City of London planning officer has seen growth in applications to refurbish office blocks
London鈥檚 skyscraper boom is coming to an end, according to City of London planning officer Peter Rees.
Rees, who has overseen planning for towers from the Gherkin to the Pinnacle, told 黑洞社区 he expects to see fewer towers built in the City and more applications to refurbish existing buildings. His comments come after a number of architects, including Make鈥檚 Ken Shuttleworth, have signalled the end of the age of iconic towers.
Rees added he was already seeing a growth in applications to overhaul ageing office blocks.
Property agent Savills estimates 13.5 million ft2 of leases will expire in the City in the next few years, prompting a construction push. Rees said he was not opposed to tower developments, but expected more occupants to opt to refurbish their buildings and overhaul their facades rather than go for new-build offices.
Rees said: 鈥淢y prognosis is there will be fewer towers and that鈥檚 no bad thing. There鈥檚 a lot of late-eighties buildings we shouldn鈥檛 be throwing away.
鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot to recommend refurbishment. It鈥檚 a more sustainable solution, can be cheaper and leads to less arguments with planning.鈥
A number of skyscraper schemes are set to complete in the City by 2014, including the 37-storey Walkie Talkie tower and 47-storey Cheesegrater.
Rees said he expected these to be among the last batch of towers in the Square Mile.
鈥淚f a client has a particular requirement and they want to build tall I鈥檓 open to that. There鈥檚 maybe room for a couple more towers in the cluster, but we鈥檝e probably built enough for the forseeable future,鈥 he said.
His comments follow work led by Broadgate developer Sir Stuart Lipton to find ways of building skyscrapers at half the cost.
Rees鈥 planning department came under fire in April for awarding permission to a 鈥済roundscraper鈥 scheme at Lipton鈥檚 Broadgate Circus for UBS, which will require the demolition of existing eighties buildings designed by Peter Foggo.
Rees defended the decision to award planning and said the case for each new scheme would be addressed on its merits.
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