Ludgate – 10 Fleet Place

  • Client British Rail Property Board
  • Region Europe
  • Location London, United Kingdom

Project Facts
  • Completion Year 1993
  • Design Finish Year 1991
  • Size Site Area: 32,300 square meters Building Height: 39.90 meters Number of Stories: 10 Building Gross Area: 21,400 square meters
  • Collaborators
    Lerch Bates Fisher Marantz Stone Gardiner & Theobald, Inc. Hanna Olin Limited Mott Green And Wall Traac Cerami & Associates Edgett Williams Consulting Group Bovis Construction Ltd. Rosehaugh Stanhope Development Plc
Project Facts
  • Completion Year 1993
  • Design Finish Year 1991
  • Size Site Area: 32,300 square meters Building Height: 39.90 meters Number of Stories: 10 Building Gross Area: 21,400 square meters
  • Collaborators
    Lerch Bates Fisher Marantz Stone Gardiner & Theobald, Inc. Hanna Olin Limited Mott Green And Wall Traac Cerami & Associates Edgett Williams Consulting Group Bovis Construction Ltd. Rosehaugh Stanhope Development Plc

As a key part of London’s Ludgate development, this distinctive building provides a visual transition between the contemporary 1 Fleet Place and the historic 100 Ludgate Hill, all designed by SOM.

Bridging the Thameslink rail line below, 10 Fleet Place is the largest building on the site. City planning officials required stone cladding to ensure that the new building was appropriate for its context, so SOM composed a facade of black granite, steel, and glass that terminates in a flying buttresses at roof level. Though its detailing is hard-edged and mechanistic, the 10-story building has a Gothic intricacy and fineness of scale.

At ground level, an arcade and stepped masonry wall hug the narrow, curved street bordering the site. A passageway cuts through the building to provide a pedestrian shortcut from the busy street to the plaza. The roughly triangular plan terminates in rounded turret-like structures, reminiscent of the traditional architecture of urban London. By combining abstraction and representation, 10 Fleet Place builds on the memory of the city’s architecture, both old and new.

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