Kings Tower, Sheffield

Future residential skyscraper in Sheffield, England

53°23′00″N 1°27′56″W / 53.3834°N 1.4656°W / 53.3834; -1.4656Construction startedSummer 2022 (planned)Completed2023 (planned)Cost£40 million (projected)HeightRoof120 m (390 ft)Technical detailsFloor count40Lifts/elevators2Design and constructionArchitect(s)Hodder + PartnersDeveloperSFGE Properties

Kings Tower is an approved skyscraper[a] that will be located on Castle Square at the junction of High Street and Angel Street in Sheffield, South Yorkshire. With a planned height of 120 m (390 ft) once completed,[1] Kings Tower will overtake Code Sheffield (once that is completed), and St Pauls Tower (current tallest building) as the tallest building in Sheffield and in Yorkshire.[2] Plans for the tower were submitted by architects Hodder + Partners in September 2020, calling initially for a 39-storey tower.[3] Planning permission was granted in December 2020,[4] and construction is planned to complete in 2023.[3] Amended plans were submitted in late 2022, adding a 40th floor to the project.

Kings Tower will be located in the Castlegate area of Sheffield City Centre, on a site bounded by High Street to the south, Angel Street to the west, King Street to the north and the EasyHotel building on Haymarket to the east. The area has undergone a wider redevelopment in the late 2010s and early 2020s as part of the Castlegate Grey to Green Scheme and the Castle Market redevelopment. The site is served by Castle Square tram stop on the Sheffield Supertram network.

Site history

The site of Kings Tower is part of the Castlegate Quarter, the historic centre of Sheffield associated with the former Sheffield Castle at the confluence of the Rivers Sheaf and Don. Located up the hill from the castle, the site was occupied by a town marketplace established by Royal Charter as early as 1296. The existing market on the site was demolished and redeveloped as the Fitzalan Market in 1786, which was subsequently refurbished in 1855.[5]

With the construction of Castle Hill Market (which would later become the redeveloped Castle Market) in 1930, Fitzalan Market was demolished and the site was replaced by a retail building which was completed in 1932.[5] This was known as the Burton Building, as the ground floor retail space was occupied by Burton Menswear, while the upper floors contained a billiard room and a roller skating rink.[5]

During World War II, the Burton Building was badly damaged by Luftwaffe air raids during the Sheffield Blitz of 1940.[5] The badly-damaged building remained derelict for over a decade, as the Sheffield Corporation could not afford funds for a replacement and, in later years, had drawn up plans to replace the site with a roundabout at the head of Arundel Gate. Plans for the roundabout were subsequently scaled down to form the smaller Hole in the Road scheme at Castle Square, and the site again became available for redevelopment. In 1962, the Burton Building was demolished and replaced by a Peter Robinson's department store.[5]

The first branch of Topshop was opened in the third floor of the Robinson's Building in 1964.[5] Peter Robinson's subsequently ceased trading in 1974, with the upper floors becoming a C&A store while the ground floor was occupied by a furniture store operated by Waring & Gillow. By the 1990s, these retailers had moved out and the entire building was occupied by Primark.[5] Following the construction of their new-build store across the city centre on The Moor in 2016, Primark vacated the Robinson's Building and it once again became unoccupied.[5]

Design and planning

The design consists of a central 40-storey residential tower on the plot of land previously occupied by Primark in the Robinson's Building, which will be demolished to make way for the skyscraper.[6] The adjacent Kings Buildings to the immediate east, currently occupied by an EasyHotel, will be retained and refurbished, with an area of the second floor of the building that is presently unoccupied being amalgamated into the Kings Tower residential scheme.[6]

Kings Tower is planned to contain 206 residential apartments.[6] There will be a provision for retail space on the ground floor. King Street will be refurbished, retaining its pedestrianised market stalls.[6] Sitting in a prominent location in the city centre on the edge of Castle Square at the head of both Arundel Gate and the High Street, Kings Tower will feature a curved façade on these two sides featuring large windows separated by narrow fluted columns of Portland stone.[7] The remainder of the building, including much of the lower floors, will be clad in white brick slips to match, accentuated with smaller, randomly placed windows.[7] The overall scheme is forecast to cost £40 million.[7]

Construction

No formal start date for construction has yet been given, although a tentative start date of "summer 2022" and ending date of 2023 has been stated in planning documents.[7] As of February 2024 work has not started.

Notes

  1. ^ Under the Emporis Standards Committee, a skyscraper is defined as a multi-storey building which is at least 100 m (330 ft). Any building from 35 to 100 m (115 to 328 ft) tall is generally considered to be a high rise building.

References

  1. ^ "Kings Tower". Emporis. Archived from the original on 23 May 2022. Retrieved 23 May 2022.
  2. ^ "Sheffield looks to the sky". Sheffield Tribune. 26 July 2021. Retrieved 23 May 2022.
  3. ^ a b "Kings Tower, Sheffield". Skyscraper Center. Retrieved 23 May 2022.
  4. ^ "Planning – Application Summary – 20/03193/FUL". Sheffield. Retrieved 23 May 2022.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h Poole, David (23 December 2020). "King's Tower". Sheffielder. Retrieved 23 May 2022.
  6. ^ a b c d Williams, Molly (9 December 2020). "'Striking' skyscraper to be built on former Primark site in Sheffield city centre". Sheffield Star. Retrieved 23 May 2022.
  7. ^ a b c d Morby, Aaron. "Green light for 39-storey Sheffield tower". Construction Enquirer. Retrieved 23 May 2022.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Buildings in Sheffield, England
Civic and institutionalCommercialEducationalIndustrialLeisure and entertainmentReligious
ResidentialSportingTransportOther structuresLists of buildings
  • Demolished buildings are shown in italics
  • v
  • t
  • e
Buildings over 100 metres in the United Kingdom
Completed
Birmingham
Brighton
Leeds
Liverpool
London
Manchester
Portsmouth
Salford
Sheffield
Swansea
Woking
Under construction
Birmingham
  • Octagon (155m)
  • Glasswater Locks (123m)
  • Cortland Broad Street (111m)
  • Exchange Square Phase 2 (111m)
  • South Central Tower (100m)
  • Maker's Yard (100m)
Liverpool
London
  • One Nine Elms East (200m)
  • Harcourt Gardens (192m)
  • The Madison (184m)
  • Vauxhall Square North (168m)
  • Vauxhall Square South (168m)
  • One Nine Elms West (161m)
  • Heron Quays West 2/One Bank Street (147m)
  • Canada Water Building C4 (140m)
  • Heron Plaza (135m)
  • 101 George Street, Croydon (135m)
  • Two Fifty One (134m)
  • The Atlas Building (134m)
  • Keybridge Lofts (128m)
  • Nine Elms Point (126m)
  • One Crown Place South (123m)
  • The Stage Shoreditch (115m)
  • One Casson Square, Southbank Place (113m)
  • Ram Quarter Residential Tower (113m)
  • One Crown Place North (106m)
  • Upper Riverside (102m)
  • Stratford Central (101m)
Manchester
Salford
Sheffield
Approved
Belfast
  • Bedford Square Phase 2 (105m)
Birmingham
  • 100 Broad Street (193m)
  • One Eastside (155m)
  • The Tower Leaf (Irish Centre) (146m)
  • Great Charles Street (126m)
  • Martineau Galleries 2C (126m)
  • 211 Broad Street 'Barcode' (117m)
  • Beorma Tower (113m)
  • Upper Trinity Street (102m)
  • Lower Essex Square (100m)
Cardiff
  • Sapphire Tower (132m)
Leicester
  • Westbridge Hotel Tower (117m)
London
  • Riverside South (237m)
  • One Lansdowne Road East Tower (236m)
  • Heron Quays West (198m)
  • Riverside South (186m)
  • Ludgate House (161m)
  • 1 Merchant Square (150m)
  • 20 Blackfriars Road Residential Tower (141m)
  • Doon Street Tower (141m)
  • 54 Marsh Wall (140m)
  • Infinity Towers Building B (127m)
  • Convoys Wharf Tower 1 (116m)
  • Berwick Tower (115m)
  • Quill (109m)
  • Sampson House (108m)
  • Infinity Towers Building B (104m)
  • The Gateway Building (101m)
Manchester
  • Student Castle Tower 1 (168m)
  • Plot F Tower 1 (154m)
  • Plot F Tower 2 (154m)
  • Trinity Islands Tower 3 (146m)
  • Angel Meadow Park (128m)
  • Trinity Islands Tower 4 (120m)
  • Vision Tower (117m)
  • The Gasworks Tower 1 (107m)
  • Port Street Tower, Piccadilly Basin (100m)
Salford
  • Waterloo Place (173m)
  • Cotton Quay Tower 1 (158m)
  • Parkside at Colliers Yard (123m)
  • Cotton Quay, Salford Quays Tower 2 (123m)
Sheffield
  • Kings Tower (117m)
Proposed
Birmingham
  • Smallbrook Queensway 2 (180m)
  • Curzon Wharf, Tower 1 (172m)
  • Thorp Tower (170m)
  • Smallbrook Queensway 3 (155m)
  • Project Drvie (150m)
  • HUB (Snowhill Plaza) (150m)
  • Smallbrook Queensway 1 (140m)
  • Curzon Wharf, Tower 2 (134m)
  • Smithfield Tower (110m)
  • Axis Square Tower 2 (100m)
  • Warner's Fields (100m)
Glasgow
  • Savoy Centre Towers (110m)
Leeds
  • CEG Southbank Tower 1 (136m)
Liverpool
  • Ovatus 2 (147m)
London
  • 1 Undershaft (295m)
  • Quay House (235m)
  • North Quay Tower 1 (222m)
  • North Quay Tower 2 (212m)
  • North Quay Tower 3 (203m)
  • Vauxhall Cross Island (175m)
  • The Goodsyard (166m)
  • One Park Place (162m)
  • Project Skylines (160m)
  • Stratford Waterfront Tower 1 (160m)
  • Stratford Waterfront Tower 2 (160m)
  • 225 Marsh Wall (158m)
  • 30 Marsh Wall (139m)
  • 82 West India Road (136m)
  • East Village E20 Tower 1 (135m)
  • East Village E20 Tower 2 (135m)
  • Cuba Street Tower 1 (134m)
  • 20 Ropemaker Street (129m)
  • Cherry Park Tower 1 (121m)
  • Elephant and Castle Town Centre Tower 1 (121m)
  • Mondial House (120m)
  • Elephant and Castle Town Centre Tower 3 (117m)
  • Borough Triangle (115m)
  • Rudolf Place (115m)
  • 16-19 Hatfields/1-5 Paris Garden (110m)
  • The Culinary Quarter Tower 1 (110m)
  • North Quay Tower 4 (107m)
  • East Village E20 Tower 4 (103m)
Manchester
  • The Lighthouse (213m)
  • Park Place, 34 Great Jackson Street Tower 1 (172m)
  • Park Place, 34 Great Jackson Street Tower 2 (172m)
  • Plot C, Crown Street Tower 1 (154m)
  • Plot C, Crown Street Tower 2 (154m)
  • 1 Bridge Street Tower 1 (147m)
  • Plot C, Crown Street Tower 3 (139m)
  • Plot C, Crown Street Tower 4 (139m)
  • One Medlock Street Tower 1 (117m)
  • Northlight Tower (115m)
  • Great Northern Warehouse Tower 1 (112m)
  • VITA, Water Street Tower (108m)
  • Dulwich Street, Victoria North (102m)
Salford
  • X1 Michigan Towers Tower 1 (127m)
  • Trinity Point, Park Street Tower 1 (123m)
  • Gorton Street Tower, Greengate (112m)
  • X1 Michigan Towers Tower 2 (109m)
  • Middlewood Locks, Phase 4 Tower 1 (101m)