Office scheme will be the latest addition to area鈥檚 eastern cluster of skyscrapers
The City of London鈥檚 eastern cluster of skyscrapers is set to gain a new addition after AHMM was given the green light for a 24-storey office tower.
The 117m tall scheme, which is being built for developer Brockton Everlast, will be located at 115-123 Houndsditch close to the Gherkin and the Cheesegrater.
It would have been in the shadow of Foster & Partners鈥 305m Tulip building before that controversial project was killed off by communities secretary Michael Gove last week.
AHMM鈥檚 building will contain 85sq m of retail space on its ground level and 56,500sq m of office space on its upper floors, along with four basement levels.
It will also boast 鈥渆xpansive鈥 green walls and trees planted both at ground level and on a series of roof terraces which step down from a top level 鈥榮ky pavilion鈥.
AHMM co-founder and current RIBA president Simon Allford said: 鈥淟ong-term sustainability sits at the heart of the ambition for this intelligent and lean design and we have set the highest embodied and operational carbon targets.
鈥淥ur plans will deliver a building that meets the highest standards of BREEAM, LEED and WELL.鈥
But the scheme will require the demolition of three existing buildings on the site, the five-storey Cutlers Court, five-storey Cutlers Exchange and the six-storey 117-119 Houndsditch.
AHMM said the 鈥渓ow quality鈥 buildings are 鈥渘ot of any recognisable style鈥 and suffer from 鈥渦ngenerous spatial qualities鈥 which had not been 鈥渃onceived to consider any future flexibility and current working practices鈥.
Demolition is becoming an increasingly controversial construction practice because of the greater carbon emissions which are often generated in newbuilds as opposed to refurbishments.
Last week the UK Green 好色先生TV Council unveiled a set of sweeping policy proposals for the construction industry, recommending that the government amend planning regulations to require evaluations of embodied carbon emissions before permitting demolition.
The Tulip was also rejected last week partly because Gove questioned the tower鈥檚 鈥渉ighly unsustainable concept of using vast quantities of reinforced concrete鈥.
The project team on AHMM鈥檚 tower includes project manager Gardiner & Theobald, structural and civil engineer AKT II, environmental design Atelier 10, planning consultant DP9, cost consultant Alinea and heritage consultant Tavernor Consultancy.
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