UG to construct Feringa Building with Ballast Nedam
The architectural tendering procedure for the construction of the new Feringa Building of the University of Groningen is complete: contractor Ballast Nedam from Nieuwegein will construct the impressive building for technical science teaching and research at Zernike Campus. On 6 March 2019 this collaboration will be signed. The Feringa building will be the successor to the almost 50-year-old ‘Nijenborgh 4’, in which a part of the Faculty of Science and Engineering is located. Construction is expected to start in the summer of 2019.


Home to Nobel Prize winners
The building is named after Chemistry Professor Ben Feringa, who conducted his Nobel Prizewinning research (2016) in Nijenborgh 4. With the Feringa Building 'home to Nobel Prize winners', the UG pursues its ambitions to contribute to important international research areas, such as chemical engineering, (nano)technology, material research and astronomy.

Labs, clean rooms, classrooms and installations
This will be the Faculty of Science and Engineering’s third new building, after the Bernoulliborg and the Linnaeusborg. It will replace Nijenborgh 4. With around three kilometres of laboratory tables, the new building will accommodate an average of 1,400 students and 850 staff members. Alongside offices and lecture theatres, the building will also contain a wide range of special laboratories, such as physics, biochemical and anti-vibration labs. The building will comprise three connected V-shaped wings.
Besides the completion of the tender for the construction contractor, the tendering procedures for installations and specialized facilities such as labs and clean rooms are still ongoing.
Construction schedule
The construction of the new building of around 64,000 m2 GFA will proceed in phases. Over the past few months, the area at Zernike Campus has been made ready for development. The first phase of construction will start this summer. This is expected to be completed in mid-2021. When the first Faculty of Science and Engineering research groups have moved into the new Feringa Building after Phase 1, the sections 17 and 18 of Nijenborgh 4 will be demolished to make space for Phase 2. This will start at the beginning of 2022, to be completed in the summer of 2023.

Last modified: | 19 June 2025 12.52 p.m. |
More news
-
16 September 2025
The ocean absorbs carbon from the air, but what if the temperature increases?
‘Fortunately, seawater absorbs carbon dioxide (CO₂). If it didn’t, things would have been over and done with already,’ according to climate and ocean researchers Richard Bintanja and Rob Middag. But what actually happens to the ocean's carbon...
-
10 September 2025
Funding for Feringa and Minnaard from National Growth Fund project Big Chemistry
Two UG research projects have received funding from the National Growth Fund project Big Chemistry via NWO.
-
09 September 2025
The carbon cycle as Earth’s thermostat
Earth's natural carbon cycle becomes unbalanced if we, humans, continue to release extra carbon dioxide (CO2) into the atmosphere. In this overview article about the carbon cycle, you can find out how Earth generally keeps itself in balance and how...