
A new strategic partnership has been announced between Lenovo and the University of Southampton to deliver next-generation high-performance computing (HPC) capabilities that will power advanced research and innovation.
Under a four-year framework agreement, Lenovo will serve as the University's preferred supplier for HPC infrastructure, supporting its ambition to enhance research computing capabilities and re-establish its position within the global Top500 ranking of the world's most powerful supercomputers.
The partnership builds on a long-standing relationship between Lenovo and Southampton spanning more than a decade and marks a renewed collaboration following a competitive tender process.
As part of the agreement, Lenovo has secured an initial order valued at approximately £7 million, with delivery planned over summer 2026. The new HPC system will significantly expand the University's computational power, enabling researchers to accelerate discoveries across a wide range of disciplines.
"This partnership represents a major step forward in strengthening our research infrastructure," said Professor Mark Spearing , University of Southampton Vice-President (Research and Enterprise). "These new HPC capabilities will play a vital role in enabling cutting-edge research and innovation, helping to raise the global profile of Southampton's research community and compete at the highest international level."
"As research demands continue to grow in scale and complexity, access to powerful, scalable computing is critical," said Andy Rhodes, Managing Director, Lenovo UK & Ireland. "Lenovo's latest HPC solutions, including next-generation GPU-accelerated systems, will enable the University of Southampton to tackle data-intensive workloads and accelerate breakthrough research. We are proud to support their ambition to further elevate their global research standing."
The first phase of deployment will include Lenovo ThinkSystem SR675 V3 servers, equipped with NVIDIA H200 GPUs and NVLink technology, designed to support demanding AI and simulation workloads. A second phase is expected to introduce a next-generation cluster based on NVIDIA Grace Blackwell architecture with Lenovo ThinkSystem SC777 V4 Neptune Servers, further enhancing performance and scalability.
Together, these systems will provide the foundation for cutting-edge research, helping the University strengthen its global research profile and drive innovation across key scientific fields.
Beyond infrastructure, the partnership creates opportunities for deeper collaboration between Lenovo and the University of Southampton. This includes exploring initiatives to expand end-user computing capabilities, support researcher engagement, and promote adoption of new technologies across the academic community.