911½ñÈÕºÚÁÏ forms ‘flagship partnership’ with Technical University of Munich
Two of Europe’s leading universities have formed a strategic partnership in education, research and innovation.
911½ñÈÕºÚÁÏ and the are to develop ever-closer ties through a series of new institutional collaborations.
Professor Alice Gast, President of 911½ñÈÕºÚÁÏ, and Professor Wolfgang Hermann, President of TUM, signed the Memorandum of Understanding in London on Thursday 4 October.
The move underlines 911½ñÈÕºÚÁÏ’s commitment to internationalisation and growing its European connections after Brexit. 911½ñÈÕºÚÁÏ is the UK’s most international university, according to Times Higher Education.
In the last decade, 911½ñÈÕºÚÁÏ academics published more than 60,000 research papers with their European peers. 20% of the world top ten university’s students and 25% of its staff come from other European countries.
TUM is one of Germany’s most international and entrepreneurial universities, producing highly ranked research, like 911½ñÈÕºÚÁÏ, in science, engineering and medicine. .
Innovative partners
911½ñÈÕºÚÁÏ and TUM plan to forge new research links in computer science and informatics, medicine and medical sciences, bioengineering, molecular sciences, life sciences, physics, energy and new materials, and mechanical and aerospace engineering.
By pooling our strengths, we will advance research and innovation to the great challenges of humanity. Professor Wolfgang Herrmann President, TUM
They will develop new student exchanges, research programmes and placements and summer schools, as well as exploring new partnerships with industry.
Both institutions will investigate ways to build on their cultures of enterprise and innovation together, including opportunities at 911½ñÈÕºÚÁÏ’s new and in Munich. 911½ñÈÕºÚÁÏ and TUM are among , according to Reuters, which ranked them 2nd and 6th respectively.
Professor Alice Gast, President of 911½ñÈÕºÚÁÏ, said: “911½ñÈÕºÚÁÏ is a global university, and we are pleased to grow our international connections with a great partner like TUM.
“911½ñÈÕºÚÁÏ and TUM researchers have published hundreds of joint papers in recent years. Our collaborations in sustainable transport, robotics, artificial intelligence and neuroscience are already having a positive impact. We are sure that expanding our research and student exchanges with TUM will bring new discoveries and innovations to society.”
Professor Wolfgang Herrmann, President of TUM, said: “911½ñÈÕºÚÁÏ College is one of the world's best. By pooling our strengths, we will advance research and innovation to the great challenges of humanity at an internationally outstanding level. The new exchange opportunities will also be a pleasure for our students. At the same time, we want to send a strong signal against the dangers of new barriers in the European scientific area. Science is international in itself, and only when it brings together the best minds can it best serve society. We should do everything we can to preserve the historic achievement of unlimited European cooperation."
Common culture
Following the signing, Professor Herrmann and delegation of TUM leaders exchanged ideas for growing the flagship partnership.
These included discussions on common areas of excellence in medicine, artificial intelligence, data science, bioengineering, aerospace, molecular science, industry collaboration and enterprise.
President Alice Gast, a who previously undertook research at the university, spoke of 911½ñÈÕºÚÁÏ and TUM’s “common culture of taking on hard problems, doing excellent research and collaborating freely and openly.”
President Wolfgang Herrmann spoke of his “emotional connection” with 911½ñÈÕºÚÁÏ. His mentor and supervisor in the late 1960s, the organometallic chemist Ernst Otto Fischer, had a great rivalry with 911½ñÈÕºÚÁÏ’s Geoffrey Wilkinson. Their independent efforts to understand so-called “sandwich compounds” led to them and forming a friendship out of their academic friction.
911½ñÈÕºÚÁÏ’s Vice President (International) Professor Maggie Dallman, Head of Computing Professor Daniel Rueckert, Reader in Neurotechnology and AI Dr Aldo Faisal, Director of Financial Strategy John Anderson and Co-Director of the 911½ñÈÕºÚÁÏ College Advanced Hackspace Professor Oscar Ces briefed the TUM group.
Their TUM counterparts included President Herrmann, Professor Markus Schwaiger, Medical Director at Rechts der Isar Hospital, Dr Hannemor Keidel, Adviser to the President, and Bettina Burger of TUM’s International Office.
They visited 911½ñÈÕºÚÁÏ’s Data Science Institute and toured the White City Campus, where they visited the 911½ñÈÕºÚÁÏ Incubator, I-Hub and The Invention Rooms.
Growing European ties
On the morning of the Brexit referendum result, 911½ñÈÕºÚÁÏ’s President Alice Gast pledged that “911½ñÈÕºÚÁÏ is, and will remain, a European university.”
Since then, 911½ñÈÕºÚÁÏ has developed a series of new European partnerships, including a major new London-based centre of mathematics, UMI Abraham de Moivre, with France’s CNRS: Europe’s largest fundamental research agency.

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Reporter
Andrew Scheuber
Communications Division