Victoria Square, Woking

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Preceded byExport House
StatusCompleted
TypeResidential
Hotel
Retail
LocationA320 Victoria Way, Woking, England
Victoria Square
Victoria Square Tower 1 and 2 (left) and Export House (right) in 2022
Interactive map of the Victoria Square area
Record height
Tallest in Woking since September 2019[I]
Preceded byExport House
General information
StatusCompleted
TypeResidential
Hotel
Retail
LocationA320 Victoria Way, Woking, England
Coordinates51°19′06″N 0°33′39″W / 51.318343°N 0.560911°W / 51.318343; -0.560911
Construction startedJune 2017
CompletedAugust 2022
Cost£700 million
Height
Roof117 m (384 ft)
Technical details
Floor count34
Design and construction
ArchitectBenoy
DeveloperWoking Borough Council
Moyallen Group
Main contractorSir Robert McAlpine

Victoria Square is a residential skyscraper complex and wider town centre redevelopment project in Woking, Surrey, England. Upon topping out in September 2019,[1] Tower 1 of the complex became the tallest building in Woking, overtaking Export House.[2] Construction commenced in June 2017 and, following delays related to the COVID-19 pandemic,[3] completed in August 2022. The total construction cost of the project was £700 million.[4]

Construction during 2019

Victoria Square was constructed on the site of a seven-storey office building known as Circle 7, on a site bounded by Victoria Way to the west, the railway line leading to Woking railway station to the south, and Woking town centre to the east and north. Three towers were constructed as part of the development. The tallest two skyscrapers, Tower 1 and Tower 2, are both residential in nature and consist of 34 and 32 storeys, rising to a height of 117 m (384 ft) and 105 m (344 ft) respectively.[5][6] The third building, Tower 3, contains a Hilton Hotel rising to 23 storeys and a height of 94 m (308 ft).[7] The two buildings taller than 100 m (330 ft) make Woking the smallest settlement in the United Kingdom to have a skyscraper.[a]

Additional construction as part of the Victoria Square development included a plant-covered multistorey car park containing the tallest spiral ramps in the United Kingdom,[8] a ground-level shopping centre extension named Victoria Place (formerly The Peacocks) linked to the nearby High Street,[9] a flagship Marks & Spencer food hall on the ground floor of Tower 1,[10] new bus stops at the western end of the High Street Link Road, and public spaces including a square.[11]

History

Notes

References

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