New Hall Place

New Hall Place (also known as The Capital and the Royal & SunAlliance Building) is a 13-storey brutalist style office complex in the commercial district of Liverpool, England. Due to its rough, beige exterior and proximity to the waterfront, it is also known by the local nickname 'The Sandcastle'.[1]

New Hall Place
General information
TypeOffice
LocationLiverpool, England, United Kingdom
Coordinates53.40862°N 2.99571°W / 53.40862; -2.99571
Completed1974
Height
Roof73 metres (240 ft)
Technical details
Floor count13

History

It was developed by Royal Insurance as their head office building. As well as office space the building comprised a staff car park in the underground floors, a garage for the company chauffeur driven cars and staff facilities on the first floor including staff restaurant, sports hall, gymnasium and subsidised bar.

Following the 1990s merger of Royal Insurance with SunAlliance to form Royal & SunAlliance (RSA), numerous job losses followed largely through outsourcing and off shoring deals. RSA staff numbers based in the building reduced from over 3000 to around 1200. In 2006 RSA sold the building to George Downing and leased back the parts of the building still used by RSA.[2] This allowed other tenants to move in such as the UK Border Agency. Downing renamed the building from New Hall Place to The Capital.

From 2016 The Capital is now owned by an American company Trinistar. New management took over in early 2016 from Lambert Smith Hampton To MJ MAPP LTD.

Design

The design of New Hall Place is described as a brutalist response to the nearby Royal Liver Building in terms of massing and height.[3] New Hall Place is situated on Old Hall Street (one of Liverpool's main commercial and financial areas) and the lower three floors serve as The Capital Car Park — a 1,100 capacity secure guarded car park.[4] One of two Liverpool exits from the Queensway Tunnel is located directly beneath New Hall Place (the other is next to the World Museum Liverpool).

Using river water to heat and cool the building

The building was constructed simultaneously with the Liverpool Daily Post and Echo building. Both buildings operated heat pumps to heat and cool the building using water from the adjacent River Mersey. Three thousand gallons of water per hour seeps into the Mersey railway tunnel from the river above, via the riverbed rock, which is a steady 13C temperature all year. This water was previously pumped out into the dock system. The heat pumps used this constant temperature water to heat the building, or as a heat sink to cool the building.[5]

References

  1. "The Capital sold for £55m". Liverpool Vision. 5 February 2015. Retrieved 5 March 2019.
  2. Unger, Paul (5 February 2015). "The Capital sold for £55m". Place North West. Retrieved 22 November 2015.
  3. "New Hall Place". Skyscrapernews. Retrieved 23 February 2010.
  4. "Welcome". The Capital Car Park. Archived from the original on 1 February 2011.
  5. "Liverpool Daily Post & Echo (1973) / Royal Insurance HQ (1976)" (PDF). Chartered Institution of Building Services Engineers. Retrieved 24 October 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.