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![[Univeristy of East Anglia]](../images/g/gb-uea.gif) by Ivan Sache, 4 September 2004
 by Ivan Sache, 4 September 2004
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The 
homepage of the University of East Anglia (UEA), Norwich, says:
"UEA admitted its first 87 undergraduate students – in English Studies and 
Biological Sciences in 1963. People in Norwich had begun to talk about setting 
up a university in the city as long ago as last century, but it wasn’t until 
1960, as the post-war ‘bulge’ generation was bringing about an expansion in 
higher education, that the University of East Anglia finally got the go-ahead.
UEA’s academic thinking was distinctive from the word go. The choice of ‘Do 
Different’ as the University’s motto was a deliberate signal that it was going 
to look at new ways of providing university education. At the heart of UEA 
innovative thinking was the principle of interdisciplinarity – that is, where 
related subjects are studied in combination with each other – and that principle 
shaped the setting up of the Schools of Studies. UEA has continued to be 
academically innovative throughout its development: recently, for instance, we 
were one of the first universities in Britain to introduce a modular, semester 
system for degree courses, providing even more flexible ways for students to 
combine units of teaching towards a degree.
The city had donated what was the Earlham municipal golf course for the site of 
the campus, and traces of the fairways can still be seen around the grounds 
today. In 1962, Denys Lasdun (who designed the National Theatre) was appointed 
as UEA’s founding architect, and was asked to produce an integrated physical 
design which would reflect and complement the academic structure. It was Lasdun 
who designed the University’s core buildings including the monumental Teaching 
Wall, the raised walkways, the central Square and, most famously, the striking 
‘ziggurats’ of Norfolk and Suffolk Terrace. His plan was that no building on 
campus should be more than five minutes’ walk away from any other – an intention 
that has been honoured as far as possible despite the building expansion over 
the last 10 years. 
Lasdun’s legacy also includes the acronym ‘UEA’, now enshrined in the 
University’s logo, as that is how he designated it in his early plans and 
drawings. The University motto ‘Do Different’ comes from the old Norfolk saying, 
“people in Norfolk do things different”. The Coat of Arms records the 
University’s association with East Anglia, the City of Norwich and the first 
Chancellor, Lord Mackintosh.
The most striking, and perhaps best known, of all of Lasdun’s contributions to 
UEA was the pyramidal residential accommodation for students which he called 
‘Ziggurats’ (after a type of pyramidal temple tower built in ancient 
Mesopotamia). The Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts, designed by Sir Norman 
Foster, opened in 1978 following the gift of Sir Robert and Lisa Sainsbury’s 
magnificent art collection. The Crescent Wing was added in 1991. The Sainsbury 
Centre has won international acclaim for the breadth and quality of its 
exhibitions, as well as many architectural awards."
UEA has a coat of arms and a flag. The flag is hoisted over the big tower 
dominating the main building of the university. The description of the coat of 
arms is the following: "The University motto ‘Do Different’ comes from the old 
Norfolk saying, “people in Norfolk do things different”. The Coat of Arms 
records the University’s association with East Anglia, the City of Norwich and 
the first Chancellor, Lord Mackintosh." The flag is a banner of arms: it shows 
on a blue field a  white castle above three yellow crowns. The flag is very 
similar to the flag of Norwich, recalled by the Norman castle. The three crowns 
on blue are the traditional arms of East Anglia, which are identical to the 
lesser arms of Sweden, from where the East Anglian royal dynasty, the Wuffingas, 
were supposed to have originated. As for the municipal flag of Norwich, the 
design of the charges on the flag is simplified compared with the coat of arms.
Ivan Sache, 4 September 2004