Late 2001 - Mid 2002. Email - |
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13th April - Posted by Pete |
The regeneration of Birmingham looks set
to continue with this fantastic development of the city's eastside.
A number of towers are planned for later phases of development including
a mini cluster on Masshouse Circus of several buildings in
the region of 20 to 30 storeys. Also a residential garden tower of
25 storeys is mentioned on the developers website: www.east-side.co.uk
Bad news, the Lots Road Power station developmet of two residential towers of 39 and 25 storeys, designed by Terry Farrel and Partners, has been rejected by Kensington, and Chelsea and Hammersmith Councils. Their objections were on the grounds that the towers would, wait for it, 'be harmful to the skyline', 'effect conservation areas and open spaces' and would cause congestion through too many people gathering in one place'...how original. It's important to remember that English Heritage themselves support this particular project Croydon has recently unveiled a very
ambitious scheme to transform its centre with a massive redevelopment
of residential towers. If the project gets the go-ahead, Croydon could
see 3 massive new towers, one of 60 storeys at 800ft and two others
at 40 storeys. The development would bring a £500m of investment into
the town and transform its skyline. No designs have been finalised
yet, the town planners have simply zoned an area for maximum heights
and are now inviting archietects and property developers to submit
proposals for the scheme. Given the lack of romance that Croydon holds
in the business world it's unlikely that the tower will get built
at the maximum possible height. The £1.5bn Elephant and Castle development has been thrown into doubt after the major developmet partner, South Land Regeneration pulled out of the development yesterday. Without this commitment the project will have to be either indefinitely postponed or abandoned altogether. Hopefully another partner will be found to bail out the scheme? Minerva is also close to submitting its final application for its St. Bolthop House tower on the east of the City of London. The tower has been designed by Nicholas Grimshaw and Partners to be the City's largest office building at 36 storeys and 1m sq ft (110,000m2). This whopper will be a stunning 100m at it's widest point so despite it's relative lack of height compared to it's neighbours it will dominate the skyline. Designed to appear differently from each side it will include a futuristic open air restaurant on the roof. Given it's location approval looks more than likely but things are never quite so simple in the City of London. |
9th March - Posted by James. |
London Bridge Tower has been given full approval by
Southwark Council - this means that London will get Europe's first 1000
footer. The tower has been opposed by neighbouring authorities including
the City of London (who have their own skyscraper plans). English Heritage
have also complained about it being "only" a mile from the Tower of London
but the council choose to ignore those and following the advice of its own
planning officers. Supporters of the plans include the government body
C.A.B.E and the Mayor who is eager to see a landmark building in the
capital, not least to re-establish visual dominance over Frankfurt.
Proposed by Irvine Sellar Property Group and Railtrack as part of the rejuvenation of the area, the building is designed by world reknowned archietect Renzo Piano and when complete in 2007 will be the tallest cantilevered building in the world. PriceWaterhouseCoopers, the worlds largest financial services firm are to be the occupiers of most of the commercial space but the tower is also set to include a public viewing deck and restaurants as well as major improvements at street level and improved links to the nearest major transport hub, London Bridge station which is currently undergoing refurbishment. Demolition of the current site is expected to start and April and unless the Secretary of State Stephen Byers calls the project to a public enquiry construction will start as soon as possible. It seems unlikely this will happen as it would be the third in almost as many years (Heron and Swiss RE being ones before it). As well as that the House of Commons select committee have published a favourable report on highrise living and the project is in Southwark, far enough from St Pauls and the Tower of London to have little effect. Given the difficulties Swiss RE faced in building their headquarters it seems more than likely the six week period the Secretary of State has to call it in will come and go with no intervention. Lets keep our fingers crossed. |
8th February - Posted by James. |
31st of December - Posted by James. |
29th of November - Posted by James. |
20th of November - Posted by James. |
Well
we have the accurate heights for the Citigroup Headquarters in Canary
Wharf and I'm afraid all the more authoritive websites have the
incorrect height for this building. The actual height of the building is
210.3 meters allowing for internal glazing and machinery. Thanks to Mark,
for letting us know the correct height, the other sites were only 31ft
out.
The future of the Meridan Towers planned for the Greenwich Peninsula have been called doubt after the Lord of Westminster's company, Grosvener Properties has pulled out of the project. Unless the developers consortium can bring in someone else to replace the lost financing it seems the project will be cancelled. Vauxhall in London is the scene of secret plans by St. George to build a fifty storey tower. It appears that CABE have already given their approval to the scheme as has the London Mayor Ken Livingstone and the local council. The site is at the edge of St George's Wharf and it appears that the developers are determined to get the go-ahead making the tower as environmentally concious as possible. With the backing they have already it looks like it might actually be likely. Hounslow in London has seen a planning application being submitted for a 33floor circular tower topped by ariels reaching 120m with 300,000square feet of floor space. The tower is mooted as part of an 800,000ft commercial development and will be located next to British Standards House, an existing but ugly tall building. It's obvious from the planning application the new tower has been designed to complement its neighbour. Newcastle looks like it might soon be having its first new high-rise building in a longtime. Wimpey are planning a residential tower of thirty floors overlooking the Tyne which should make it well over 300ft. The tower is planned for the eastern end of Quayside and will hopefully be finished by 2003 if the developers get their way. |
17th of November - Posted by James. |
7th of November - Posted by James. |
It
looks like since Barclays have announced they are going to be occupying
BP1 in Canary Wharf the building is going to be redesigned, not
that the pictures released were the final design of course. The original
plan is for 13,000 sq ft per floor with a total office space of 400,000
but Barclays require 1million feet. Assuming the tower is increased to the
size of its Citibank and HSBC neighbours then it will work out at as much
as 40floors giving it roughly the same height. The redesign for BP1 will
not only include increased floorspace but also address safety concerns
caused by the attacks on 11th of September in the United States with
additional improvements of heat resistance and escape. This area of the
Wharf does not have the same height restrictions as areas south though so
a 700ft tower looks very possible.
Portsmouth retains its plans to be a highrise city. The millenium tower there has already started construction and the council now plan a £100million pound redevelopment on the waterfront topping out at 38 storeys. Port and immigration facilities will be at the base whilst the top will have a restaurant with stunning views. There's always a catch though, and due to the location of the site and poor transport arteries it seems the scheme is dependent on a £60million pound monorail/light railway being approved before it can start. Thanks to Alli for both these stories. English Heritage may not be reknowned for their love of tall buildings but they have just announced that British Telecom Tower has been listed as a protected building, as has Elmley Moor television transmitter. They may not be classically beautiful structures but they are certainly as much a part of the country's national heritage as anywhere else. |
5th of November - Posted by James. |
The
Heron Bishopsgate Tower public enquiry has started this week and is
expected to continue for the next month or so after its approval and
consequent controversy. If you're not up to date on what's happening the
building is opposed by English Heritage despite the fact that it blocks no
protected views of anything. If it gets approved then there will be a
whole slew of proposals for skyscrapers in the same area also
greenlighted. These include...
We won't hear about
whats happened with the enquiry until the end of November at the
earliest... I would expect 110 Bishopsgate to be approved because it
obscures nothing, and more importantly because the Swiss RE Tower
got approval a few years ago by exactly the same standards after being
called to an inquiry by the Secretary of State. Watch out Frankfurt, the
sky's the limit. (Thanks to Jonathan Smith for some of the
info). Ballymore have announced their proposals for a new mixed use quarter in Docklands just opposite Canary Wharf called New Providence. The residential area will have apartments reaching 18 storeys in height. We don't have the floor heights but I'd reckon this development to be approx 200ft tall. They also have proposals for an office building on the site of approximately 25 floors which should work out at about 300ft. You can read all about this development here. (thanks to Glyn for this link) The developers of Lots Road have released a picture of the site as it will look when it's completed and it's very impressive. The towers are long and slender, accentuating the height and making them look a lot taller than they really are. The scheme has been approved already and groundwork has started, surprisingly even English Heritage have backed this scheme. When finished they will be 426ft and 298ft tall which is very impressive for residential towers in West London... Remember the Grand Union Building development in London, well it hasn't been cancelled. The developers and Richard Rogers, the archietect went back to the drawing board and have designed a new scheme for the same area after objections from Westminster council. The new tower on the blueprints will be two thirds of the height of the original plans, and topping out at 30 floors which works out at about 400ft making it the largest development outside the City and Canary Wharf since the 70s. |
See the older news here.