Lloyd´s Register
Set within a conservation area, access to Lloyd's Register is through a landscaped churchyard. The site is largely surrounded by existing buildings, including 71 Fenchurch St, constructed for Lloyd's Register in 1901. This Grade II listed building has been incorporated into the new headquarters and extensively restored. The floor plates of the new building, comprised of fourteen stories of office space and two basements, taper in response to the awkward geometry of the site to create a fan-shaped grid composed of vaults formed around two dramatic atria. This design allows daylight penetration and provides thermal buffers between the offices and the external environment.
Public Realm
An existing underused and neglected urban public space, in the form of St. Katherine's churchyard, has been regenerated and given back to the city. Existing mature trees are incorporated into the new landscape with simple, elegant stone and timber benches and new planting to create a calm and light-filled urban retreat.
City and Context
The design retains and integrates existing structures, conservation area, churchyard, and mature trees whilst ensuring public rights of way continue to pass through the site.
Legibility
Highly transparent clear glazed atria, lifts and stairwells provide instant legibility, and allow views into and out of the building at all levels. Colour-coded steel work also acts as an orientating device that is legible both in the broader context of the city and from within the building.
Energy
The environmental strategy is based on utilising the thermal mass of the pre-cast concrete frame, the reduction of solar gain by high performance glazing, automatically controlled external louvers, and the use of an energy efficient chilled beam cooling system.
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