Portland House

Portland House is a skyscraper in Westminster, London. It is 101 metres (331 ft) tall with 29 floors. The building was the central feature of the redevelopment of the six acres old Watney's Brewery site. The architects were Howard, Fairbairn & Partners, and the development took place from 1959 to 1963.[1] Pevsner notes that the architectural form of Portland House was influenced by the Pirelli Tower (1955-58) in Milan by architect Gio Ponti.[1] The development was known as Stag Place.[1] Today the site is Cardinal Place.

Portland House, Central London

The building has two banks of lifts — the first serving the first up to the fifteenth floor, and the second the fifteenth floor upwards.

Firms that currently use Portland House for office space include American Express, Crossrail, Caxton FX, HomeAway UK, Owners Direct, Direct Ferries Orbus Software, Increase the Wedge, NetBooster, Somo Global, TradeDoubler, Wunder2, uSwitch, Upmystreet.com, Reef Television, Rentokil Initial, AkzoNobel, Monica Vinader and IWG. IWG provides serviced offices to a number of companies.[2] The building once contained the head offices of British United Airways.[3]

The building is a five-minute walk from London Victoria station (rail and tube) and a ten-minute walk from Victoria Coach Station. The surrounding area was redeveloped between 2003 and 2005,[4] with a new shopping and refreshments area called Cardinal Place. The building also has a gym in the basement.[5]

The building is part of the Cardinal Place Estate, which includes the shopping centre and development around the building. Retail establishments such as Marks & Spencer, Boots, Thorntons, Zara, Ha Ha Bar and Zizzi have taken retail space in the complex.

The ground floor has a portico arrangement of pillars which reflect the octagonal cross-section of the building.

The Portland House is substantially similar in design to the MetLife Building in New York City. The two buildings were under construction at the same time.

See also

References

  1. Bradley, Simon and Pevsner, Nikolaus, The Buildings of England: London 6: Westminster, Yale University Press, 2003, p. 719
  2. "Office Space at London Victoria, Spaces | Regus GB". www.regus.co.uk.
  3. "World Airline Directory." Flight International. 28 September 1967. 530.
  4. "Projects". Sir Robert McAlpine.
  5. http://www.lafitness.co.uk/gym/london-victoria

Sources

  • Bradley, Simon and Pevsner, Nikolaus (2003). The Buildings of England: London 6: Westminster. New Haven and London: Yale University Press Books. ISBN 0300095953.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
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