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View to the building on Sherwood Street from Denman Street

June 1, 2011. Click on the image to view larger photo.

Retained historic facade in the corner of Sherwood Street and Brewer Street

June 1, 2011

Sherwood Street

June 1, 2011

Sherwood Street

June 1, 2011

Sherwood Street

June 1, 2011

View to the building from Piccadilly Circus.

January 27, 2012

Corner of Glasshouse and Sherwood Street.

January 27, 2012

Sherwood Street

January 27, 2012

Sherwood Street

January 27, 2012

Sherwood Street

January 27, 2012

Brewer Street

January 27, 2012

Brewer Street

January 27, 2012

Quadrant 3

Address: Quadrant 3, Glasshouse Street, London W1A 4BZ
Type: Mixed use
Completion: November 2011
Flats: 9
Offices: 7
Retail: 1
Website: www.q3london.com
Viewed: 1957 times

Description

The 94-year-old Regent Palace Hotel is being redeveloped as part of the Crown Estate's plans to create a new identity for Regent Street.

Meeting the strict conditions imposed by heritage and planning bodies was the key to unlocking the development potential of this prominent Piccadilly site. The 1000-bedroom hotel is currently being replaced by seven floors of offices, a ground floor incorporating shops and nine residential units.

The hotel was a Grade II listed building, largely because of the quality of its art deco interiors. Half of the historic facades are being retained, while four glamorous 1930s entertainment venues are being completely restored within the redevelopment. Timber veneer, marble, brass, mirrors, ceilings, even wallpaper, from the Atlantic Bar & Grill, Titanic Restaurant, Dick's Bar and Chez Cup, have been carefully stripped from the building and labelled so the rooms can be put back together again like a jigsaw.

A high-tech energy centre to service the wider Regent Street Quadrant block is being installed on one of three basement levels. The energy centre is powered by a cutting-edge hydrogen fuel cell - the same technology used to power space shuttles. The cell works by turning natural gas into hydrogen and emits little more than air, making it a highly environmentally-friendly option. This project aims to set a new benchmark for sustainable central London development.

A new pedestrianised arcade, named Glasshouse Walk, will link the south-west end of Denman Street to Glasshouse Street, bringing new vibrancy to this part of Piccadilly.

Gross Area 420,000 sq ft (internal)
Office 200,000 sq ft
Retail 54,000 sq ft
Residential 9,500 sq ft (nine 1-3 bedroom units)

Source: Stanhope.plc, development manager

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Buildington Rating & Notes

arendusprojektid
2161
Location
1
Architecture
Condition
Plans
Transport
Environment
1

0.882

Development added by: Buildington
Published: 02. June 2011
2
kohv__devprjs_comments http://www.buildington.co.uk/new_developments/london_w1/glasshouse_street/quadrant_3/id/2161 http://www.buildington.co.uk/new developments/toggle comment visibility http://www.buildington.co.uk/new developments/ban comment ip project_id = 2161 15 1 comment_block
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