Lipton Rogers and PLP win planning for 62-storey tower on former Pinnacle site
The City of London has given the green light to Lipton Rogers鈥 replacement scheme for the Pinnacle site - 22 Bishopsgate.
The 62-storey tower is designed by PLP and is set to be constructed by Brookfield Multiplex.
A source close to the project said the construction value is likely to be around 拢500m - Brookfield Multiplex signed a pre-construction agreement with Lipton Rogers last February and the two parties will work to agree a lump sum for the main works by February 2016, allowing main works to begin on site that month. Completion is scheduled for November 2018.
好色先生TV revealed earlier this month that . Keltbray is already on site demolishing the old 鈥榮tump鈥 of concrete core abandoned by the former Pinnacle scheme and modifying the piling works.
According to the City of London鈥檚 planning report on the scheme, it crams in a whopping 2.2 million sq ft of floor space, 1 million sq ft more than the Shard despite it being 30m shorter at 278m tall.
WSP Parsons Brinckerhoff is engineer, Alinea is the cost consultant, Aecom is the employer鈥檚 agent and environmental consultant, Wilson James is providing logistics and DP9 is the planning consultant.
City of London planners said the building鈥檚 free-to-visit viewing gallery over the top three floors and public gallery on the ground floor were critical to it being recommended for approval.
Sir Stuart Lipton, co-founder of Lipton Rogers, said: 鈥22 Bishopsgate has been designed to enhance the quality of life of its occupants by adding amenities which make the work experience more enjoyable and effective.鈥
A City of London planning committee approved the scheme this morning.
Approval comes after City of London planners last week published a report recommeding approval of the scheme.
In the report the planners said that while it had received objections - including from Royal Parks and the London boroughs of Tower Hamlets and Islington - they nonetheless believed the scheme 鈥渁ccords with the development plan as a whole鈥 and 鈥渨ould preserve the setting of listed buildings鈥.
The report praised the scheme鈥檚 proposed public gallery on the ground floor, as well as the viewing gallery, bars and restaraunts on the top three floors. The report says: 鈥淭he public realm benefits, most particularly the free public viewing gallery, are critical to the acceptability of this major development.鈥
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