Mixed-use scheme would double height of 70s blocks on prime west London site

Rogers Stirk Harbour & Partners has drawn up plans to replace two ageing office blocks in an affluent west London neighbourhood with a hotel and office development double the size of the existing structures.

The practice’s proposals, created for developer Hammersmith Properties, would deliver a 28-storey hotel building with a top-level bar and 15,852sq m of new office space, spread across the structure’s lower-rise elements.

Work will involve demolishing the existing 14-storey Landmark House and 11-storey Thames Tower buildings, which are on a triangular site between King Street, Hammersmith’s main shopping street, and Hammersmith Bridge Road.

 

Landmark House

The Rogers Stirk Harbour&Partners-designed hotel and office complex in Hammersmith, west London

 

The proposed development, which is surrounded by conservation areas, would deliver around 35,000sq m of new space, including cultural space and new retail. The existing buildings – one of which is currently vacant – provide around 17,000 sq m of office space.

Public consultation on the proposals closed earlier this month but Hammersmith and Fulham Council has yet to announce a determination date for the scheme.

Minutes of a design-panel meeting held on the project in December report that the scheme’s height was not seen as a concern “due to the elegant proportions of the proposals”.

But the panel expressed concerns that an approval for the building “might set a precedent for other sites with less competent schemes and a sensitive context where height could be a negative issue”.

Last year RSHP moved out of its 30 year home at Hammersmith and into new offices at the Leadenhall ΢Ȧ, the tower it designed in the City and which is better known as the Cheesegrater.