the old department store.

What will actually be inside Atriwm?

Step inside the revamped building and it becomes clear the council is trying to create something far bigger than a simple replacement for Debenhams. Actif will run its first ever 24‑hour gym on the site, complete with high‑spec spin studios, activity rooms and a full TAG Active arena aimed at families and fitness fans. There’ll be indoor adventure golf, a children’s play centre and even electric go‑karting, turning part of the old department store into a leisure complex in its own right.

Alongside that sits the more practical side of the project. The council’s Customer Service Hwb will move in, offering face‑to‑face help with everything from council tax to housing queries, while a new visitor information outlet will support tourism across the town and wider county.

Hywel Dda University Health Board will take over a large section of the building, bringing together services that are currently scattered across Carmarthen. Community and children’s nursing teams, therapies for young people, dental care, sexual health, podiatry, mental health support and phlebotomy will all operate from the new centre. The Health Board’s People Development team will also be based there, using the building as a modern training hub for staff.

The University of Wales Trinity Saint David will add another layer, running its sport and exercise therapy clinics from Atriwm. Students on the bilingual BSc Sport and Exercise Therapy course will treat clients under supervision, with the gym and health services just metres away — a setup the university says will give students real‑world experience while offering the public easier access to treatment.

The council says the idea is to put health, fitness, advice and leisure in one central, accessible location — and to breathe life back into a major retail unit that’s been empty since Debenhams collapsed.

Why ‘Atriwm’?

The name is a nod to Carmarthen’s Roman history — the Latin atrium meaning the central hall of a Roman home. It also happens to be the name of one of the chambers of the human heart, which the council says reflects the building’s health‑and‑wellbeing purpose.

And in a more modern twist, it’s also a reference to the huge glass frontage of the old Debenhams building.

The former Debenhams building in St Catherine’s Walk, Carmarthen, which is being transformed into a new health, leisure and education hub. (Image: Google Maps)

Delays, traffic disruption and more work needed

Atriwm was originally due to open in early 2026, but the date has now slipped to 2027 after contractors discovered the building’s façade needed major remedial work.

Bouygues UK will soon begin repairs, and a traffic management system will be in place on St Catherine’s Street until autumn 2026 — meaning drivers face months of disruption.

Local firms including FP Hurley, Shufflebottom and Becker Sliding Partitions are involved in the build, which the council says is supporting local supply chains.

Council: “Thank you for your patience”

Cllr Hazel Evans, Cabinet Member for Regeneration, Leisure, Culture and Tourism, said the name reflected Carmarthen’s heritage and the building’s new purpose.

She added:

“I would like to thank the local community and drivers for their patience… Further details on the progress of Atriwm will be updated throughout the year as we look forward to opening the facility in 2027.”

NHS and university say the centre will transform services

Hywel Dda University Health Board said the move would bring a wide range of services together “at the heart of the community”, while UWTSD said the centre would give students valuable hands‑on experience in a professional setting.

Related stories from Swansea Bay News

£146m Carmarthenshire capital plan includes market demolition, school upgrades and Debenhams delay
Major projects across the county — including the Atriwm redevelopment — face new timelines and costs.

Work starts to prepare former Debenhams for new tenants
Contractors begin the first phase of transforming the landmark store after years of vacancy.

Council announces three businesses to move into former city centre Debenhams
New tenants are confirmed as the council pushes ahead with its regeneration plans.

Council unveils family entertainment centre plans for former Debenhams
A major leisure development is proposed to breathe new life into the empty department store.

#Atriwm #Carmarthen #Debenhams #electricGoKarting #ExerciseTherapy #gym #Hwb #HywelDdaUniversityHealthBoard #IndoorAdventureGolf #Phlebotomy #StCatherineSWalk #UniversityOfWalesTrinitySaintDavid #visitorInformation

Health board and university renew partnership to boost health and skills in west Wales

The Memorandum of Understanding was signed on Friday 12 September at UWTSD’s Carmarthen campus. It builds on years of collaboration between the two organisations and sets out plans to continue joint work in research, innovation, business development and training for the health and care workforce.

Over recent years, the partnership has delivered a range of practical benefits. Health board staff have been able to take part in professional training programmes run by the university, including qualifications in people management and workplace practice. Teams from UWTSD’s Assistive Technologies Innovation Centre and Hywel Dda’s TriTech Institute have worked side‑by‑side on research projects, securing grant funding and developing new ideas for patient care. The two organisations have also launched a Therapy Assistant Practitioner Diploma, creating new career routes into therapy services and helping to fill skills gaps.

The next phase of the partnership will see the creation of a Centre for Social Innovation. This will bring together health board staff, university experts and local communities to find new ways of tackling social, environmental and economic challenges that affect people’s health. The aim is to test and develop practical solutions that support a “social model” of health and wellbeing — looking beyond hospitals and clinics to the wider factors that keep people healthy.

Hywel Dda Chief Executive Dr Phil Kloer said the renewed agreement was “an opportunity to reflect on the good work already undertaken and look forward to what we will achieve over the next five years and beyond.”

UWTSD Vice‑Chancellor Professor Elwen Evans KC said: “By joining forces and sharing our research capability and expertise we aim to deliver the innovation, skills and training needed by practitioners across the region, which will ultimately improve outcomes for people and communities in west Wales.”

Both organisations say the agreement will also help shape future training for health and care roles, ensuring students and staff have the skills they need for the jobs of today and tomorrow, and supporting the introduction of new technologies — including artificial intelligence — into health services.

#AssistiveTechnologiesInnovationCentre #ATiC #Carmarthen #CentreForSocialInnovation #HywelDdaNHS #MoU #TriTechInstitute #UniversityOfWalesTrinitySaintDavid #UWTSD

Student mural celebrates nature at abandoned farm-turned woodland

The new mural was created at Coed Cadw’s Brynau Farm site by Ellie Jones, a BA Illustration student at the University of Wales Trinity Saint David (UWTSD). Her winning design celebrates the rich stories, landscape and wildlife of Brynau Farm – from the springtime bluebells to the elusive resident barn owl.

Brynau, meaning ‘many hills’ in Welsh, is a 235-acre, long-forgotten landscape that has been restored into a sanctuary for nature. Barren fields have been transformed into vibrant young woodland, with restoration work carried out in the ancient wood, and abandoned agricultural buildings resurrected into a secure home for Brynau’s resident barn owl.

Brynau Farm landscape
(Image: Sophie Thomas)

The landscape is grazed by a small herd of ancient Welsh white cattle and boasts panoramic views across Bannau Brycheiniog and Swansea Bay.

The mural is the centrepiece of the ‘Spirit of Place’ work being undertaken at Brynau, and forms part of Coed Cadw’s wider vision to engage and inspire young people in the protection and restoration of nature.

The project began with a live brief issued to Swansea College of Art students, inviting them to creatively interpret the unique character and ecological promise of Brynau.

A panel made up of Coed Cadw staff, volunteers, youth forum members and external youth representatives selected Ellie’s design for its outstanding artistic quality and deep emotional connection to the natural world.

Ellie at work
(Image: UWTSD)

“My creative work is heavily inspired by nature, wellbeing and mindfulness,” student and artist, Ellie Jones explained. “I wanted to capture the calm, beauty and wildlife that thrive at Brynau Farm – from the bluebells to the resident barn owl. I hope this mural encourages people to pause, take a breath, and really appreciate the nature that surrounds them.”

“This project has been a shining example of how creativity and conservation can come together to inspire change,” said Sophie Thomas, Digital Communications Officer at Coed Cadw. “We’re incredibly proud to support young people like Ellie who bring their passion and vision into public spaces. The mural at Brynau is not only beautiful, it’s a visual reminder of our shared responsibility to protect and cherish the natural world.”

Ellie’s winning design celebrates the rich stories, landscape and wildlife of Brynau Farm
(Image: UWTSD)

Now complete, it is hoped that Ellie’s mural will act as a vibrant reminder of the importance of connecting young people with nature through creative expression.

It also marks another chapter in Coed Cadw’s long-term commitment to restoring and protecting nature in Neath; it recently secured an additional 140 hectares of land at Cefn Morfudd as part of an ambitious project to create and restore woodland and natural habitats across a 236-hectare landscape – one of the largest woodland restoration efforts in Wales.

Brynau lanscape

“It’s been a real privilege to partner with Coed Cadw,” added Iwan Vaughan, Lecturer in BA Illustration at Swansea College of Art. “Giving our students the opportunity to tackle a live brief has not only developed their creative practice, but also connected them with a vital environmental mission. It’s fantastic to see their work make a real difference.”

#Art #BrynauFarm #CoedCadw #mural #nature #SwanseaCollegeOfArt #Tonna #UniversityOfWalesTrinitySaintDavid #UWTSD #WoodlandTrust

Swansea women to share powerful stories of climate and migration

Led by Literature Across Frontiers (LAF), an initiative based at the University of Wales Trinity Saint David, the project is a collaboration with the Makassar Festival in Indonesia and sees the women link up with Indigenous women on the other side of the world.

Entitled ‘Voicing the Climate Emergency: Women’s Stories from Wales’, the project is funded through the British Council’s Connection Through Culture programme. It involves creative workshops where the women use poetry, storytelling and images to explore how climate change is affecting friends and family in their home countries – and how those stories connect with their current lives in Wales.

Speaking about how the project came about, Alexandra Büchler, Director of Literature Across Frontiers, said: “We were approached by the Makassar festival, who came up with an idea that aligned closely with work we’ve been doing – exploring artistic responses to climate change. Their focus was on Indigenous women, who in Indonesia are deeply affected by environmental destruction – particularly from logging – which often displaces them. Women, of course, are usually the ones working the land, providing for families and are also disproportionately affected by climate change.”

And while the women in Swansea and the women in Indonesia live very different lives, they share resilience and resourcefulness.

Alexandra said: “The women carry so much knowledge – not just about starting a new life in Wales, but about what they’ve left behind. Many of them left home because of conflict or instability. But for some, climate change has played a role too. This is a chance for them to tell that story and reflect on their experiences, drawing on memory, language, and imagination to reclaim their voices through art. The Indigenous women in Indonesia, on the other hand, will express their advocacy and resistance through collecting cultural knowledge related to practices of working the land, preparing food and healing.

“The partners talked about connecting the groups directly, but the language and logistical barriers are huge. Instead, the outcomes of the project will be presented on the festival stage, and this will bring the women together virtually and facilitate mutual learning.”

The project is being led in Swansea by Welsh poet and artist Rufus Mufasa and Jeni Williams, a retired creative writing lecturer at Swansea University, who also runs the Refugee and Asylum Seeker Women’s Support Group in the city.

Alexandra said: “There have been two in-person meetings so far, with more to come online. Jeni has brought together an incredible group of women – some with creative experience, others just beginning to explore their voices. I hope this project helps them feel more confident expressing themselves, whether in English or their native languages, and gives them a meaningful way to connect their past with their present, their home countries with their lives here in Wales.”

This project will cumulate when the women’s work is shared in Swansea on 27 May and then internationally at the Makassar International Writers Festival in Indonesia on 1 June. Their creative responses will be brought together in a short multimedia piece.

This is one of several projects in Wales supported by the British Council’s Connections Through Culture grants, which fosters artistic collaboration between the UK and selected countries in Asia and Europe.  Other projects include Cardiff Metropolitan University, who are exploring how digital technology can modernize handloom practices; an inter-generational collaboration between Welsh artists Jo Fong and George Orange and Indonesian artists, and Trac Cymru partnering with Matariki Cultural Foundation in New Zealand to explore narratives among Indigenous communities worldwide.

A new funding call for 2025 has just opened, offering grants of up to £10,000 to support international partnerships with 19 countries. The British Council Wales team will host an online information session on Wednesday, 14 May — an opportunity for Welsh-based creatives to learn more about the new funding call and connect directly with the British Council Wales Arts team.

Speaking about the Connections Through Culture grants, Elena Schmitz, Head of Arts, British Council Wales said: “This collaboration brings together powerful, personal stories using creativity to explore one of the most urgent global challenges of our time: climate change. What makes this project so special is that it centres the voices of women who are often underrepresented, offering them space to reflect, connect and be heard.

“We’re proud to support such initiatives through our Connections Through Culture programme, which fosters artistic partnerships between Wales and selected countries. For those inspired by this project, a new funding call for 2025 is now open and we encourage Welsh-based creatives to apply and continue building meaningful cultural connections.”

#BritishCouncil #culture #immigration #LiteratureAcrossFrontiers #poetry #Swansea #UniversityOfWalesTrinitySaintDavid #UWTSD #women

University connects its Swansea campuses with new ‘dark fibre’ network

The new data link is part of Swansea Bay City Deal’s Digital Infrastructure Programme who have worked with Virgin Media O2 Business to build a dark fibre network loop across the University of Wales Trinity Saint David’s sites in Swansea.

Dark fibre network offers practically limitless capacity and speeds, with the innovative loop configuration ensuring a continuous data flow between educational sites.

The university says this will benefit research, teaching, and collaboration across the academic landscape. The network, which is only accessible to linked sites, will also provide secure, high-speed, and scalable connectivity, improving the efficiency of internal systems, whilst providing increased capacity to increase to suit the demands of the sector. 

The network will immediately increase bandwidth to 40Gbps, with the potential for 100Gbps between campuses in the future. This means all Swansea campuses are now connected at exceptionally high speeds that are usually only available at a single campus location, with future proofing for even higher speeds.

The university says this will enable high-flex teaching, ultra-high-quality video streaming, and immersive learning environments, while also supporting future research, as well as smart campus solutions to enhance efficiency and sustainability.

James Cale at the University of Wales Trinity Saint David said: “This is an exciting phase where we will now start to tangibly see the benefits of a dark fibre network across campuses.  The ability to fully exploit technology within a class or research environment offers both academics and students a far wider range of opportunities, whist making our sites more data secure, something that is widely needed to future proof further education in this region.” 

Cllr. Rob Stewart, Leader of Swansea Council and Chair of the Swansea Bay City Deal Joint Committee said: “This is a fantastic milestone in the region’s plan to adopt emerging technology into our public sector services. Creating more robust ways of collaborating, data sharing and ways of researching is a fundamental aspect of how we build best practices across our education and healthcare sites, that will only open up more innovation opportunities in the future.”

On completion, the dedicated dark fibre network will connect 36 public sector sites throughout Swansea and Neath Port Talbot, including local authorities, healthcare and education partners.

#darkFibre #SA1 #Swansea #UniversityOfWalesTrinitySaintDavid #UWTSD #VirginMediaO2

Swansea Bay City Deal News - Swansea Bay News

Swansea Bay News

University’s ‘Innovation Matrix’ building gets official opening at Swansea’s SA1 Waterfront

The University say the building has been designed to drive digital innovation, entrepreneurship, and industry collaboration.

The new space is situated alongside the University’s existing IQ and Y Fforwm buildings. UWTSD say it has already attracted nine businesses to its high-quality working spaces, creating a dynamic cluster with the added benefit of direct access to its expertise and research. 

The official opening of UWTSD’s Innovation Matrix at Swansea’s SA1 Waterfront
(Image: UWTSD)

Funded through a strategic partnership between UWTSD and the Swansea Bay City Deal, the University say the Innovation Matrix offers a unique opportunity for established businesses and start-ups to accelerate new product development, access specialist technical support, hire graduate talent and create knowledge exchange partnerships with the University. 

The building was developed by Kier Construction, which secured £6 million worth of contracts for Wales-based businesses during the construction process.

The launch event was attended by representatives of the Welsh and UK governments, civic leaders, and industry partners.

Dame Nia Griffith MP and other dignatories watch a demonstration at the official opening of UWTSD’s Innovation Matrix
(Image: UWTSD)

Dame Nia Griffith DBE MP, said: “It’s great that UK Government funding, through the Swansea Bay City Deal, has contributed to building this wonderful facility.  Our key mission, as set out in our Plan for Change, is economic growth.

“The Innovation Matrix will provide space for established businesses to grow and new businesses to start up, creating jobs in the high-tech industries of the future.”

Cabinet Secretary for Economy, Energy and Planning, Rebecca Evans, said: “We want Wales to be at the forefront of innovating new technologies that drive meaningful change in society and benefit people in their day-to-day lives. 

“This exciting development will nurture a first-class ecosystem for digital innovation and enterprise that can be a catalyst for economic growth and prosperity.

“It is a testament to the excellence partnership working can deliver for regional economies in Wales and is another step forward on our journey to a stronger, fairer, greener future.”

From left to right: Cllr Rob Stewart (Leader of City and County of Swansea), Emlyn Dole (Chair of University Council), Professor Elwen Evans KC (UWTSD Vice-Chancellor), Rebecca Evans MS (Cabinet Secretary for the Economy, Energy and Planning), Dame Nia Griffith DBE MP (Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Wales Office), Julie James MS, Dr Debra Williams (UWTSD Pro Vice-Chancellor, Business and Commercial Relations)
(Image: UWTSD)

Professor Elwen Evans, KC, Vice-Chancellor of UWTSD said: “The opening of this new building marks a significant step in digital innovation, providing a unique opportunity to collaborate, co-locate, and thrive in a high-quality space designed for partnership working. By bringing together industry and education, we are fostering an environment where cutting-edge ideas can develop, talent can flourish, and innovation can drive economic growth.”

Cllr Rob Stewart said: “Swansea has a proud history for innovation and entrepreneurship, but there has been a shortage in recent years of high-quality offices and shared workspace environments to meet the needs of businesspeople and aspiring entrepreneurs.

 “Supported by cutting-edge digital connectivity, the Innovation Matrix will complement several other projects in Swansea to help meet that need while also giving access to university expertise and research.

 “It will support existing businesses, give start-up businesses an opportunity to thrive and help create jobs for local people.

 “The Innovation Matrix will also combine with other developments like the 71/72 Kingsway office scheme to further reinforce Swansea’s reputation as a city of business and investment.”

(Lead image: UWTSD)

#Business #InnovationMatrix #research #SA1 #Swansea #Technology #UniversityOfWalesTrinitySaintDavid