100 Broad Street proposals will deliver 294 homes across 33 storeys
Downsized proposals for a ground-floor-plus-32-storeys build-to-rent residential tower in central Birmingham have been lodged by Howells.
Designs by the recently rebranded practice, formerly known as Glenn Howells Architects, slash the height of a previously consented scheme for 100 Broad Street by almost half.
Glancy Nicholls鈥 61-storey scheme was designed for Euro Property Investments and approved in 2020. However, the 503-home scheme is understood to have become unviable and the site was sold to current owner Urban Vision.
Urban Vision says the 294-home Howells proposals will be all-electric and 鈥渁mong the most environmentally and socially conscious developments in Birmingham鈥.
Howells director Robert King said the scheme for the site 鈥 currently occupied by a five-storey office building 鈥 had 鈥渃hallenged鈥 the practice to 鈥渓ook again and question鈥 the blueprint for efficient tall-building designs.
鈥100 Broad Street pays reference to Birmingham鈥檚 architectural modernist past while looking to the future to create a building that is more Birmingham, less anywhere,鈥 he said.
The tower will be on the opposite side of Broad Street from Howells鈥 recently-completed 42-storey The Mercian build-to-rent development for Moda Living.
The site is less than a mile from Howells鈥 Brick House homes at Icknield Port Loop, which last week.
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