30 South Colonnade

30 South Colonnade
Alternative names Thomson Reuters Building
General information
Location

Canary Wharf
London, E14
United Kingdom

51°30′15″N 0°1′13″W / 51.50417°N 0.02028°W / 51.50417; -0.02028Coordinates: 51°30′15″N 0°1′13″W / 51.50417°N 0.02028°W / 51.50417; -0.02028
Completed 1991
Height 62m
Technical details
Floor count 13
Floor area 305,627 sq ft (28,000 m2)
Design and construction
Architect Kohn Pedersen Fox

30 South Colonnade is a commercial building in Canary Wharf, London. It occupies the FC-6 plot from the original Canary Wharf plans. Kohn Pedersen Fox were appointed as architect and the building was completed in 1991.[1] It is 62 metres (203 ft) tall, with a total of 13 floors - a lower ground floor, ground floor, mezzanine level and 10 upper floors.

Owners

Canary Wharf Group sold the building for £200m to German fund manager KanAm Grund in December 2005.[2] In May 2015, KanAm instructed CBRE and JLL to prepare the building for sale, with an asking price of £215m.[3]

Tenants

Reuters agreed to lease the majority of the building in 2005, their lease currently runs to May 2020. The building serves as Thomson Reuters Corporation's European headquarters.[4] As part of Reuters' relocation, Perkins + Will carried out extensive refurbishment of the building, including installing a 100 metre long ticker around the building to display news and stock prices.[5] Five retail tenants make up the remainder of the building's tenants.

Prior to this, the building was occupied by London Underground Ltd.[6]

References

  1. Hobhouse, Hermione (1994). "Modern Docklands: Gazetteer of modern non-housing developments". Survey of London: Volumes 43 and 44, Poplar, Blackwall and Isle of Dogs. London County Council.
  2. "Canary Wharf disposals continue with Reuters HQ". Property Week. 2005-12-16.
  3. Buckley, James (2015-05-13). "KanAm to sell £215m Canary gem". CoStar News.
  4. "Landmark central London investment opportunity". The Investor. Jones Lang LaSalle.
  5. "Work: Thomson Reuters London". Perkins+Will.
  6. Hamnett, Chris (2003). Unequal City: London in the Global Arena. Routledge. p. 221. ISBN 0203580249.
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