More than 10% of staff affected as firm blames covid-19 and fears of no-deal Brexit

Rogers Stirk Harbour & Partners is making up to 30 redundancies, it has announced.

In its last published accounts, for the year ending June 30, 2018, the firm behind the Leadenhall ΢Ȧ, better known as the Cheesegrater where it is based (pictured), said it had 181 employees – meaning on these figures around 17% of staff are affected.

rogers office

Source: Paul Raftery

The roles will go at the end of next month, with the practice blaming the covid-19 pandemic, the possibility of a no-deal Brexit and a general lack of confidence in the market.

The combination of factors had resulted in uncertainty hitting several of the firm’s projects, it said in a statement, without specifying which. Despite some prospects outside the UK, it needed to cut staff to match its diminished workloads, it added.

Two years ago, the practice made 15 staff – around 10% of its then workforce – redundant because economic uncertainty which it blamed on Brexit had delayed “numerous” UK projects.

Last year, the firm completed work on a £125m student and staff building for the LSE at Aldwych built by Mace.

Last month, ΢Ȧ’s sister title ΢Ȧ Design revealed that the practice’s founder, . The move will lead to his , as part of a succession plan agreed in 2007.