This website requires certain cookies to work and uses other cookies to help you have the best experience. By visiting this website, certain cookies have already been set, which you may delete and block. By closing this message or continuing to use our site, you agree to the use of cookies. Visit our updated privacy and cookie policy to learn more.
This Website Uses Cookies
By closing this message or continuing to use our site, you agree to our cookie policy. Learn More
This website requires certain cookies to work and uses other cookies to help you have the best experience. By visiting this website, certain cookies have already been set, which you may delete and block. By closing this message or continuing to use our site, you agree to the use of cookies. Visit our updated privacy and cookie policy to learn more.
Architectural Record
search
cart
facebook twitter linkedin youtube
Architectural Record
  • NEWS
    • Latest News
    • Coronavirus Coverage
    • Technology
    • Interviews
    • Commentary
    • Reviews
    • Editorials
  • PROJECTS
    • Building Types
    • Adaptive Reuse
    • Museums & Arts Centers
    • Colleges & Universities
    • Interior Design
    • Lighting
    • Kitchen & Bath
  • HOUSES
    • Record Houses
    • House of the Month
    • Featured Houses
  • PRODUCTS
    • Material World Newsletter
    • Categories
    • Products of the Year
    • Sponsored Products
  • EXCLUSIVES
    • Videos
    • Podcasts
      • Design:ED Podcast
      • Sponsored Podcasts
    • Historic Archive
    • Record Houses
    • Design Vanguard
    • Record Interiors
    • Top 300 Firms
    • Products of the Year
    • Best Architecture Schools
  • SUBMIT WORK
    • Design Vanguard 2021
    • Record Houses 2021
    • Guess the Architect
    • Cocktail Napkin Sketch
    • Submission Guidelines
    • Editorial Calendar
  • CONTINUING ED
    • Editorial Continuing Ed
    • CE Center
    • CE Topic Academies
  • EVENTS
    • Record on the Road
    • Innovation Conference
    • Women In Architecture
    • Webinars
    • Ad Excellence Awards
    • Submit an Event
  • MORE
    • CONTACT
      • Masthead
      • Customer Service
      • Subscribe
      • Custom Content Marketing
    • Advertise
    • Newsletters
    • Store
    • Custom Content Marketing
    • Research
    • Sponsor Insights
    • Sponsored eBooks
  • MAGAZINE
    • Current Issue
    • Digital Edition
    • Historic Archive
    • Subscribe
    • Customer Service
    • My Account
  • Sign In
  • Subscribe
  • Sign Out
  • My Account
Home » Renaissance St. Pancras London

You have 0 Articles Left This Month. Join RECORD Premium for Unlimited Access.

ProjectsBuildings by TypeHospitality Projects

Renaissance St. Pancras London

December 16, 2011
KEYWORDS London
Order Reprints
No Comments

Program: A five-story, 347,125-square-foot hotel with a total of 246 guest rooms, 66 residential apartments, a presidential suite, a basement spa and pool, and retail space. The project, which backs up onto the Eurostar train station, is a restoration and expansion of a 19th-century Victorian Gothic railway hotel designed by George Gilbert Scott. A new five-story wing on the west side of the site contributes the majority (189) of the bedrooms.

Design concept and solution: RHWL and Richard Griffiths wanted to restore the interiors and highlight the building's details with minimal interference, and to integrate the new wing naturally into the site. The original hotel entrance was small and not centrally located, so the architects enclosed a covered taxi lane that goes through the hotel and turned it into a new reception concourse and function room. They retained the taxi route's sawtooth glass roof and added glass screens at either end of the passage. The brick exterior walls of the Scott building, with their arched windows, give the concourse an expansive indoor-outdoor feel reminiscent of the winter gardens popular in Victorian and Edwardian hotels. The architects replaced the sidewalks with Yorkstone and the taxi lane with a patterned wood floor, a nod to the wood-block street paving of the period. On the first floor RHWL and Richard Griffiths preserved the original guest rooms and suites, and on the second and third floors they converted some of the rooms into apartments. The fourth and fifth floor spaces became duplexes, with added height: the architects removed fifth-floor ceilings to expose the building's large roof timbers. Throughout the hotel they redid many of the original ceilings, restoring damaged plasterwork and re-creating elaborate stenciled patterns. For the new wing—a steel structure clad with brick—the architects designed a simplified version of the Scott arches. The stacked rows of arches shift in size and shape to accommodate a steel-truss bridge underneath, which brings passengers over the train station's delivery bay.

You have 0 complimentary articles remaining.

lock iconJOIN RECORD PREMIUM to Unlock Unlimited Access + Premium Benefits.

Get started for as low as $2 a month!

Already a RECORD Subscriber or Premium Member?Login Now or Register Your Email

What is RECORD Premium?

Privacy Policy

Related Articles

Renaissance Barcelona Fira Hotel

The Bexley Wing, St. James's Institute of Oncology, St. James's University Hospital by Anshen + Allen

50 New Bond Street and 14 St George Street

Related Products

Architectural Record September 2020 Issue

Contemporary Market Architecture Planning and Design

3D Thinking in Design and Architecture: From Antiquity to the Future

More Videos

Sponsored Content

Sponsored Content is a special paid section where industry companies provide high quality, objective, non-commercial content around topics of interest to the Architectural Record audience. All Sponsored Content is supplied by the advertising company. Interested in participating in our Sponsored Content section? Contact your local rep.

close
  • BART Milpitas Transit Center.
    Sponsored bySAFTI FIRST

    Award-Winning Transit Center Brings Daylight from the ‘Outside In’

  • Western Window Systems Dallas House.
    Sponsored byWestern Window Systems

    In Dallas, a Glassy Solution to a Challenging Space

  • Cultured Stone Biophilic Design.
    Sponsored byCultured Stone

    A Timeless Imperative: Maximizing Biophilic Design

DESIGN:ED Podcast
Listen to Architectural Record’s DESIGN:ED Podcast

Tweets by @ArchRecord

Events

June 24, 2021

Architectural Record’s Annual Advertising Excellence Awards

Each year, Architectural Record recognizes the most effective ads in the building and design marketplace, and the companies and agencies that produce them. Join us virtually in 2021 for a panel discussion on what our jury of architects and their peers look for in advertising.

View All Submit An Event
Qualified Labor - Free Natural Stone Webinar - April 21, 2021 - 2:00 PM EDT

The latest news and information

#1 Source for Architectural Design, News and Products

JOIN RECORD PREMIUM
  • Contact
    • Survey And Sample
    • Editorial Calendar
    • Industry Jobs
  • Call for Entries
  • Subscribe
    • Subscribe
    • Renew
    • Create Account
    • Change Address
    • Pay My Bill
    • Free eNewsletters
    • Customer Care
  • Advertise
    • Architectural Record
    • Advertising Awards
  • Privacy
    • PRIVACY POLICY
    • TERMS & CONDITIONS
    • DO NOT SELL MY PERSONAL INFORMATION
    • PRIVACY REQUEST
    • ACCESSIBILITY

Copyright ©2021. All Rights Reserved BNP Media.

Design, CMS, Hosting & Web Development :: ePublishing