and the Kenneth Kettle and Fred Wheeler Buildings are named after long-standing governors. Others are named after Anglo-Saxon saints: St Alphege, St Edburga, St Grimbald and St Swithun and St Elizabeth's. The Martial Rose Library is named after a former Principal. A subsidiary campus, home to the Winchester Business School and West Downs Centre, is located a short distance away at the West Downs site. A smaller third section of the university, known as the Medecroft Quarter, is located just off the King Alfred Campus and contains extra learning facilities.
=== Recent and future campus development ===
Major redevelopment has taken place in recent years to modernise the campus. In 2007, work finished on the University Centre on site of the former refectory, at a cost of £9 million. The building includes a new Student Union, a cafe and bar, and a nightclub as well as catering facilities, main reception, a bookshop, a mini-mart convenience store and a social learning space in the WiFi-equipped Learning Café. It was designed by architects Design Engine.
In 2010, a new several-storey student residence, Queens Road, was completed. In 2012, St. Alphege, a new teaching block which contains state-of-the-art teaching spaces, was opened. Work also finished on providing the university library with six new private study rooms for student use. In 2013, the Burma Road Student Village finished construction, providing the university with five blocks that make up a third student village, including a gym and an extra laundry room. In 2013, the Kenneth Kettle building was converted into a social learning space and cafe known as Cyber Italia.
The redevelopment of the university's sports grounds at Bar End in Winchester was completed in 2008 after Sport England formally pledged the funding required for the project's completion, in partnership with Winchester City Council. The facilities at Bar End include an Olympic-standard 400m eight-lane athletics track with supporting field events, an all-weather hockey and general sports pitch, …