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One St Peter's Square

One St Peter's Square
Office building and St Peter's Square, Manchester.jpg
One St Peter's from The Cenotaph
General information
Status Complete
Type High rise office
Architectural style Modern classical
Location St Peter's Square, Manchester,
Greater Manchester,
England, UK
Coordinates 53°28′38″N 2°14′42″W / 53.477205°N 2.244991°W / 53.477205; -2.244991Coordinates: 53°28′38″N 2°14′42″W / 53.477205°N 2.244991°W / 53.477205; -2.244991
Current tenants KPMG
Construction started May 2012
Completed September 2014
Cost £60 million
Height 60 metres (200 ft)
Technical details
Floor count 14
Floor area 268,000 sq ft (24,900 m2)
Design and construction
Architect Glenn Howells
Main contractor Carillion
Website
onestpeterssquare.com
References

One St Peter's Square is a high rise office building in Manchester, England. It is situated in St Peter's Square in the city centre.

The previous building on the site was the concrete Elisabeth House, an office block which was built in 1960 and had weathered badly. It was originally meant to be clad in stone to keep with its context but for financial reasons the exposed concrete was not clad. Demolition of Elisabeth House, by now derelict, began in late 2011 and the building was fully removed by April 2012.

The building was first proposed in 2009, and was granted planning permission in 2010. The scheme was approved in July 2011, and a 25% pre-let of the building by professional services firm KPMG enabled construction to begin. One St Peter's consists of 268,000 sq ft (24,900 m2) of Grade A office space.

Construction began in May 2012 and was due to be completed in early 2014 to coincide with completion of the Central Library and Town Hall redevelopment. It is currently undergoing internal fit out and was completed in late 2014. Concern over the building's height surfaced during the construction of the core. One local observer said the building "is at least four stories too tall on the site and the lift core alone makes the neighbours cower". The building fronts onto Midland Hotel, Central Library and Town Hall Extension – all Grade II* listed buildings.

The columns supporting the building are on the outside, thus avoiding unwelcome columns in the office space. The exterior columns are clad in limestone rather than concrete. The choice of limestone was exacerbated by the need to remain in context with listed buildings in the vicinity and the desire to avoid weathering which is often seen in concrete. A three-storey glazed balcony tops the building and features a curved, overhanging roof complete with spotlights.


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