• London’s Best Office Spaces – The Links Between London’s Past and the Modern World

  • By: Prestige Offices
  • Podcast

London’s Best Office Spaces – The Links Between London’s Past and the Modern World

By: Prestige Offices
  • Summary

  • This podcast celebrates some of the, in our opinion, finest commercial properties of London. London is home to some of the best and varied examples of architecture in the world that tell the rich historical tale of the UK’s capital. We discuss these properties and, specifically, the properties that have been elegantly refurbished and repurposed into high-end modern office spaces. Office spaces that allow modern businesses to immerse within London’s fascinating past whilst operating in the 21st Century world. This podcast celebrates the connection between London’s past and the modern world.
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Episodes
  • Cutting Edge Piano Composition
    Feb 22 2023

    Whilst we normally speak about buildings with great heritage and history that have been transformed to provide premium office space for the modern world, we thought that we should make an exception for The Shard. Clearly a modern development, The Shard stands dominantly in the historically significant London Bridge district on the southern bank of the Thames. Opened to the public in 2013, The Shard was recognised as the tallest building in the UK and Europe and as a new emblem for London. Today, the striking and iconic building is home to apartments, restaurants, the luxury Shangri-La hotel, a viewing platform, and a 26-floor office complex. Some of these can be seen here - Prestige Offices in The Shard This podcast celebrates the area in which the tower is situated, the unique development and the exceptional modern offices that are available to rent within it.

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    11 mins
  • The Modern Concept of Hybrid Working in London
    Nov 12 2021
    The podcast episodes that we normally record are focused on historically important properties in London that have had their lives extended by repurposing them as modern offices – this, in our opinion, makes them some of the best office spaces in London. London has, of course, experienced many epidemics over its history as well as other natural disasters but none quite the same as the global Covid-19 pandemic. The pandemic had and is continuing to have devastating, effects for the world’s population for which we have great sympathy. One of the effects of the pandemic was the way that it affected the modern business world and the use of office space. In post-industrial London, a great number of businesses are office-based. Of course, during the lockdowns, offices were closed off to businesses for safety reasons. However, with the use of high-speed domestic broadband, cloud-based technologies and personal computers, smartphones and tablets, many businesses could continue to run with normally office-based staff, working from home remotely. The option to utilise remote homeworking staff has been available to businesses for many decades, however, many never fully adopted it as standard working practice. As lockdowns lift, many businesses are now looking at how they will use physical office space in the future. We wished to record this slightly different episode to talk about the modern concept of hybrid working at, what we think, is a pivotal and historically important time, relating to how businesses will use offices, and specifically to us, the historically important offices, in the future.
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    11 mins
  • Thomas Gresham - Exchanging History for Modernity
    Jun 1 2021

    The Royal Exchange in the City of London was founded in the 16th century, in 1565, by the merchant Sir Thomas Gresham to act as a centre of commerce for the City. The site was provided by the City of London Corporation and the Worshipful Company of Mercers, who still jointly own the freehold interest of this landmark. It was London’s first purpose-built centre for trading stocks and was modelled on the Bourse in Antwerp - the world’s oldest financial exchange, where Gresham had been based as a royal agent. So, who was Thomas Gresham? Known as the father of English banking, Sir Thomas Gresham the Elder was born in 1519 and was an English merchant and financier who acted on behalf of King Edward VI and Edward's half-sisters - queens Mary I and Elizabeth I. He was born in London and descended from an old Norfolk family, he was the son of Sir Richard Gresham, a leading merchant mercer and Lord Mayor of London, who was knighted by King Henry VIII for negotiating favourable loans with foreign merchants. Gresham was educated at St Paul's School in the City. Following this, he attended the University of Cambridge and was concurrently apprenticed in the Mercers' Company. In 1543 the Mercers' Company admitted Gresham as a liveryman, and later that year he left England for the Low Countries basing himself in Antwerp, where he worked as a merchant whilst acting in various matters as agent for King Henry VIII. In 1551, following some financial mismanagement by the government, Gresham was called upon for his advice and, through some methods that he thought up that would have been seen as somewhat questionable by today’s standards, raised the value of the pound on the Antwerp bourse and subsequently “rescued the pound” for which he was rewarded in various ways by King Edward VI. On the accession of Queen Mary in 1553, Gresham was replaced as advisor by Alderman William Dauntsey. However, Dauntsey's financial operations proved unsuccessful and Gresham was soon re-instated. He professed his desire to serve the Queen, and manifested great adroitness both in negotiating loans and in smuggling money, arms and foreign goods. Not only were his services retained throughout her reign (1553–1558), but besides his salary of twenty shillings per year, he received grants of church lands to the yearly value of 200 pounds... ...Today, businesses from a wide range of sectors can occupy office space at the Royal Exchange – aptly named office provider, Landmark, that was founded in 2000, provides a range of workspace options including private offices, collaborative spaces and meeting rooms. And, on Gresham Street, which was named in 1845, office space provider, The Argyll Club, that was founded in 1998, provides premium flexible office spaces for companies needing space for between 2 and 50 desks. Occupiers here will be neighbours of modern-day business icons such as Eversheds, ING Bank and Investec. Both of these properties with links to Thomas Gresham can be viewed on the link: Prestige Offices – Offices in London with links to Thomas Gresham  Gresham’s legacy can, today, be directly experienced through the buildings that have been modernised to provide office space for the businesses of the modern world. He had commercial property interests in the City and was a pioneer in many areas but he could have never imagined the areas that modern businesses operate in or the business technology used, although he may have possibly imagined the arrangement of several companies operating within one office, as they do within the serviced offices in the Royal Exchange and those on Gresham Street and throughout London  – a format not dissimilar to that used by the Royal Exchange's loyal tenant, Lloyd’s of London.

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    18 mins

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