The building was constructed in 1968 and designed by local architect firm, Scherrer and Hicks. The tower had two contrasting façades in juxtaposition; the west-facing side had a concrete brutalist exterior while the east side was clad in windows, which jutted out at varied angles. Both façades represented the current architectural movements of the era; modernism with flush glass panes and brutalism, marked by the use of concrete.[3]
News of the planned demolition saddened some who hoped the tower would be renovated and maintained for the future. Urban Realm magazine spoke in praise of the Maths Tower and describing it as an architecturally bright building in a dreary campus: "what you will mainly see are university buildings totally lacking imagination and style. Of almost all the university buildings of the last forty years, only the Maths Tower has grace and scale. A pity then, that it is unfit for purpose".[5]
The School of Mathematics moved first into temporary buildings (named Lamb and Newmann) and retained use of the Maths and Social Sciences Building while they awaited a move into the Alan Turing Building on Upper Brook Street in 2007. The site of the former tower is now occupied by a £55 million rotunda building called University Place, which houses a number of lecture theatres. 17 New Wakefield Street, completed in 2012, shares some architectural features with the Maths Tower.[6]