A SCOTTISH university has drawn up controversial plans to relocate one of its campuses.

The University of the West of Scotland (UWS) is considering closing its Hamilton base and re-opening it on a motorway business park.

The move is one of three options being considered by UWS after some of the money it needed for a £53 million development on the current town centre site was put on hold by the Scottish Funding Council (SFC).

The other options include a smaller redevelopment on the current site or a new building on a technology park on the outskirts of Hamilton.

However, the most controversial move would be a relocation to the Maxim Park site next to the Eurocentral business park 12 miles east of Glasgow on the M8.

Monica Lennon, Labour councillor for Hamilton, said: "It is disappointing that the funding allocation appears to have been rejected, but to move to a completely different site on a motorway doesn't make sense.

"It is not a sensible place for a university to be located. The university has strong links with the Hamilton community built up over many years and that would all be lost by moving to a business park on the M8.

"What the community wants to see is a modern building on the current site which is easily accessible to students from across the region. It would be devastating for Hamilton to lose this facility."

However, David Fagan, North Lanarkshire Council's regeneration convener said he would be happy to see the university relocate to Maxim Park.

He said: "We were delighted to be approached by the university authorities. To have a university campus within North Lanarkshire would be a tremendous feather in our cap and acknowledge the huge investment and progress in education, employment and skills we have made in recent years."

A university spokesman said officials had requested funding for a new building in Hamilton because of the limitations of the current campus infrastructure.

He said: "The university was proposing to fund up to 50 per cent of the cost of this development and was seeking support from the SFC for match funding.

"Unfortunately, funding was not available at that time and, as a result, the university is reconsidering the range of alternate options that will deliver the exceptional learning environment to serve today's students and future generations in Lanarkshire and beyond.

"Options include development on the existing campus location as well as options to develop off-site. All options are being fully appraised and no decision has been taken, nor is there a preferred option."

The spokesman said a "wide ranging" consultation would take place and a detailed options appraisal would be presented to the university’s governing Court by the end of the year.

A spokeswoman for the SFC said the bid had not been rejected, but was on hold hold pending the Scottish Government's October spending review.