David Low, Group Property Manager for London and Manchester Assurance, alongside Martin Laing, Laing Group Chairman, cutting the ribbon at the handover ceremony at the Helicon building, Finsbury Pavement

Date:
21 Jun 1996
Location:
The Helicon, 1 South Place, Finsbury Pavement, Islington, Greater London Authority, EC2A 1AT
Reference:
JLP01/11/60796/03
Type:
Photograph (Negative)
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Description

The Helicon was named after the sacred mountain of the muses in Greek mythology and in reference to a bookshop called 'Temple of the Muses' that previously occupied part of the site. Laing began work on the foundations in May 1994 and the project was complete by June 1996. The building is divided between office and retail space, the lower 3 floors are occupied by Marks and Spencer whilst the 6 above are office accommodation. Designed to maximise natural light and be energy efficient the triple glazed curtain walls are vented in summer to allow cooling through air circulation and closed in winter to provide insulation. An automated system of metal louvres within the curtain wall close and open in response to the sun to regulate temperatures inside the building. The post-tension technique of construction of the concrete frame allowed the size of the columns and depth of floor slabs to be reduced and maximise usable floor space. The building won a CONSTRUCT Award for Innovation and Best Practice in 2000.

This image was catalogued as part of the Breaking New Ground Project in partnership with the John Laing Charitable Trust in 2019-20.

Content

This is part of the Series: JLP01/11 John Laing Photographic Collection Colour Negatives and Contact Sheets; within the Collection: JLP01 John Laing Photographic Collection

Rights

© Historic England Archive. John Laing Photographic Collection

Keywords

Concrete, Glass, Steel, Late 20th Century Office, Late 20th Century Department Store, Ceremony, People Posed