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May 19, 2004
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Courtesy KPF |

Courtesy Richard Rogers Partnership |
In 1991 London had but two skyscrapers
by global standards: the 800-foot Canary Wharf Tower designed
by Cesar Pelli and the 600-foot National Westminster Bank
Tower. The city has strict rules on building height, and permission
to build city center skyscrapers is granted on a case-by-case
basis, meaning the ones that get through are notable landmarks
like Norman Fosters unique new SwissRe tower.
SwissRes transformation of Londons skyline unleashes
the prospect of a new picture postcard image representing
London, as skyscraper development in the city is set to catapault
it into a new era.
Renzo Pianos 1016-foot London Bridge
Tower, dubbed The Shard of Glass, is as slim and
sharp as Fosters SwissRe is tubby and textured. Its
steeply sloping facades of white glass will make the tower
seem to partly disappear into the sky. The building sparked
controversy and a public enquiry over claims it would spoil
the skyline. It has been praised for the elegant and tapering
shape that prompted its Shard nickname, and is
due to provide offices, a hotel, restaurants, apartments,
retail and three viewing areas. The decision in November 2003
to give the go ahead to what will be Europes tallest
building when completed on the grounds that the tower enhanced
its setting surprised critics, but was a triumph for Mayor
Ken Livingstones policy of supporting tall buildings.
One year ago Livingstone announced his
plans to add up to 15 new skyscapers in the capital by 2013
and immediately came under fire from government inspectors.
He is responsive to arguments put forward by the Corporation
of London (Tall Buildings and Sustainability,
2002) that tall buildings are increasingly necessary for the
efficient use they make of the limited land available. "The
Corporation of London needs to ensure that demand for office
space can be met within the Square Mile (the London area in
which much of the citys financial industry is located),"
says Judith Mayhew, in charge of the Corporations policy
and resources. In this context, tall office buildings are
becoming increasingly necessary as a result of the efficient
use that make of the limited land available.
Now skyscapers are a UK reality, resulting
from clients wanting the kind of floorspace as well as the
iconic glory they bring. Other recent skyscraper projects
include Richard Rogers 122 Leadenhall Street, which
is strikingly similar to Pianos design. The 48-floor
glass tower's high degree of transparency reveals its structural
steel frame, with colour and light adding depth and animation
to the north-facing façade. Its slender, tapering form
rises to a height of 736.5ft in the eastern cluster of tall
buildings in the City of London. given in 2002 to go ahead
with the Heron Tower in Bishopsgate in the City, following
a public enquiry. Designed by Kohn Pedersen Fox, the 727 foot,
37 storey Tower arranges workspaces around a series of 11
triple-height atria, and when completed in 2005 will be one
of the tallest building in the City. Mayor Livingstone apparently
jokingly said go back and make it bigger when
KPF presented a 590 foot tower.
A third skyscraper, the Minerva Building,
designed by Grimshaw Architects, recently won planning permission.
At 217m (50 floors high), it will provide 93,000m2 of office
space. Its design is described by the architect as four open
books standing with their spines erect, facing one another.
A naturally ventilating glass façade is projected to
save up to two thirds of energy, eliminating the need for
air conditioning most of the year.
Even the architects of the London Eye
have proposed a skyscraper design. Marks Barfields 72
storey Skyhouse, with shops, health clubs, nurseries, restaurants
and gardens. But most of the pressure for skyscrapers at the
moment is for commercial rather than to meet residential needs.
Vying to be the highest and the ultimate
landmark is a game set to continue globally, and London has
clearly now got a thirst for some action. Convincing evidence
of the need for new skyscrapers will come as they fill up
with tenants. Meanwhile, a confluence of factors: an easing
of the restrictions, the rigor of the Mayors policies
and the Corporation of Londons active advocacy of good
design, will hopefully ensure that only the exceptional ones
get realised.
"Our skyline has seen exciting and
rapid change," says Peter Rees, chief planner at the
Corporation. The public can find that hard to accept,
because it has been poorly served by architecture in the post-war
period. Size isnt everything. I want to see buildings
with flavour, where you can see the architects enthusiasm.
Lucy Bullivant
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