Madrid ha conseguido atraer compradores para 56.000 metros cuadrados de espacios de trabajo en 2021, mientras que Barcelona ha cerrado contratos de alquiler par
By Dave Rogers2021-05-24T05:00:00+01:00
East London scheme due to start on site next summer
Morris & Co has been given the green light for a scheme to build more than 150,000 sq ft of workspace close to the Tea Building in London’s Shoreditch district.
The nine-storey warehouse scheme next door to Shoreditch House for developer Blue Coast Capital is expected to start on site next summer and complete two years later.
Source: Secchi Smith
The scheme will include a rooftop terrace and pavilion
Called the Huntingdon Estate, it will include 15,000 sq ft of affordable workspace aimed at fledgling firms as well 2,500 sq ft of retail space and more than 11,000 sq ft of external amenity space.
Morris+Company narrowly wins approval for Shoreditch office block
1/18 Illustration of consented building by Morris+Company
Source: SecchiSmith
Source: SecchiSmith
Source: SecchiSmith
Source: SecchiSmith
Source: SecchiSmith
Source: SecchiSmith
Source: SecchiSmith
Source: SecchiSmith
Source: SecchiSmith
Source: SecchiSmith
Source: SecchiSmith
Source: SecchiSmith
Source: SecchiSmith
Source: SecchiSmith
Source: SecchiSmith
Source: SecchiSmith
Source: SecchiSmith
Source: SecchiSmith
Morris+Company’s plans for a nine-storey office block in Shoreditch have finally been approved by a one-vote margin, after a decision was postponed by Tower Hamlets’ planning committee last month
The warehouse-inspired scheme is now set to be built on the 0.28ha Huntingdon industrial estate, nine years after Amanda Levete’s high-rise designs for the City-fringe site were rejected, and six years after Robin Parti
With 50 shops empty or changing hands in Stratford town centre, the Herald looks at what the story is behind each unit
| Updated: 14:17, 03 April 2021
Special report: Changing face of the high street (45798332)
Fears for the UKâs high streets continue as the pandemic takes its toll on the economy.
In central Stratford more than 50 retail and hospitality outlets are currently empty or seeing a change of hands or use. Covid has conspired with other threats, such as online and out of town shopping, to bring the situation to a crisis point. More bad news came as the Herald went to press when the town heard it was not going to receive funding under the governmentâs High Street Task Force scheme, despite being fourth hardest hit local economy in the country.