124 Horseferry Road | |||||||||
Native Name: | Channel 4 Headquarters building | ||||||||
Alternate Names: | Channel 4 building | ||||||||
Architectural Style: | High-tech architecture | ||||||||
Location: | City of Westminster | ||||||||
Address: | Channel Four Television, 124–126 Horseferry Road, London SW1P 2TX | ||||||||
Coordinates: | 51.4959°N -0.1329°W | ||||||||
Start Date: | 1990 | ||||||||
Destruction Date: | --> | ||||||||
Cost: | £38,500,000 | ||||||||
Owner: | Channel Four Television Corporation | ||||||||
Antenna Spire: | 43m (141feet)[1] | ||||||||
Roof: | 37m (121feet) | ||||||||
Floor Count: | 4 | ||||||||
Floor Area: | 15000sqm | ||||||||
Architecture Firm: | Richard Rogers and Partners Project Architects:[2] Marco Goldschmied and John Young (Project Partners) Mark Darbon (Project Lead) Richard Rogers Graham Stirk Mike Davies Mike Fairbrass Stephen Light Avtar Lotay John Lowe Andrew Morris Stephen Spence Martin White | ||||||||
Structural Engineer: | Arup Group | ||||||||
Quantity Surveyor: | Davis Langdon & Everest / Mott Green Wall | ||||||||
Unit Count: | --> | ||||||||
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124 Horseferry Road is the Grade II listed London headquarters for the British television broadcaster, Channel 4. It is located in the City of Westminster, and includes 100 residential apartments. The building was opened on 6 July 1994 and was designed by Richard Rogers and Partners. In January 2024, Channel 4 announced it would sell the building as part of cost-cutting measures.[3]
After a selection process during the autumn of 1990, Channel 4 invited three architectural firms to take part in a competition to design their 15000sqm headquarters building on the south-eastern corner of Chadwick Street and Horseferry Road in a mixed development area of Westminster.[4] [5] The site consisted of an abandoned 10m (30feet) deep basement of a proposed 1970s post office building.[5] The architectural brief also incorporated a requirement for a residential development of two blocks of flats including 100 apartments, an underground car park and a small public landscaped park.[4] [5] The three firms chosen were Bennetts Associates, Richard Rogers and Partners and James Stirling.[4]
The Richard Rogers Partnership was chosen from the shortlist. This was the first major building that they had designed since the Lloyd's building (1978–1986). Construction began in 1990 and was completed in 1994. It was built on a design and build basis. The building consists of two four-storey office blocks that are connected to a central entrance block in an L shape.[5] The entrance has a concave glazed wall.[6] The building is finished in grey steel cladding, which is perforated by red-ochre steel struts. John Young, the project architect, said that the colour was "taken from a paint sample provided by the City of San Francisco: it is the same colour as the Golden Gate Bridge".[7]
The building was listed at Grade II by Historic England on 23 March 2023.