8 Finsbury Circus City of London office building development, UK capital commercial property photos
8 Finsbury Circus London Building
New Building for Mitsubishi Estate London Limited and Stanhope design by WilkinsonEyre Architects, UK
22 Jun 2017
RIBA Awards Winner in 2017
RIBA Awards – 8 Finsbury Circus is one of winners announced for the London region.
25 Oct 2016
8 Finsbury Circus City of London
WilkinsonEyre completes 8 Finsbury Circus
Design: WilkinsonEyre, architects
Photos: Dirk Lindner
WilkinsonEyre has completed work on 8 Finsbury Circus, a £68 million commercial development in the City of London for Mitsubishi Estate London Limited and Stanhope.
WilkinsonEyre was appointed for the redevelopment of the former River Plate House, Finsbury Circus, following a design competition in 2011. Their scheme works to the client’s overall requirements for an ‘exemplary’ new office building in this historic City setting. The site, which is adjacent to the listed Britannic House by Edwin Lutyens, has access from both Finsbury Circus and South Place.
Full planning permission was granted in 2012 to replace the existing 1980s building with the new scheme, which provides more than 15,000m² of Grade A, flexible office space with ground floor retail.
The main challenge was convincing the City Planners to allow the demolition of the existing building. Further constraints required that the new building should retain a mansard, as other buildings in the Circus, and that the building should not be seen above the height of the existing mansard when viewed from the south side of the Circus. Careful modelling resulted in stepping back the upper levels to create generous terraces, allowing the net area on the site to increase by approximately 23%.
WilkinsonEyre’s interpretation of a traditional City building has resulted in deeply modelled Portland stone and bronze facades, detailed in a contemporary manner. A portion of the north façade, dating from the 1920s, has been retained with an existing colonnade opened up to form a new entrance. Juliet balconies and dormer windows within the mansard with their crisp, frameless glazing continue the theme of traditional elements given a modern twist. Castings from the building’s original railings have been retained and embodied into the walls of the entrance.
WilkinsonEyre’s proposals maximise the full development potential of the extremely constrained site, whilst respecting the surrounding listed buildings. Entrances on both the north and south provide access to a generous lobby that runs through the length of the ground floor anticipating the change in the movement of office workers to the building following the opening of new ticket halls at Liverpool Street and Moorgate for Crossrail in 2018, also designed by WilkinsonEyre.
The building is configured around a central core, providing large column free office space at all levels. A sculptural main circulation stair has been positioned with good visibility from the core to encourage use of the stair between floors.
Within the impressive reception a traditional palette of stone, bronze and walnut is imaginatively detailed to provide an uplifting environment for the occupiers. The lift shafts, in translucent glazing, provide both a source of light and movement, with the lift cars casting shadows as they rise and descend. WilkinsonEyre has designed two walnut veneered sculptures which act as focal points within the large space and provide a place to sit.
A walnut clad recess in the curved stone wall on the east side of the reception houses a sleek reception desk and provides views into the lower levels of the lightwell. The lightwell brings daylight down through the building and provides a visible connection between floors. An art installation by Carpenter Lowings, commissioned for the project, runs the full height of the lightwell. The dynamic piece, composed of folded stainless steel panels, was developed in response to a brief prepared by WilkinsonEyre that sought both a focal point and device to introduce reflected light into the depth of the building.
Oliver Tyler, Director at WilkinsonEyre said:
‘‘8 Finsbury Circus is a carefully crafted building on a constrained City site in a unique bit of historic townscape. Much of our challenge was convincing the planners that we could replace the existing building with another of better quality, whilst maintaining the architectural integrity of the Circus. The design is unashamedly contemporary, but uses a traditional palette of materials to assist the building’s integration with the surrounding buildings.’’
Yuichiro Shioda, Managing Director & CEO of Mitsubishi Estate London, said:
“The quality of both the design and construction of 8 Finsbury Circus, in a location that presented a number of logistical and planning challenges, is testament to the skills and expertise of WilkinsonEyre and the rest of the development team. With such projects, only the very best will do, and the success of this build is reflected in the letting activity and considerable occupier interest being seen.”
Lucy Homer, Lendlease Head of Design & Technical Support, said:
“Lendlease has a longstanding relationship with Wilkinson Eyre and we were delighted to be working with them again. 8 Finsbury Circus was a unique and inspirational design – and the whole delivery team worked
collaboratively to ensure the quality of the project was realised successfully.”
8 Finsbury Circus London – Building Information
CLIENT: Mitsubishi Estate London Limited/Stanhope plc
ARCHITECT: WilkinsonEyre
STRUCTURAL ENGINEERS: Waterman Group
BUILDING SERVICE ENGINEERS: WSP Parsons Brinckerhoff
COST CONSULTANT: alinea consulting
FAÇADE ENGINEERS: Arup Façade Engineering
CONSTRUCTION MANAGER: Lendlease
ARTIST: Carpenter Lowings
8 Finsbury Circus City of London images / information from WilkinsonEyre Architects
Location: 8 Finsbury Circus, London, England, UK
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Website: 8 Finsbury Circus