Heritage praises tower plan

US hospitality giant has begun consulting on revamp for listed building

Friday, 22nd May — By Josef Steen LDRS

BT Tower 2

The feedback deadline for the first round of consultation is Tuesday May 26. Comment on the project using a virtual form or Freephone 0800 061 4770. See bttowerconsultation.co.uk

EARLY designs for the transformation of London’s famous BT Tower into a hotel with a new public square have been revealed.

Opened in 1965 by then prime minister Harold Wilson, the 177-metre tower in Fitzrovia served as a telecommunications hub for decades.

After purchasing the site for £275million in 2024, US hospitality giant MCR Hotels has begun consulting on its early plans to revamp the listed building into a “vibrant hotel that celebrates the landmark’s place in history”.

MCR plans to submit a full application to Camden Council in September.

The “heritage sensitive” redevelopment, led by Orms Architects, will include a restoration of the tower while granting public access to the site for the first time in nearly half a century, the company said.

The designs feature a publicly accessible square beside the hotel’s reception along with spaces for retail and foot outlets, plus walkways allowing visitors to stand at the tower’s base for the “first time ever”. Above the square, the restored “podium” building will house hotel bedrooms and a rooftop swimming pool, and hotel rooms will be built inside the tower’s shaft itself, known as “The Stick”.

Proposals also include scrapping what are referred to as “unsightly” additions to the structure to reveal the original façade of the podium built in 1966 to “restore the building’s true character”.

Formerly the Post Office Tower, the BT Tower has been almost entirely off limits to the general public for decades. Once home to a rotating restaurant and viewing area, “Top of the Tower”, a bomb attack in 1971 led to security restrictions that limited access. From 1981 the building was no longer open for routine public visits.

The hotel group’s planned layout [MCR Hotels/Orms Architects]

Though there are no plans for a new eatery, the developer proposes to restore the observation deck to offer the public “spectacular, 360-degree, panoramic views of London that it has been missing for nearly 50 years”.

The designs, which will preserve the original concrete structure, have already won the support of Historic England regional director Tom Foxall, who said the organisation was “delighted” by MCR’s “thoughtful approach”.

The emerging scheme would reinforce the significance of the tower’s architecture, ensuring its “…iconic presence remains on the London skyline while also reconfiguring its internal spaces in ways that will bring both public enjoyment and economic growth,” he said.

The developer said the project would carefully position new elements to the building to avoid the impact to surrounding areas of “heritage significance”, such as the Fitzroy Square conservation area.

MCR added that an influx of hotel visitors would also bring in more money to the area and the scheme would boost career growth for residents and create new full-time, part-time and construction jobs.

Should the plans gain approval, construction would not commence until late 2029, with completion anticipated in 2033.

The plans were unveiled at exhibitions held at University College London from May 11-16, and are available to view in full from MCR at: https://mcr-bt-tower.s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/BT+Public+Consultation+Boards+May+2027.pdf and at: bttowerconsultation.co.uk

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