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Wood Wharf

Coordinates:51°30′9.55″N0°0′41.25″W / 51.5026528°N 0.0114583°W /51.5026528; -0.0114583
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Building complex in London, England

Wood Wharf
2014 artist impression of the development
Map
Interactive map of Wood Wharf
General information
LocationIsle of Dogs,London,United Kingdom
LandlordCanary Wharf Group
Website
www.group.canarywharf.com/portfolio/wood-wharf
Wood Wharf under construction on 8 July 2015

Wood Wharf is a 23 acres (9.3 ha) new-build mixed-use neighbourhood inLondon Docklands.[1] It is immediately east ofCanary Wharf on the northern quayside of the South Dock ofWest India Docks.[2] As of 2024[update], it is partially completed, with several buildings currently under construction and some developments paused.[3]

Wood Wharf includes offices, high-rise and mid-rise residential buildings and retail space.[1] When complete, it is expected to contain around 5 million square feet of space, including 2 million sq ft of office space, 3,330 residential homes, 9 acres (3.6 ha) of public spaces, and 380,000 sq ft of shops, restaurants, and amenities including a GP surgery, primary school and community centre.[1][4]

History

[edit]

Wood Wharf was part of thePort of London's West India Docks. In 1989, the disused docks were transferred from thePort of London Authority to theLondon Docklands Development Corporation.[5] In 1998, Wood Wharf was transferred toBritish Waterways,[6] and in 2012 the assets of British Waterways were transferred to theCanal & River Trust (CRT), who remain the freeholder of the main 20 acres (81,000 m2) site.

Following the closure of the West India Docks in the 20th century, the Wood Wharf area was used for light industry and warehousing, becoming Wood Wharf Business Park. In the early 21st century, some units were repurposed for leisure and sports.[7] The business park was sold by British Waterways to a joint partnership in financial year 2007–08.Canary Wharf Group plc purchased a 250-year lease for the site in January 2012.[2]

Early redevelopment plans

[edit]

In 2003, British Waterways issued a masterplan for a substantial, mixed used redevelopment of the site. The masterplan indicated a potential development size of 330,000 square metres (3,600,000 sq ft) commercial floorspace (offices, retail and restaurants), 120,000 square metres (1,300,000 sq ft) of residential use (approximately 1,500 units) and 10,000 square metres (110,000 sq ft) of hotel and serviced apartments. The masterplan was adopted by Tower Hamlets as interim guidance to support the current local plan.[8] In 2005, a consortium of British Waterways (50%), Canary Wharf Group (25%) andBallymore Properties (25%) established the Wood Wharf Partnership to develop the scheme withBerwin Leighton Paisner as legal advisors.[9]

In 2007, a new master plan was produced byRogers Stirk Harbour + Partners.[10][11] Tower Hamlets gave outline planning permission in October 2008.[12] The new master plan increased density, with more towers which were taller than in the previous plan. The plan aimed for at least one iconic residential tower and one iconic office tower, along with a glass-roofedhigh street hosting bars, shops, cafés and restaurants.

A reduction in demand during the2008 financial crisis led to these plans being shelved,[13] as Canary Wharf Group did not wish to proceed until it had completed and let all developments in progress elsewhere in the docklands estate, includingRiverside South,North Quay,Heron Quays West, and25 Bank Street.[14]

Final redevelopment plans

[edit]

In January 2012, Canary Wharf Group took 100% control of the project, paying British Waterways £52.5 million for their 50% stake and Ballymore £38 million for their 25% stake.[15][16] Under the agreement, Canary Wharf Group was granted a new 250-year lease from British Waterways, paying ground rent which will grow to £6 million per year.[2][17]

One Park Drive in 2021, one of the first apartment buildings to be completed.

Canary Wharf Group adjusted their strategy for the site to shift some emphasis from office developments to residential.[13] InitiallyTerry Farrell replaced Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners in leading the masterplanning,[18] andHerzog & de Meuron,Allies and Morrison andStanton Williams were appointed as architects for various elements of the scheme.[19] Eventually, Allies and Morrison produced the final masterplan, withAdamson_Associates asexecutive architect supported by Darling Associates, KPF, Herzog & de Meuron, Pilbrow & Partners, Stanton Williams Architects, Grid Architects, and Patel Taylor.[1][20]

The new masterplan included 30 buildings, comprising 4.9 million square feet of homes, offices and shops.[21][22][13]

Tower Hamlets council granted planning permission in July 2014,[21] and the scheme was approved by theMayor of London in December.[23] Permission required that around 25% of the new homes be affordable homes, and created a review mechanism to increase this allocation to around 40%.[23]

Construction

[edit]

Work on the Wood Wharf site was expected to start in autumn 2014, with the first buildings to be occupied at the end of 2018.[24] It was initially estimated to be completed in 2023.[1] A loan of £535 million was secured for the construction Wood Wharf Phase 3. Construction of the third phase has begun with completion of Phase 3 expected in Q1 2027.[25][26]

Reception

[edit]

The development of Wood Wharf won the Property Week Placemaking Award in 2022,[27] and a silver award in the Best Mixed-use Development category in 2023 WhatHouse? Awards.[28]

Buildings

[edit]
Buildings in the Wood Wharf development[29]
NameFloorsResidential unitsCompletionUseArchitectsImage
One Park Drive574842022Residential (private sale)Adamson Associates
Herzog & de Meuron
40 Charter Street535522027 (expected)[30]Residential (market rent)Kohn Pedersen Fox[31]
50–60 Charter Street497562025 (expected)Residential (market rent)GRID[32]
7 Brannan Street46912TBAResidential (student rent)[33]Howells[34]
10 Park Drive423452020Residential (private sale)[35]Stanton Williams[36]
10 George Street373272020Residential (market rent)[37]GRID[38]
70 Charter Street292027 (expected)Residential (discount market rent)Darling Associates[39]
30 Harbord Square271762021Residential (discount market rent)[40][41]Allies & Morrison[42]
One Charter Street202792024AparthotelHTA[43]
15 Water Street14N/A2021Offices
Hotel[44]
20 Water Street14N/A2021Offices
Ground floor retail[45]
8 Water Street131742020[46]Residential (market rent)
Ground floor retail
Stanton Williams; JRA[47]
3 and 15 West Lane132972025AparthotelHTA[48]
8 Harbord Square12822024Residential (private sale)Karakusevic Carson[49]
50 Harbord Square12762021Residential (social rent)[40]
Retail and community facilities
Patel Taylor[50]
65 Harbord Square11672021Residential (social rent)[40]
Retail and community facilities
Patel Taylor[50]
13 Brannan Street9722027 (expected)Residential (affordable)
Retail and community facilities
Darling Associates[51]
20 Brannan Street4N/A2022Primary School[52]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcdehttps://group.canarywharf.com/portfolio/wood-wharf/ Wood Wharf, Canary Wharf Group PLC, Retrieved 26 April 2018
  2. ^abc"Canary Wharf Group plc acquires full ownership of Wood Wharf Partnership". Canary Wharf Group plc. 18 January 2012. Retrieved31 December 2013.
  3. ^"Canary Wharf struggles to reinvent itself as tenants slip away in era of hybrid work". Financial Times.
  4. ^"Wood Wharf Community Centre – Operator - Request for Proposals 2025"(PDF).
  5. ^"NOTE ON REMOVAL OF CERTAIN DOCKS FROM THE PLA'S JURISDICTION"(PDF).
  6. ^"The London Docklands Development Corporation (Transfer of Functions) Order 1998".www.legislation.gov.uk.
  7. ^"Committee"(PDF). Tower Hamlets London Borough Council.
  8. ^"Wood Wharf masterplan (2003)". Tower Hamlets. Retrieved31 December 2013.
  9. ^Gemma Westacott (26 September 2005)."Wood Wharf hands £2bn Docklands deal to BLP". The Lawyer. Retrieved31 December 2013.
  10. ^Wood Wharfhttps://www.rsh-p.com/projects/wood-wharf/ Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners LLP, Retrieved 26 April 2018
  11. ^Masterplanning 2017, Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners,https://www.rsh-p.com/assets/publications/RSHP_masterplanning.pdf Retrieved 26 April 2018
  12. ^Will Henley (10 October 2008)."Rogers' east London Wood Wharf masterplan wins outline planning consent". Building. Retrieved31 December 2013.
  13. ^abcDaniel Thomas (10 December 2013)."Canary Wharf expansion plans to include 3,000 homes". Financial Times. Retrieved1 January 2014.
  14. ^http://www.leytonstonia.com/2010/12/with-jp-morgan-on-their-way-to-25-bank.html[dead link]
  15. ^Graham Ruddick (18 January 2012)."Canary Wharf pays £90m for adjacent site to expand by a third". The Telegraph. Retrieved1 January 2014.
  16. ^Rupert Neate (18 January 2012)."Canary Wharf Group in £90m derelict land deal".The Guardian. Retrieved1 January 2014.
  17. ^"Osborne Clarke advises British Waterways on Wood Wharf deal". Osborne Clarke. 20 January 2012. Retrieved1 January 2014.
  18. ^Richard Waite (16 September 2012)."Rogers out, Farrell in at Wood Wharf". Architects' Journal. Retrieved1 January 2014.
  19. ^"Canary Wharf Group appoints Individual Building Architects for Wood Wharf". Canary Wharf Group. 24 January 2013. Retrieved1 January 2014.
  20. ^"Canary Wharf v 2.0".Allies and Morrison. Retrieved12 March 2025.
  21. ^ab"PA/13/02966/P0".development.towerhamlets.gov.uk.Tower Hamlets London Borough Council.Archived from the original on 23 May 2020. Retrieved23 May 2020.
  22. ^Mike Brook (11 December 2013)."Canary Wharf submits Wood Wharf Masterplan to Tower Hamlets Council". The Docklands and East London Advertiser. Retrieved1 January 2014.
  23. ^ab"London Mayor Approves Huge Wood Wharf Scheme". OBAS Group.
  24. ^Julia Kollewe (22 July 2014)."Canary Wharf spreads east with new towers and 3,000 homes planned".The Guardian. Retrieved24 August 2014.
  25. ^"Canary Wharf Group Secures 'Largest Development Loan in UK'".London Build 2025. Retrieved8 August 2025.
  26. ^"Wood Wharf".Canary Wharf Group. Retrieved8 August 2025.
  27. ^CWG’s Wood Wharf Wins Property Week Placemaking Award 2022 – 10.06.22Canary Wharf Group plc. 10 June 2022. Retrieved 24 December.
  28. ^CWG Wins Two Awards at the WhatHouse? Awards 2023 – 20.11.23Canary Wharf Group plc. 20 November 2023. Retrieved 24 December 2023.
  29. ^"CANARY WHARF DEVELOPMENT UPDATE"(PDF).Canary Wharf.
  30. ^"40 Charter Street - The Skyscraper Center".www.skyscrapercenter.com.
  31. ^"40 Charter Street".KPF.
  32. ^"50-60 Charter Street - New Development - Wood Wharf, London E14".www.buildington.co.uk.
  33. ^Mellor, Joe (14 May 2025)."Sadiq Khan's team approves Canary Wharf Group's Wood Wharf PBSA".PBSA News.
  34. ^"New student accommodation at Wood Wharf".Howells.
  35. ^"10 Park Drive Completion, a Major Milestone for Wood Wharf - 18.06.20".Canary Wharf Group.
  36. ^"10 Park Drive".New London Architecture.
  37. ^"10 George Street - Building - Wood Wharf, London E14".www.buildington.co.uk.
  38. ^"10 George Street | GRID Architects & Interiors".Archello.
  39. ^"70 Charter Street".New London Architecture.
  40. ^abc"Affordable Apartments to Rent - Canary Wharf Group Affordable Housing & Apartments to Rent In Canary Wharf".Canary Wharf Group.
  41. ^Lockhart, Alastair (22 October 2021)."First look inside new Canary Wharf flats that only cost £1,100 a month".My London.
  42. ^"30 Harbord Square - Building - Wood Wharf, London E14".www.buildington.co.uk.
  43. ^"One Charter Street - New Development - Wood Wharf, London E14".www.buildington.co.uk.
  44. ^"15 Water Street - Building - Wood Wharf, London E14".www.buildington.co.uk.
  45. ^"20 Water Street - Building - Wood Wharf, London E14".www.buildington.co.uk.
  46. ^"8 Water Street - Building - Wood Wharf, London E14".www.buildington.co.uk.
  47. ^Architects, John Robertson; Ltd, AVCO Productions."10 Park Drive & 8 Water Street".www.jra.co.uk.
  48. ^Williams, Fran (10 July 2025)."HTA Design completes two aparthotels for Canary Wharf".The Architects’ Journal.
  49. ^"8 Harbord Square - New Development - Wood Wharf, London E14".www.buildington.co.uk.
  50. ^ab"50 and 65 Harbord Square".Housing Design Awards.
  51. ^"13 Brannan Street".New London Architecture.
  52. ^Alam, Breerha (15 December 2021)."Mulberry to open brand new primary school in Wood Wharf, Isle of Dogs - Mulberry School for Girls".www.mulberryschoolforgirls.org.

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51°30′9.55″N0°0′41.25″W / 51.5026528°N 0.0114583°W /51.5026528; -0.0114583

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