‘Exceptional’ office projects in city centre scoop pair of awards
AMAJOR renovation project and a brand new office building in Birmingham city centre have both been crowned double winners at an annual property awards.
10 Brindleyplace and One Centenary Way each won two awards at the British Council for Offices Midlands and Central Awards 2024, held at the ICC in Birmingham.
The annual awards recognise the best workplace projects in disciplines such as office design, fit out, operation and sustainability.
The new-look 10 Brindleyplace won the environmental, social and governance and refurbished/recycled workplace categories.
Completed last summer, the project combined the previously separate 8 and 10 Brindleyplace addresses into a single complex.
The 20-year-old buildings now have more than 217,000 sq ft of modern office accommodation, including a co-working facility called 10X run by London-based Spacemade.
Judges praised the regeneration scheme for including multiple sustainable and smart features which resulted in several industry accreditations, a 65 per cent reduction in energy demand and a focus on health and wellbeing amenities such as roof terraces and a gym.
One Centenary Way, on the £1.2 billion Paradise estate in Chamberlain Square, became the third office building to complete when it opened last autumn.
The building has 280,000 sq ft of office and leisure space across 13 storeys.
Crowned best commercial workplace, judges praised the ambition of the speculative scheme, including its sustainability credentials, which include a cycle hub with room for 450 bikes and which is open to the public,
not just the building’s tenants.
Built environment consultancy Arup not only worked on the project but is also one of its largest tenants after it relocated its 800-strong West Midlands team from Solihull at the end of last year.
Arup’s new regional hub was named best fit out of a workplace, with the panel recognising the close collaboration between occupier and developer in redesigning the building’s gas fire boilers to incorporate air source heat provision and smart gateways.
Judges also praised Arup’s use of recycled materials, minimal energy usage in unoccupied areas and support for inclusivity through a series of flexible workspaces.
Completing this year’s Midlands and Central winners were the new Cambridgeshire HQ of technology consultancy TTP (corporate workplace) and Rare’s Xbox gaming development studio in Twycross, Leicestershire (projects up to 2,500m2).
The winners from this and other UK regions will go forward to the BCO National Awards in London on October 8.
Lee Jones, partner at construction consultancy Quantem and chairman of the judges, said: “The calibre of this year’s awards has pushed the boundaries of workplace design.
“The increasing focus on carbon reduction in use and during construction and a true emphasis on the health and wellbeing of all who use workplaces has been outstanding.”