Historic England raises no objection to scheme in Maritime Greenwich world heritage site
Stride Treglown and Purcell have been given the green light for plans to refurbish and extend a grade II-listed building within the Maritime Greenwich world heritage site.
The University of Greenwich鈥檚 proposals to add a three-storey building to the side of the 1920s Devonport House, which neighbours the National Maritime Museum, were approved by Greenwich council鈥檚 planning committee last week.
The scheme, which Stride Treglown is working on as lead architect with Purcell as conservation architect, will see the historic former nurses home restored and converted into educational use.
An existing former conference centre on the site, built in the early 2000s and now used by the university as teaching space, will be demolished under the plans to make way for the 4,000 sq m new extension.
This will be linked to Devonport House by a glazed atrium described by Stride Treglown as an 鈥渋nternal street鈥, with the facade of the listed building left exposed.
Historic England raised no objection to the plans, which it described as a 鈥渄iscrete and contextual addition to the townscape in heritage-sensitive views鈥.
The new building will contain a 150-seat lecture space, a 90-seat lecture space and a former back of house area which will be transformed into a breakout area and exhibition space.
A further 4,000 sq m of internal space in Devonport House will be refurbished, and a grade II-listed war memorial relocated to a garden at the front of the site.
The project team also includes project manager Gardiner & Theobald, QS Fanshawe, planning consultant Turley, multidisciplinary engineer Hoare Lea, landscape architect Farrer Huxley and civil and structural engineer Alan Baxter.
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