Search the LJMU website

Search results filters

  1. Myles Jensen

    Myles is an LJMU alumni of Liverpool Business School and a Black British Business Awards 2023 finalist. He’s the co-founder, director and consultant at a creative and strategic insight marketing consultancy that he runs with his twin brother Bradley. From not really seeing himself studying at a university, to using the varied skills learnt in his degree to his advantage, Myles embodies the courageous and inclusive values of LJMU in all aspects of his career.

  2. Rod Hill

    Read the full oration for Rod Hill on the Award of their Honorary Fellowship from Liverpool John Moores University.

  3. Facilities for Built Environment and Sustainable Technologies Research Institute students

    Find out about the range of first-rate facilities used by the staff and students of the Built Environment and Sustainable Technologies Research Institute (BEST) including labs for radio frequency and microwave sensors, highways research, industrial chemistry, soil mechanics, hydraulics, surveying, light structures and materials, structural testing, and concrete.

  4. Neena Gill CBE

    Read the full oration for Neena Gill CBE on the Award of their Honorary Fellowship from Liverpool John Moores University.

  5. Chemoinformatics

    We are an award-winning research group that provides informatics solutions for safer and cheaper new molecules by linking chemical structure and physico-chemical properties to biological activity and effects. Find out more about research, collaborations, REF highlights and people working within this group.

  6. Rachael Grace

    Rachael is the winner of the Rose Paterson Sportswoman Community Award 2023 for her dedication to the sport of netball in Liverpool. Not only is she an inspiring community sports coach she juggles teaching and being a mum alongside her own development, having most recently gained an MPhil with LJMU.

  7. LJMU Test Houses

    The LJMU exemplar houses are the first purpose built, multi-unit housing test facility in the North of the UK. The houses are designed based on standards from the 1920s, 1970s, and present-day and can be used to test emerging green technologies and building methods.