Building

The history of Faculty of Spatial Sciences started in 1948, when Hendrik Jacob Keuning became the first professor in Economic and Human Geography. At this moment, a new Economic faculty is founded where Professor Keuning teaches the course Economic Geography to economics students.

In 1950, Human Geography became an independent study program at the University of Groningen. In the early 1960’s this turned into the sub-faculty of Human Geography, within the Faculty of Geography and Prehistory. This sub-faculty moves from an office building at the foot of the Martini Tower to an office villa on the Kraneweg in 1966. In 1969, together with the faculty of Economics and Business, the faculty to the WSN building at the new university campus in Paddepoel, currently known as the Zernike Campus.

Independence

With the division of the Faculty of Geography and Prehistory in 1987, the Faculty of Spatial Sciences became independent, just like in Utrecht and Amsterdam. At this moment the new Faculty includes much more than just Human Geography. At the end of the 1960’s Urban Planning was introduced, with a chair, its own study program, and an independent doctoral exam. In the 1970’s Demography got its own chair and study program. The number of students has grown rapidly in this time, to about 500. In the 1980s, different tracks were introduced for Economic and Regional (what later became Cultural) Geography, and in the 1990’s the first English Master Programme for Demography (Population Studies) started.

Education programmes

The Bachelor programs for Human Geography and Planning and Spatial Planning and Design started in 2002. Two years later new Masters programmes start, of which there are six in total today. One of these is the Master in Real Estate Studies, a new discipline for the Faculty since the first chair in real estate was assigned in 1995. For Research Master's and PhD students, the Graduate School of Spatial Sciences is founded.

The FSS today

After the introduction of the Bachelor/Master system, the total number of students of the Faculty grew to about 1100. Also, an increasing number of students come from abroad to study at the Faculty of Spatial Sciences. Since 2008 the Faculty has been located in its own building at the Zernike Campus. In the meantime, the Spatial Sciences departments in Utrecht and Amsterdam have gone up to bigger Faculties (Geosciences and Social Sciences), and also in Nijmegen (Management Sciences). This means that the Groningen Faculty is still the only independent Faculty of Spatial Sciences in the Netherlands.

Skyline Groningen