Too good to waste: how Make recycled an old building to create a new one

30 Duke Street side elevation CGI

Source: GPE/The Boundary

Thomas Lane reports on how 30 Duke Street reuses steel, glass, aluminium and Portland stone from the building there before

The protracted planning battle over the carbon emissions from the redevelopment of Marks & Spencer’s flagship Oxford Street store and the introduction of carbon offset pricing by Westminster council and the City of London has prompted a huge shift towards refurbishment over redevelopment in the capital over the past five years. And many in the industry – particularly large developers, designers, consultants and contractors – are keen to reduce the carbon emissions from construction. 

But what about those buildings that are beyond viable refurbishment because they are in a terrible condition, or where the floor to ceiling heights are impossibly low? Sometimes, it may even be more carbon efficient to demolish a building rather than spend a lot of time and resources trying to bring a basket case up to scratch.

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