But here, developer TH Real Estate wanted to take a different approach, as head of development Geoff Harris explains: “Developing in London is quite a challenge because there’s a very historic street pattern and block size, and a lot of protected views. In the recent past, a lot of buildings have been shaped to deal with those constraints. We were looking for a building that is beautiful, unique and distinctive in its form, that takes us back to 20th-century US tower design – a building that expresses its verticality, mixes solid and clear and uses terracing.”
Working with Make Architects, Harris’ team completed 58 separate design studies, modelling all the constraints in 3D to produce an envelope in which the building had to sit. But rather than shaping the building to fill that space, they considered it from the inside out, looking at how form could follow function. “We ended up with a terraced building that is arranged in slices,” he says. “It deals with all the constraints, but it’s still a very clean form that is rectilinear.”
“40 Leadenhall has to be unseen from Fleet Street, by sitting behind the dome of St Paul’s Cathedral in the same way as The Scalpel,” adds James Taylor, partner at Make. “But we didn’t want the architecture to be defined by this requirement. Our focus was on creating a group of simple, well-proportioned elements which work on the skyline. The Fleet Street view requirement was handled by working a set of terraced set-backs into the overall composition, which also enhance the workplace with external amenity spaces.”