Greenwich Peninsula Masterplan, London
(1999 - present)
Home to London's Millennium Dome, the Greenwich Peninsula
is a highly constrained development site bearing the scars of a
diverse industrial history. Covering 74 hectares with 2.5 km of
riverside, its comprehensive regeneration marks one of the largest
planning applications ever submitted in London and presented significant
challenges to the design team.
At its heart was the need to create an urban quarter for London
embodying the concept of growth, renewal and rebirth while embracing
the existing infrastructure. Terry Farrell and Partners approached
the site as an urban grid laid out over the pattern of land ownership
responding to the geometry of the Dome. This created a network
of streets, squares and parks ensuring clear lines of connection
north to south and arching cross streets around the curve of the
Dome.
The immense scale of the project envisages 10,000 homes for 25,000
residents, 27,000 jobs, a leisure and entertainment destination
in the Dome centered around a new 26,000 capacity Arena, and enhanced
community and transport facilities. We created a series of distinctive
urban districts including four new residential neighbourhoods,
an office and retail district structured around the bus and tube
interchange, five public parks and twelve public squares.
The phasing of the masterplan is led by the rejuvenation of the
Dome, with residential development taking place simultaneously
at the north west and south west areas of the peninsula. In this
way, the full range of tenures is delivered throughout the evolution
of the masterplan.
The proposals demonstrate a comprehensive and sustainable approach
to the planned development of a whole new urban district. Local
planning approval was granted only 17 weeks after submission, followed
swiftly by the endorsement of the Greater London Authority and
Office of the Deputy Prime Minister, which signifies the strength
of support from local up to national level.
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