Planted balconies will be added to one of the earliest offices to complete in canalside development
Morris & Company鈥檚 plans to spruce up one of the earliest office buildings in the Paddington Central development have been approved by Westminster council.
The practice will add a series of greenery-covered balconies to 3 Sheldon Square, a 2001 glass and steel building designed by Sidell Gibson.
The proposals, for British Land, will see an external steel structure consisting of nine levels of balconies added to the front elevation.
The lightweight structure, which will hang off cantilever beams projecting from the 18,000sq m building鈥檚 roof, will provide 542sq m of external terrace space and nearly 80sq m of planting.
Morris & Co said the 鈥渂old and playful鈥 retrofit, which will have a bright red-oxide colour, has been envisaged as an intentional contrast to the existing building鈥檚 grey and green palette.
The practice said that the herbaceous plants and shrubs cascading down from each level will bring 鈥渢exture, movement, form and colour鈥 to the building鈥檚 facade, improving views both into and out of the office.
It added that the greenery will help to regulate temperatures in the building, which currently suffers from excessive solar gain in the summer and heat loss in the winter.
Each balcony will be prefabricated off-site and installed in sections, while the building鈥檚 steel frame, concrete floor slabs and shaft walls will remain untouched. Construction is expected to start on site in autumn next year and be completed by the third quarter of 2023.
Morris & Co founding director Joe Morris said office workers were increasingly seeking a closer connection to nature in the workplaces.
鈥淢uch has changed in the way we think about and design workplaces over the last decade,鈥 he said.
鈥淭hrough the climate crisis, the global pandemic, changing patterns of work and increased awareness of the mental strain workplaces have on our lives, the era of airless offices with the focus on efficiencies over user experience has been replaced by one in which the desire for a connection to nature now prevails.鈥
He added that 3 Sheldon Square represents a 鈥渢ypology-breaking approach鈥 where the value of the existing building is understood but enhanced to provide more passive energy use and more amenity.
British Land head of development Nigel Webb said the scheme will turn the 3 Sheldon Square into an 鈥渋deal workspace鈥, adding that the building will become an exemplar project for the developer鈥檚 2030 sustainability strategy.
Paddington Central has undergone an overhaul in recent years with the addition of British Land鈥檚 10-storey 4 Kingdom Street, designed by Allies & Morrison and completed in 2017, and Fletcher Priest鈥檚 2019 Brunel 好色先生TV.
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