'Adastral Park' is the name given to what was once the 'BT Research Laboratories' or 'BT Labs' based at
Martlesham Heath near
Ipswich in the
English county of
Suffolk.
In keeping with the stellar theme of the site name, buildings on site are named after stars or constellations (an example being the Main Laboratory Block now named the Orion building). The Orion building is easily recognisable from the nearby
A12 road with its 200ft. radio (now named Pegasus) tower dominating the skyline.
The site name change occurred in the late 1990s with the aim of turning the site into a high tech business park no longer exclusively for the use of BT. During this transformation, car parks were moved to the perimeter of the site with the centre being transformed into fountains and open areas to provide a 'park' feel to the complex. The site is expected to accommodate approximately 4000 employees.
Companies based at Adastral Park besides
BT include:
★
Alcatel
★ Azure
★
Cisco
★
Fujitsu
★
O2 plc
★ University College London (See
UCL Adastral site)
When the name change to 'Adastral Park' first came in, there was a little controversy. A BT contractor, Sir Richard Hayman made a grab for the ''adastralpark''
domain name, and tried to sell it to BT at an inflated price. BT refused to yield and dismissed Sir Richard Hayman. In return, Sir Richard Hayman set up a successful dating site using the domain. The situation remains to this day.
There is also one of BT's five satellite earth stations - chosen for the visibility of satellites on the eastern horizon.
The original Laboratories (when BT were part of the Post Office) were first opened by
Queen Elizabeth II in
1975. Previous to this the
Post Office Research Station was located at
Dollis Hill. Martlesham Heath was originally chosen as the location for a research facility because the surrounding countryside was relatively flat and therefore ideal for testing the radio-based communication systems in vogue at the time. See also
Martlesham Heath where further history of the site and surrounding area can be found.
See also
★
Post Office Research Station
References
★
Adastral Park home page
★
Connected Earth Museum on the origin of BT Laboratories, Martlesham
★
Adastral Park dating service (not BT)
★
Coverage from theregister.co.uk on domain grab
★
Further coverage on domain grab