York Council Building, Office Architecture, Architect, Image, Hungate HQ Design

City of York Headquarters

English HQ Building in Yorkshire, north England design by RMJM architects, UK

14 Mar 2008

City of York Council HQ

New HQ Unveiled for City of York Council

City of York Council HQ

City of York Council today unveiled the first images of its proposed new headquarters in the Hungate area of the city. The proposed development will bring together nearly 1,500 council staff who are currently spread across 16 offices in the city. The consolidation of the council’s office accommodation will offer significant savings for the city and will release a number of historic buildings. Designed by UK-based, international architects RMJM, the headquarters building aims to be sustainable in terms of its economic, social and environmental impact and uses a number of low or zero carbon technologies.

The plans, which hope to go before the planning council in April 2008, were inspired by the architectural richness of York, from the delicate to the distinct. Architects RMJM embraced the opportunity to design a building in such a challenging, historical context.

Chris Jones, RMJM’s Project Director, commented: “This is a great opportunity for RMJM to work within the rich and diverse historic city of York for a progressive local authority to create a contemporary and sustainable public building.”

The new building will sit on the edge of the city’s historic centre and is part of the wider Hungate redevelopment.

Environmental sustainability was a priority throughout the design development and the project team came up with a unique way to celebrate the sustainable technology proposed for the building. The technology required for environmental components such as rain water harvesting will be housed in a ‘bio-tower’ adjacent to the main building. This unique feature celebrates the sustainable aspirations of the development as well as acting as a modern day campanile, a type of tower historically associated with civic buildings. The York project aims to better the Building Regulations CO2 emissions requirements by 30 per cent and include 20 per cent on-site renewable energy generation.

The decision to create new headquarters for the Council was made following an independent review of the existing office accommodation which concluded that a large proportion of the buildings are outdated, disjointed and unsuitable for office accommodation.

The current accommodation also presented a real constraint on the authority’s ability to respond to the changing needs of its customers, modernise the organisation and meet current Disability Discrimination Act legislation. The new building aims to be customer focussed, incorporating a fully integrated face to face Customer Centre and access for customers with disabilities.

The headquarters are expected to be complete in 2010.

City of York Council Headquarters image / information from RMJM Architects

RMJM Architects

Location: York, Yorkshire, northern England, UK

Architecture in England

Contemporary English Architecture

Leeds Architecture

English Architect

Sheffield University
2007
Design: RMJM
Sheffield University
picture from architect firm
Sheffield University building

Key Contemporary York Buildings:

Carmelite Street
2002
Design: Panter Hudspith Architects

1-5 Davygate
1999
Design: Panter Hudspith Architects

National Centre for Early Music
2003
Design: Van Heyningen and Haward

Sixth Avenue Apartments
2003
Design: Cartwright Pickard Architects

York Millennium Bridge
2003
Design: Whitby & Bird

City of York Council headquarters architects: RMJM Hillier (practice name since changed)

Sheffield Buildings

Bradford Buildings

Yorkshire Building Designs

Comments / photos for the City of York Headquarters Architecture design by RMJM Architects page welcome

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