Empress State Building
The Empress State Building is a high rise building on in West Brompton in London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham, on the border with Earl's Court. Its full address is Empress State Building, Empress Approach, Lillie Road, West Brompton, London, SW6 1TR. HistoryThe building is named after the Empress Hall which formerly stood on the site, and in tribute to the Empire State Building.[1] It was completed in 1962 for the Admiralty[2] on the site of the former Empress Hall and ice rink as a commercial building and was 100 metres (328 ft) tall with 28 floors, designed by Stone, Toms & Partners and was briefly the tallest commercial building in London until Millbank Tower was built in 1962. It was renovated in 2003 to a design by Wilkinson Eyre Architects. Three floors and 17.3 metres (57 ft) were added to its height. Plus a frontal extension of 5 meters 'Orbit' is the name given to the private revolving bar on the top floor which offers panoramic views of London.The revolving bar element was shut down This building was originally designed as a hotel but was first used by the Admiralty and GCHQ. The Directorate of Naval Shore Telecommunications (formerly the Naval Shore Telecommunications Authority) had their national headquarters in the building in the 1980s and 90, as did the Directorate of Fleet Supply Duties. Metropolitan Police officesThe building is occupied by staff from the Metropolitan Police Service[3] who refer to it as ESB.[4] Among other things, until 2020 the building was home to the assessment centre for prospective police officers.[citation needed] Some of the upper floors were occupied by staff from Transport for London until 2010. An annexe at the entrance to the site housed the Metropolitan Police Heritage Centre until January 2020.[5] In March 2018 the London mayor's office agreed to buy the ESB estate for its MPS operations from Capco Plc, the developer of the adjacent Earl's Court regeneration scheme, for £250 million to house a new Counter Terrorism Operations Centre.[6][7] Funding for that project was confirmed in November 2020, from 23rd December 2024 the building is designated as a Prohibited Place under The National Security Act 2023[8], it is expected to re-open in that role by late 2025.[9] On 15 October 2019 the building received a certificate of immunity from listing by the then Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, Nicky Morgan, which is due to expire on 14 October 2024.[10] See alsoReferences
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