London’s newest skyscraper as tall as The Shard approved in major city hotspot
A towering new 74-storey skyscraper the exact same height as The Shard has been given the go-ahead by the City of London.
The high-rise tower will be 309.6 metres (1016ft) tall and join The Shard as the tallest building in the UK, as well as the tallest in Western Europe.
Officially called 1 Undershaft, the mega-structure will host Europe’s highest publicly accessible viewing gallery, as well as a ‘classroom in the sky’ for children at levels 72 and 73.
The new skyscraper will replace the existing 118 metre tall St Helen’s tower on St Helen’s Square and will provide almost 13 per cent of the office space required by the City by 2040, at more than 150,000 square metres.
Approved close to a decade after plans for the project were first put forward, the City of London said 1 Undershaft will ‘help to deliver on the demands for economic growth’and ‘contribute to the City’s growing cultural offer and tourist appeal.’
Just a 20 minute walk away from The Shard, the buildings will be the same height to the centimetre, while 1 Undershaft will over take 22 Bishopsgate (278 metres) to be the tallest building in the City.
The Civil Aviation Authority restricts the height of towers in the capital to 309.6m because of the number of airports in and around London.
The new skyscraper will also cash in on the popularity of rooftop gardens in London, such as Sky Garden and 120 Fenchurch Street, by offering its own unique 2,500 sqm podium garden 42 metres above street level.
1 Undershaft will also collaborate with the London Museum to host a 7-day-a-week children’s educational area and public space all the way up on the 72nd and 73rd levels.
Top 10 tallest buildings in the world
1. Burj Khalifa, Dubai – 2,717ft
2. Merdeka, Kuala Lumpur Malaysia – 2,227ft
3. Shanghai Tower, Shanghai – 2,073ft
4. Abraj Al-Bait Clock Tower, Saudi Arabia – 1,972ft
5. Ping An International Finance Centre, Shenzhen – 1,966ft
6. Lotte World Tower, Seoul – 1,819ft
7. One World Trade Center, New York – 1,776ft
8. Guangzhou CTF Finance Centre, Guangzhou – 1740ft
8. Tianjin CTF Finance Centre, Tianjin – 1,740ft
10. China Zun, Beijing – 1,731ft
Historic England warned that the plans would ‘seriously degrade the scale and character of the public realm around the site’ and have a ‘harmful impact’ on the Tower of London World Heritage Site.
Latest London news
- Plan reveals how £15,000,000,000,000 tunnel could connect London and New York
- London's iconic Regency Cafe where Hollywood movie was filmed up for sale for £170,000
- Packed train made more hellish for commuters thanks to man's strange seat choice
To get the latest news from the capital visit Metro's London news hub.
Despite these objections, the project was approved by 16 votes to 7, with completion of the building work expected in the early 2030s.
Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.
For more stories like this, check our news page.