Tower Bridge House
Rogers, Richard; Richard Rogers Partnership
Download1A1-RR-TBH-A2_cp.jpg (436.1Kb)
Date
1987-2005Description
Overall view, box-like projecting glass façade; The building is in an historic area known as St Katharine’s Dock (built by the engineer Thomas Telford, 1825-1828), adjacent to the Tower of London and Tower Bridge. The scheme features a giant ‘window’ facing west to the Tower of London. On the south (dock) side extensive use of solar shading gives it an appropriately solid look. The scheme provides seven floors of office accommodation, an underground service level with loading bay, one floor of retail provision accessible from the new dockside piazza, and a large full-height atrium. The floor plates are column-free, and serviced from cores situated at the corners of the building and a central core. High performance glass façades and fixed horizontal aluminium louvres (on the south and east façades) combine to significantly reduce the building’s energy consumption. These improve the quality of the office space by regulating the solar gain from the glass façades and allowing daylight into the building. Source: Richard Rogers Partnership [website]; http://www.richardrogers.co.uk/ (accessed 5/8/2011)
Type of Work
office buildingSubject
architecture, business, commerce and trade, contemporary (1960 to present), Architecture and energy conservation, City planning, Solar energy, passive solar, Twenty-first century
Rights
Rights Statement
Licensed for educational and research use by the MIT community only