Dezeen Magazine

Exterior of 100 Liverpool Street from Broadgate Circle

Hopkins Architects adapts deep-plan office in London to suit "modern 24/7 lifestyle"

Hopkins Architects has reused elements of a 1980s office block to create the commercial 100 Liverpool Street building in London, which is shortlisted for this year's RIBA Stirling Prize.

Commissioned by British Land, the project was developed by Hopkins Architects in collaboration with local firm Universal Design Studio, with the aim of creating a contemporary building offering work, retail and restaurant spaces.

London skyline
Hopkins Architects has created the 100 Liverpool Street building in London

The 100 Liverpool Street project is one of six vying to win this year's RIBA Stirling Prize.

On top of transforming a dated building, the project also forms a gateway to the recently reinvigorated Broadgate Estate – an office and retail destination beside Liverpool Street Station.

Tiered rooftop terraces of London office
The building is shortlisted for this year's RIBA Stirling Prize

"The brief asked for a high quality, modern and flexible commercial office building that responded to the modern 24/7 lifestyle," Hopkins Architects told Dezeen.

"The building was to be as sustainable as possible with a significant increase to the retail and restaurant offer that enhanced the public realm and that created an appropriate gateway to the revamped Broadgate Estate."

Top levels of 100 Liverpool Street offices
It was built partly from the structure of a 1980s office

The original 100 Liverpool Street building was built in the 1980s by Arup Associates in response to the booming banking industry.

It had a stone-clad facade and deep-plan floors, measuring 40 metres deep at the narrowest point, which restricted outward views and natural daylight inside.

Podium of 100 Liverpool Street by Hopkins Architects
It has a curved and tiered exterior

The updated building comprises 48,000 square metres of flexible office spaces on its upper floors. These are raised on a podium containing restaurants and retail spaces.

Visually separating the public spaces from the offices is a collonaded walkway that wraps around the building.

Glass and aluminium facade detail
The stone facade was replaced with a glass and aluminium system

Hopkins Architects opted to retain and refurbish a large proportion of the original structure rather than demolish it.

All of the original foundations were preserved alongside half of the superstructure, allowing the studio to minimise material consumption while creating "what feels like a new building".

Retail spaces at 100 Liverpool Street
The base of the building contains retail and restaurants

"The design options were either to demolish or to undertake a significant refurbishment," the studio explained.

"It was necessary to replace 50 per cent of the superstructure in order to reorganise the internal layout of the building to make it work better."

Office atrium with staircase on one side
Hopkins Architects added a large atrium

To reduce the deep plan, Hopkins Architects moved the building cores away from the facade, where they were originally placed. This helped to reduce the size of the office spaces inside, making them more flexible while maximising natural light.

An atrium with a statement staircase was also added to the heart of the building to bring in daylight and introduce an "orientation space".

Atrium at 100 Liverpool Street by Hopkins Architects
The atrium helps to bring light into the building

In an effort to limit the carbon footprint of the new construction, the studio avoided the use of concrete where possible. The new superstructure is made predominantly from steel and composite steel frames.

Where concrete was required, the studio specified ground granulated blast furnace slag (GGBS) as a lower-carbon cement substitute.

View up into oval office atrium
The atrium features a staircase

As a result, the embodied carbon of the project is "significantly below current targets for new build office buildings", the studio claims.

Overall, Hopkins Architects has calculated that the building's embodied carbon footprint from materials and construction is 389 kilograms of CO2 per square metre, compared to the 600 kilograms set out as a 2020 target in the LETI Embodied Carbon Primer report.

Atrium with statement staircase
This central space is intended to help orientate visitors

The building is also "extremely efficient" in terms of its energy use due to the size of its facade compared to the depth of the building, Hopkins Architects says.

"The deep-plan form of the building means that the facade area is extremely low for the accommodation provided," the practice explained.

"This ratio, known as the form factor, is a key driver of efficiency and therefore energy-in-use on every project. And on 100 Liverpool Street, it is extremely efficient."

Glazed office lobby in London
The lobbies are designed to facilitate meetings

New heat recovery systems, which allow waste heat to be used to warm the building's hot water, also help reduce energy demand.

As part of the project, Hopkins Architects replaced the building's original stone facade with a lightweight system composed of aluminium and glass that appears to be almost entirely transparent.

Entrance lobby at 100 Liverpool Street
Universal Design Studio helped develop the interior design

Approximately 40 per cent of the facade is opaque and lined with insulation to help minimise solar gain and heat loss.

By reducing the weight of the facade, the studio was able to extend the building's floor slabs and introduce three more storeys without updating the foundations.

Concrete wall panels
The ground floor lobby is lined with concrete panels

The floor slabs were extended to soften the form of the building, creating "a more sinuous facade that responded to the flow of people", the studio said.

In contrast, the top five levels of the building were stepped back from the edge to form planted terraces and outdoor spaces, all with step-free access.

The interior design for the project, developed in collaboration with Universal Design Studio, is focused primarily on the building's entrance and second-floor lobby.

Universal Design Studio's aim for these areas was "to create active spaces, which are inviting and encourage use".

London office interior by Hopkins Architects
Circulation routes are mapped out in terrazzo flooring

In the main double-height lobby, walls are lined with concrete panels that form a backdrop to leather seating and shelving, and circulatory routes are mapped out in terrazzo flooring.

Above, the second-floor lobby is lined with whitewashed oak panelling and can be accessed via an escalator in the atrium.

Different seating styles feature throughout the two lobbies, allowing them to be used for everything from informal meetings to team collaborations.

A highlight of the interior is a site-specific ceramic artwork by local artist Lubna Chowdhary, which references the history of the site and its railway landscape.

Entrance to 100 Liverpool Street
The building was designed to reinvigorate the surrounding public realm

The 100 Liverpool Street project is one of six buildings shortlisted for this year's Stirling Prize, which will all be featured on Dezeen ahead of the winning project being revealed next week at RIBA's London headquarters.

Following the shortlist announcement, climate action group ACAN accused RIBA of championing buildings that exaggerate their sustainable credentials, citing 100 Liverpool Street as an example.

Although Hopkins Architects reused the existing structure, ACAN argued that it would have been more sustainable to avoid tearing down any part of the original building.

The photography is courtesy of Hopkins Architects.

More images and plans

Floor plan of 100 Liverpool Street by Hopkins Architects
Floor plan
Floor plan of 100 Liverpool Street by Hopkins Architects
Floor plan
Floor plan of 100 Liverpool Street by Hopkins Architects
Floor plan
Floor plan of 100 Liverpool Street by Hopkins Architects
Floor plan
Section of 100 Liverpool Street by Hopkins Architects
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Section of 100 Liverpool Street by Hopkins Architects
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Illustration of 100 Liverpool Street by Hopkins Architects
Illustration
Exterior of 100 Liverpool Street by Hopkins Architects
Exterior of 100 Liverpool Street by Hopkins Architects
Exterior of 100 Liverpool Street by Hopkins Architects
Interior of 100 Liverpool Street by Hopkins Architects
Exterior of 100 Liverpool Street by Hopkins Architects
Interior of 100 Liverpool Street by Hopkins Architects
Interior of 100 Liverpool Street by Hopkins Architects
Interior of 100 Liverpool Street by Hopkins Architects