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Heart of LSE campus transformed by new Centre Building

With its emphasis on sustainability, community and collaboration, the Centre Building has created an inspiring academic environment.
- Julian Robinson, Director of Estates
Centre Buildings 747 x560
Centre Building

LSE has opened its latest landmark building to students, staff and alumni. The Centre Building, which has a £78m construction cost as part of an overall investment of £125m in developing the centre of LSE’s campus [A], was designed by internationally renowned architects Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners and delivered by international consultancy and construction company Mace.

Situated at the heart of LSE’s campus, on Houghton Street and Clare Market, the 13-storey building is the largest building commissioned in LSE’s history. A bold and beautiful design, it is also the highest building on campus, offering spectacular views across London’s skyline.

Julian Robinson, Director of Estates at LSE, said: “This building delivers on the two key tenets of our estates strategy, creating a world class estate and a university quarter in this part of London. The Centre Building, with its emphasis on sustainability, community and collaboration, has created an inspiring academic environment within which to work and study that will enhance the campus experience for our students, staff, alumni and visitors.”

Tracy Meller, Partner and architect, Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners said: "The Centre Building project presented us with a unique opportunity to work with the LSE to design a building which really reflects the values of the school, creating  innovative and inspirational spaces for students and staff, in which to learn, socialise, study and collaborate. Our proposals went beyond the original brief aspirations placing a new public square at the heart of the campus to improve wayfinding and connectivity, and to give the LSE a much needed new focal point. Embracing sustainable design principles from the offset the BREEAM Outstanding building provides good daylighting and natural ventilation to over 70% of the accommodation, creating workspaces which enhance the wellbeing of its occupants, in addition it reduces embodied carbon by 30%, harvests rainwater and utilises a biomass boiler and PVs as part of its renewable energy strategy."

Terry Spraggett, Mace’s Managing Director of Public Sector Construction said: “We’re proud to have supported LSE in delivering this landmark building, which forms an integral part of the university’s continued ambition to create world class facilities for its students and staff. Sustainability was a core component of the delivery strategy and the Centre Building will be the first on the campus to achieve a BREAAM ‘outstanding’ rating, further cementing LSE’s reputation as a forward-thinking institution. Working with LSE and our excellent supply chain, we’ve created a high-spec building with state of the art teaching and learning facilities that will foster collaboration and innovation for years to come.

The Centre Building hosts a number of academic departments, more than a dozen seminar rooms, hundreds of study spaces and fourlecture theatres, including an innovative ‘LSE style theatre’ designed to allow for both traditional style teaching and collaborative group work. A new LSE Alumni Centre provides a custom-designed space for alumni visiting their campus, while three roof terraces and a café provide new areas for students and staff to meet and socialise.    

To facilitate interaction, a public square has been placed at the heart of the building, creating a new focal point for students and staff to interact while linking Houghton Street to the Library Plaza and connecting Lincoln’s Inn Fields on the western edge of the campus to the LSE buildings to the east. The building also features a dramatic ‘Academic Stair’. Moving diagonally across the façade of the building in a series of double height spaces, the staircase was designed to encourage dialogue between departments, institutes and research centres and to provide additional informal areas for students and staff to interact. 

The Centre Building is aiming to achieve a BREEAM “outstanding” rating.   

Behind the article

[A] The total cost of the Centre Building is £125m, which includes construction costs of £78m as well as demolition and enabling works, services diversions, fees, furniture fittings and equipment and VAT.

The Centre Building will open to the public on 21 and 22 September as part of Open House London.  https://openhouselondon.open-city.org.uk/coming_soon

The Centre Building houses the Department of Government, Department of International Relations, European Institute, International Inequalities Institute and School of Public Policy and the LSE DIrectorate.

Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners is an international architectural practice based in London. Over the past four decades, RSHP has attracted critical acclaim and awards with built projects across Europe, the Americas, Asia and Australia.

The practice is experienced in designing a wide range of building types including: office, residential, transport, education, culture, leisure, retail, civic and healthcare. The quality of its designs has been recognised with some of architecture’s highest awards, including two RIBA Stirling Prizes, one in 2006 for Terminal 4, Madrid Barajas Airport and the other in 2009 for Maggie’s West London Centre.

Education projects designed by the practice include: Mossbourne Community Academy in London; Minami Yamashiro Elementary School in Kyoto; and Thames Valley University in Slough. https://www.rsh-p.com/

Mace is an international consultancy and construction company, founded and built on exceptional people, a commitment to service excellence and a deep-rooted entrepreneurial spirit. We employ over 6,300 people across five global hubs, with a turnover of £2.35bn. We develop, consult, construct and operate some of the world’s most inspiring projects and programmes. Find out more about what makes us different: www.macegroup.com