All the coverage from one of the year鈥檚 biggest planning sagas
Last month, Michael Gove agreed with a planning inspector that the Foster & Partners-designed Tulip should not be built.
There were concerns over its sustainability and whether a glut of viewing platforms at other towers already up and running in the City as well as those planned as for yet unbuilt schemes would leave it a white elephant.
The decision marked the end of a process which has gone on for the past few years. The pattern was predictable: City approves, London鈥檚 mayor Sadiq Khan turns it down and it鈥檚 left to a planning inspector to decided.
A few weeks before the mood music was optimistic that the Tulip would get the green light. The Tulip team, which had been speaking to four firms about building the tower, has not called it quits yet but given the constraints of the site the odds have to be against a tall tower like the one planned ever coming out of the ground from it.
Here鈥檚 how we reported the news
Why throwing the Tulip out was the right decision
Date published: 18 November
Historic England chief executive Duncan Wilson explains why the government鈥檚 ruling should be welcomed
Tulip decision is missed opportunity to deliver positive change
Date: 12 November
The hard-hit Square Mile will suffer because of Michael Gove鈥檚 decision to reject developer鈥檚 appeal, says NLA founder Peter Murray
Experts say Tulip decision could change how big projects are assessed
Date: 15 November
Ministers鈥 decision to reject Foster & Partners鈥 Tulip partly on the grounds of its 鈥渉ighly unsustainable鈥 use of concrete may have set a 鈥済ame-changing鈥 precedent, according to architects, planners and lawyers. Other major projects are now likely to be given a much harder ride at planning with their sustainability credentials set to come under significant scrutiny.
Tulip team mulling rethink in bid to save 拢500m project
Date: 12 November
The project team behind the Tulip is expected to decide in the next few weeks whether to redraw it or give up on it entirely after it was turned down for planning by the government. Several sources have told 好色先生TV the team, which includes developer Bury Street Properties, run by Brazilian billionaire banker Joseph Safra, and architect Foster & Partners, will be speaking to government in the coming days about how the scheme can be made to work.
Industry reacts as 拢500m Tulip on the brink after government pulls plug on City tower
Date: 11 November
Lawyers for the Tulip were locked in talks this afternoon about what to do next after the 305m-tall tourist attraction in the City of London was thrown out by the government. Project insiders told 好色先生TV they were taken aback by the news with one saying: 鈥淎 few weeks ago I thought it was 80:20 in favour of going through. I鈥檓 gobsmacked. I wonder if COP26 had something to do with it.鈥
Tulip appeal dismissed over design and carbon concerns
Date: 11 November
Foster & Partners鈥 Tulip was today rejected by the new communities secretary Michael Gove who said it contained 鈥渢oo many compromises to amount to world-class architecture鈥. He also questioned the 鈥渉ighly unsustainable concept of using vast quantities of reinforced concrete鈥.
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