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  • 21 Aug, 2019

  • By, Wikipedia

The Mercian

The Mercian (also known as 218 Broad Street by its address and formerly known as 2one2 Broad Street and Broad Street Tower) is a 132-metre-tall (433 ft) residential skyscraper on Broad Street in Birmingham, England. It is designed by Glenn Howells Architects, the developer is Moda Living and the main contractor is John Sisk & Son.

The building is 42 storeys in height, consisting of a 39-storey residential building (30 studios, 163 one bed, 260 two bed and 28 three-bedroom apartments) which sits on a three-storey podium with over 30,000 square feet (2,800 m) of community amenity space. The build is valued at £183m and was completed in May 2022.

The tower sits perpendicular to the street with the front-facing Five Ways. Originally, a helipad was proposed to be located on top of the building on a podium, but this was removed from the design, though the podium remained with some minor changes.

The tower was scheduled to be presented before a planning committee in late August 2006. However, the developers pulled out minutes before the meeting to make changes.

The application was presented again on 28 September and whilst it was originally deferred due to lack of information, concerns over height and payment of money under Section 106, it was later approved. The updated proposal boasted a partial redesign, increasing the height of the tower and creating a redesigned façade. Construction of the skyscraper began in April 2019.

The Mercian is the second tallest building in Birmingham following the topping out of the 155 metre tall, 49-storey skyscraper Octagon in 2024.

See also

References

  1. ^ "FreeTimePays". birminghamweare.com. Retrieved 4 May 2020.
  2. ^ "GHA Project | The Mercian". Glenn Howells Architects. Retrieved 4 May 2020.
  3. ^ "City skyscraper plans grounded", Birmingham Mail (28 August 2006)
  4. ^ "Green Light for New Tallest for Brum", Skyscraper News (2006-09-29)
  5. ^ "Planners give go-ahead to 40-storey Birmingham tower", Birmingham Post (29 September 2006)
  6. ^ Hammond, Kirsty (30 April 2019). "Moda breaks ground and unveils new name for Birmingham's tallest residential tower". Specifier Review. Retrieved 4 May 2020.