
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


A report suggests London could be on course to become something of a “Manhattan-on-Thames” as almost 600 more skyscrapers are planned to cram into gaps of the capital’s crowded historic skyline.
The 10th annual tall buildings report from think-tank New London Architecture finds there are 583 tall buildings of more than 20 storeys that authors describe as “queuing up in the pipeline”.
Plus, Gordon Ramsay’s plans to become the BT Tower’s successor as London’s highest restaurant and Savile Row tailors are unhappy at Westminster Council's pushback over redevelopment of a former police station.
From the newsroom, join Evening Standard business editor Jonathan Prynn in conversation with Mark Blunden.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By The Evening Standard4.3
2020 ratings
A report suggests London could be on course to become something of a “Manhattan-on-Thames” as almost 600 more skyscrapers are planned to cram into gaps of the capital’s crowded historic skyline.
The 10th annual tall buildings report from think-tank New London Architecture finds there are 583 tall buildings of more than 20 storeys that authors describe as “queuing up in the pipeline”.
Plus, Gordon Ramsay’s plans to become the BT Tower’s successor as London’s highest restaurant and Savile Row tailors are unhappy at Westminster Council's pushback over redevelopment of a former police station.
From the newsroom, join Evening Standard business editor Jonathan Prynn in conversation with Mark Blunden.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

102 Listeners

695 Listeners

996 Listeners

1 Listeners

160 Listeners

148 Listeners

246 Listeners

5 Listeners

38 Listeners

16 Listeners

0 Listeners

3,443 Listeners

1,181 Listeners

762 Listeners

82 Listeners

15 Listeners

40 Listeners

0 Listeners

10 Listeners

2 Listeners

3 Listeners

182 Listeners