Museum to move into old West Smithfield market buildings
The City of London Corporation has approved 拢337m plans to move the Museum of London from Powell & Moya鈥檚 brutalist citadel into the crumbling market buildings at West Smithfield.
The scheme has been drawn up by Stanton Williams and Asif Khan working with specialist conservation architect Julian Harrap. The practices have spent four years working on the detailed plans.
Announced in 2015, it is one of the biggest cultural projects happening anywhere in Europe, said Sharon Ament, the museum鈥檚 director, adding that the aim is to open in 2024.
The site includes the General Market, Poultry Market and several buildings known as the Annexe, which includes the Fish Market, Red House and Engine House. Listed building consent was also granted for the grade II-listed Poultry Market.
Ament said the consent secured the future of the historic market buildings, most of which date back to the Victorian era and have fallen into disrepair.
Much of the historic fabric of the buildings will be preserved to create what she described as cavernous and atmospheric spaces above and below ground.
Last month 好色先生TV revealed that five firms are on the shortlist for the first major phase of construction work planned at the site.
The scheme, worth between 拢40m and 拢50m, will include enabling, demolition and structural work at the site.
Keltbray, McGee and Careys have been joined on the shortlist by smaller rivals Kilnbridge and Harrow firm Toureen which has been working on the 拢1bn scheme to turn the Old War Office in Whitehall into a hotel and apartments.
Tenders were due to be issued in April but this has been held up by the covid-19 pandemic. Under the museum鈥檚 original timetable, work had been expected to start this October and run until the following November.
Last month, the museum got the ball rolling for the main construction contract on the job worth 拢140m. Tenders are due to go out to a maximum number of five bidders in the second week of August.
Consultants working on the job include QS Gardiner & Theobald, project manager Buro Four, engineer Arup and structures firm AKT II.
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