Graphite Square


Quality mixed-use living in London’s thriving Vauxhall with an industrial aesthetic

 

Working with Lambeth’s local plan, our approach has been to maximise the potential for public space
across the site and connect the currently
disjointed urban context

Budget

£100m

Area

280,000 sqft

Client

Angelo, Gordon & Co., BMOR, Kingshott Holdings

Location

London


Graphite Square is a new mixed use residential and office scheme designed to regenerate and create public value on a derelict site not currently meeting its full potential.

Our proposal will deliver approximately 20,000 sq m of brand new floor space including 5,000 sq m of office space over three floors, flexible ground and basement workspace units designed for local industry, a Methodist church, 160 new residential units and two public spaces that link currently disconnected local streets.

The history of Lambeth is one of factories and warehouses giving way to terraced houses and pleasure gardens, before its 21st century reinvention as the greenest borough in central London.

This is a private development that makes many and varied improvements to the public realm through new pocket parks, public routes to connect disjointed local streets and layers of privacy for office workers and home owners. It replaces a local eyesore whose dilapidation has dismayed its neighbors for decades with a compelling collection of new buildings that look to the future with a respectful nod to the local past.

The history of Lambeth is one of factories and warehouses giving way to terraced houses and pleasure gardens, before its 21st century reinvention as the greenest borough in central London.

This is a private development that makes many and varied improvements to the public realm through new pocket parks, public routes to connect disjointed local streets and layers of privacy for office workers and home owners. It replaces a local eyesore whose dilapidation has dismayed its neighbors for decades with a compelling collection of new buildings that look to the future with a respectful nod to the local past.