Undergraduate Degree Courses

Common Entry in Engineering (DC200)

Do you want to create, innovate and make a lasting impact on the world? Are you a critical thinker who’d love to be part of a team solving real-world problems? Choose engineering.

Maybe right now you’re just as interested in robotics as you are in renewable energy. That’s OK. It’s why we have a common entry programme for engineering. You’ll spend first year building a strong engineering foundation across maths, materials engineering and basic sciences, while also building skills like logical and critical thinking. 


Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering (DC195)

Want to build the robots of the future? If you’re fascinated by robotics and automation, this is the course to do. It’s all about how we build intelligent machines through the meeting of mechanical systems such as engines and machines with the electronics needed to control them.

Can you imagine designing and building a better electric vehicle, jet engine or wind turbine? Maybe you’ve figured out a way to improve inhalers or door handles. If you’re fascinated by how things work and are made, enjoy getting caught up in the details, and thrive as part of a team, choose Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering.


Biomedical Engineering (DC197)

From realistic and powerful prosthetics to individually engineered implants, biomedical engineers work to develop products at the cutting edge of what is possible to heal and help the human body.

When you study Biomedical Engineering, you not only learn how the body works and become injured, but you come to understand how medical devices are developed to treat injuries and disease, and how we can help the body heal itself. 


Mechatronic Engineering (DC193)

Want to build the robots of the future? If you’re fascinated by robotics and automation, this is the course to do. It’s all about how we build intelligent machines through the meeting of mechanical systems such as engines and machines with the electronics needed to control them. 

This course perfectly blends mechanical engineering and electronic engineering. It offers classes in 3D modelling and design, for example, as well as circuit design and programming. 


Mechanical and Sustainability Engineering (DC194)

Transitioning to zero carbon is one of the biggest challenges faced by humanity. Students who do this innovative programme will be ready to tackle the huge challenges thrown up by climate change, while also being mindful of the environmental impact of any engineering work they do.