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Nine Elms walking tour

Discover London’s Vauxhall, Nine Elms and Battersea Power Station
regeneration zone

Join Open City for a tour exploring the past present and future of London’s Vauxhall, Nine Elms and Battersea Power Station regeneration zone

This insightful walking tour — led by expert guide Nick Edwards — tells the story of this waterfront district formerly famous for the Vauxhall gyratory system, Terry Farrell’s MI6, New Covent Garden Market, and a hinterland of associated of sheds, cold warehouses, post office depots, railway viaducts and Battersea Dogs Home – alongside the iconic Giles Gilbert Scott-designed Battersea Power station which has recently been refurbished by Wilkinson Eyre.  

The tour will start at the landmark Vauxhall bus station designed by Arup Associates in 2004 and finish at the newly opened Battersea Power Station. The journey will discuss how this former industrial zone less than a mile from parliament was identified as an ‘opportunity area’ in Ken Livingstone’s 2004 London plan and has been going through a lengthy regeneration programme ever since with the aim of creating a vast new £15 billion mixed-use district. 

It will examine competing visions for the future of the area and look at how two new Northern Line stations designed by Grimshaw, the first few phases of the Raphael Viñoly’s £9bn Battersea Power Station masterplan, and a sea of towering speculative housing developments have created a critical mass of activity while also reshaping London’s skyline.

Landmark buildings featuring on the tour include include Prospect Place by Frank Gehry, Circus West Village by Simpson Haugh and Nine Elms Square by Skidmore, Owings & Merrill (SOM). The tour will also cover Brunswick House, Terry Farrell’s ‘SIS Building’, the new US Embassy by Kieran Timberlake, the contentious Embassy Gardens sky pool by HAL Architects & ARUP Associates, and the Riverlight development by RSHP.

With the potential to deliver 20,000 new homes, 25,000 new jobs, 600,000m² of commercial space and a 4.8ha linear park, this case study tour will question the successes of the Nine Elms regeneration project to date while also looking ahead to what the future might hold.

Key information:

Meet: Vauxhall Bus Station SW8 2LN (outside Exit 2 from Vauxhall tube Station- Opposite exit from Vauxhall overground station)

End: Battersea Power Station (nearest station Battersea Power Station, new extension of the Northern Line)

Duration: 2.5 hrs approx

Distance: 2.5 miles approx

Cost: £19.50 / £14.50 / £13.50 /£9.50 

 

Tickets are non refundable and go ahead rain or shine… Get in touch with Adrianna at tours@open-city.org.uk with any queries.

Meet the tour guide…

Nick Edwards is an architectural educator and change driver with 20 years experience creating innovative participation opportunities which encourage greater understanding of architecture, regeneration, planning, placemaking, active citizenship and sustainability.

Since studying architecture, Nick has spent most of his career working in formal and informal education demystifying built environment processes, changing perceptions and advocating for the role that communities can play in shaping and caring for their neighbourhoods.

Much of Nick’s professional experience has focused on East London and specifically the 2012 Games and its 

Legacy. This included co-founding Fundamental Architectural Inclusion

funded by CABE; establishing the

Architecture Crew, Britain’s first youth architecture forum and setting up the Legacy Youth

Panel on behalf of the London Legacy Development Corporation to facilitate young people’s

response to the Legacy Masterplanning Framework for the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park

and surrounding area and feeding directly into the Legacy Community Strategy; bringing

young people to the forefront of influencing and shaping socio economic and community

engagement policy at the London Legacy Development Corporation.



He joined the Open City team in February 2021.

 

Open City's year-round tours programme is supported by Bloomberg Connects, the free arts and culture app.

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