
St George Wharf Tower - Nine Elms Lane, London, UK
N 51° 29.120 W 000° 07.664
30U E 699417 N 5707710
St George Wharf Tower is a 180m tall residential building alongside the River Thames in south west London. The tower sprang to fame in January 2013 when the construction crane was hit by a helicopter in January 2013.
Waymark Code: WMHEKR
Location: London, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 07/01/2013
Views: 7
The 180m tall building is known by several names
including: The Tower, One St George Wharf; Vauxhall Tower; The Tower; St George
Tower and No 1 The Tower.
The
Skyscraper News
website tells us:
St George's Wharf is the first
tower in London to be topped with a wind turbine which will provide power
for all the towers public lighting.
Other environmental technology employed includes heat pump technology
removing the heat from naturally drawn water to provide heating for the
apartments. Triple glazing will provide sound-proofing and heat-loss/gain as
will thermal blinds between the glazing. The result will be the tower will
use one third of the energy of a similar building.
St Georges Wharf Tower if built will be the tallest wholly residential tower
in the U.K and the second tallest in Europe after Turning Turso in Sweden.
The tower is the final part of a scheme, the rest of which has been
completed and sold out. Construction for the tower was originally planned to
start in 2003.
The scheme has been revised twice following feedback from the Commission for
Architecture and the Built Environment and Lambeth Council. Despite meeting
all the requirements the latest design has been refused planning permission
by Lambeth. It was supported by the Mayor of London, Ken Livingstone who
threatened the council with legal action. The developer successfully
appealed to the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister winning an eventual
planning inquiry.
The same
publication
also tells us:
When it comes to proposals acting
as tipping points for future developments few projects can be more important
than St George's Wharf Tower in Vauxhall, which looks likely to be London's
first 500ft+ residential tower.
History.
Vauxhall almost saw a skyscraper cluster arrise in the early 1970s. A series
of buildings along the edge of the Thames of between 350ft and 450ft were
approved but the slump following the 1973 oil crisis saw that they never got
started.
Their was also much fighting over the Effra site, including two public
inquiries where each time the secretary of State decided against high-rise
development. It is now this site that has been bought and developed into St
George's Wharf complete with plans for a 181m tall centerpiece.
The Development.
Developer by St George their self-named St George's Wharf is a successful
mid-rise development on the the South Bank of the Thames near Vauxhall which
is now nearing completion and totals 72m in height.
It is located near a major transport interchange and has been zoned as one
of six areas of London which are acceptable for tall buildings by both the
government and Mayor.
Although the existing development is not particularly tall it has made a
substantial difference to the skyline in the area which is largely medium
rise and has almost completely sold out.
One section of land on the end of the site has yet to be developed and it's
been proposed now to build a 181m residential tower. If built it will be the
tallest residential project in the country by a large margin.
Project Details.
St George's Wharf Tower was originally concieved by Broadway Malayan and
released to the public in 2000. A circular design, stepping up, it would be
a revolutionary environmentally friendly tower, not only tall but also
sporting a windturbine on the top - something that has never been done in
London before - that would provide 50% of the buildings power.
It will contain a total of 167 1, 2 and 3 bedroom apartments on 48 floors,
with the top floor for a mechanical penthouse and the turbine standing on
top of this.
Following a number of criticisms from architectural and design bodies the
tower has undergone a number of subtle redesigns, mostly to the outside with
remodelling of the base and pinacle and changes to the colour of the
cladding removing the rotating step. The end result is something less
metallic and more glassy, but more importantly with a sheer look as the
removal of the steps emphasise the height more.
The Public Inquiry and planning process.
The location of the tower has in the past been considered somewhat sensitive
- it's proximity to the Palace of Westminster being the cause for high-rise
proposals on the Effra site being rejected. This is despite the tower being
almost completely obstructed from that view by Millbank Tower. Common sense
seems to have won through this time and there has been no public inquiry
despite the usual predictable calls.
The planning process has centered around changes to the outside of the tower
which have changed the look but not the shape as recommended by CABE to
assist it's progress through the planning which is common-place these days,
but more importantly issues of planning gain.
The developer originally offered only 25% of the flats as affordable
claiming that the wind turbine on the top should negate them having to make
up the shortfall too as the Mayor of London's office expects. The Mayor's
office responded in April by refusing the application not on the grounds of
the design of the tower itself but because of the lack of public housing and
the excess car-park spaces which is common sense given how close it is to
the railway and tube stations in Vauxhall.
The garden was also recommended for remodelling to help shield the area from
wind which will hit it from the Thames.
The developers have agreed to take into account these changes and the design
has been resubmitted with 40% public housing.
Meanwhile in a shot across Lambeth Councils bows the Mayor's office warned
London's councils that rejecting towers he had approved would lead to legal
action, although he cannot compel a council to approve a tower.
Future Prospects.
Given the formal opposition to this tower stems mostly from disagreements
over planning gain rather than the issue of building a skyscraper on this
site. As the developer has agreed to the Mayor's proposals approval from his
office looks likely before the end of the year. Lambeth council are said to
be a bit cagey on the issue but whether they fancy a fight with both the
Mayor and the developers in the court seems unlikely as the chances are they
would lose.
London needs more homes and this development recognises both that and the
need for environmentally sustainable housing and should be welcomed as such.
SN.com is confident that St George's Wharf will see it's tower rise early
next year. If asked for a percentage on whether it will be approved our our
answer would be 90% positive.
This will be the first of a number of similar sized towers in an area zoned
for such buildings by developers eager to cash on the success.
The end result can only mean more skyscrapers for London and with developers
feeling they can get tall residential buildings approved, plus the current
cost of land in London which is amongst the most expensive in the world, the
skyline will look very different in ten years time.