(Redirected from 122 Leadenhall)

122 Leadenhall undergoing demolition, June 2007.
'122 Leadenhall Street' is an office building on
Leadenhall Street in the
City of London,
England. It is owned by the developer
British Land and was designed by Gollins Melvin Ward Partnership.
History
Before the development of the 1960s, the site had been used as the head offices for
P&O for over a century. Since 1840, P&O had worked in rent-free offices of Willcox & Anderson. However, business east of the
Gulf of Suez increased in 1846 resulting in the company needing newer and larger offices. It was the MDs' obligation to provide new offices. In November 1845, the King's Arms Inn and Hotel was put up for sale. The whole estate freehold was bought by the MDs for £7,250, who then commissioned architect, Mr Beachcroft, to design the new buildings. The cost of the new building was estimated at £8,000. In March 1848, P&0 moved into new offices at 122 Leadenhall Street.
[ Flagships of Imperialism: the P&O Company and the politics of empire from its origins to 1867, Freda Harcourt, , , Manchester University Press, 2006, ]
The MDs volunteered to pay £1,000 of the rent per annum out of their commissions. In 1854, the MDs unsuccessfully attempted to purchase 121 Leadenhall Street. However, they were able to take a lease from the charity which held it. They also bought leases of 80 years from St Thomas's Hospital on the residential properties at numbers 123, 124 and 125 Leadenhall Street which were demolished to create a new frontage at number 122. The new building provided more office space, some of which was for rent, and a spacious new courtyard.
1960s building
When completed in 1969, it was 54 metres tall with 14 storeys and three storeys under ground. At the time, it was considered one of the most complex glass fronted buildings in
England. It had been designed by Gollins Melvin Ward and Partners and was influenced by the
Seagram Building in
New York City. The building was extensively damaged by a
Provisional Irish Republican Army bomb attack in the early 1990s and subsequently had to be reclad. It was occupied until November 2006 by
Calyon.
The building is currently being demolished to make way for a much taller tower designed by
Sir Richard Rogers. The demolition procedure is unusual, in that it is working from the bottom upwards, rather than the other way round.
[1]
The new building

The new building
Designed by
Richard Rogers and developed by
British Land, the new tower will be 225 metres (737 feet) tall, with 48 floors, making it the tallest building in the City until the completion of the neighbouring
Bishopsgate Tower. With its distinctive wedge-shaped profile, it has been nicknamed the ''Cheese Grater''.
[2]
The planning application was submitted to the
Corporation of London in February 2004 and was approved in May 2005. Demolition of the current building commenced in December 2006 and will be completed in early 2008. Construction of the new building is expected to be finished in the first quarter of 2011.
[3]
It will feature a tapered glass façade on one side which will reveal the steel bracings, along with a ladder frame that is aimed to emphasise the vertical appearance of the tower. It will also appear to anchor the tower to the ground giving a sense of strength. The base will feature a 30 metre high atrium. It will be open to the public and will extend the adjacent plaza. Exterior glass lifts will be used on the building, similar to the neighbouring
Lloyd's Building designed by the same architect.
This unusual design's main drawback is the building's relatively small floorspace for a building of its height (500,000 square feet/ 47,000 m²). However, it is hoped that the slanting wedge-shaped design will have less impact on the protected sightline of
St. Pauls Cathedral when viewed from
Fleet Street.
The development is expected to cost approximately £286 million.
[4]
122 Leadenhall is just one of several other skyscrapers planned for the area - which include the
Bishopsgate Tower,
Heron Tower,
20 Fenchurch Street,
100 Bishopsgate,
Broadgate Tower and the
Shard of Glass at London Bridge - marking a period of dramatic change for the city's skyline.
References
1. The tower that's coming down bottom first
2. Building 49 - The Leadenhall Building
3. The Leadenhall Building Go-Ahead
4. E-architect: 122 Leadenhall Street
See also
★
Aviva Tower - a neighbouring office tower
★
Tower 42 - the current tallest building in the
City of London
★
The Gherkin - the 2nd tallest building in the
City of London
★
Tall buildings in London
★
Leadenhall Market
External links
★
RSHP: The Leadenhall Building
★
Information on the 1969 building
★
A thread discussing the new building, with regular news and photo updates