65 Davies Street shortlisted for 2025 Structural Steel Design Awards

We are pleased to announce that 65 Davies Street has been shortlisted for the 2025 Structural Steel Design Awards. Organised by the British Constructional Steelwork Association and Steel for Life, the awards celebrate outstanding use of steel in architecture and construction across the UK.

Mark Kelly Featured in Property Week and Green Street News on Urgent Building Safety Reforms

Mark Kelly, Partner and COO at PLP Architecture, has been featured in both Property Week and Green Street News this month, offering insight on the UK Government’s urgent reforms to the Building Safety Regulator (BSR). The commentaries address growing concern across the construction sector about delays to housing delivery caused by the Gateway 2 approvals process.

PLP Architecture Featured in Real Asset IMPACT

We are delighted to share that PLP Architecture is the focus of the latest episode in THE PLAN magazine’s ‘Architects Series’, a documentary series spotlighting leading architecture practices around the world.

PLP Architecture appointed to design new student living hub at Leake Street, London

PLP Architecture has been appointed by international developer HB Reavis to design a major new purpose-built student accommodation (PBSA) scheme in central London. Located at 10 Leake Street – next to Waterloo Station and the iconic Leake Street Arches – the development marks HB Reavis’s first move into the UK student living sector.

Opus Launches: Landmark Residential Tower Begins Sales at Bankside Yards

Sales have officially launched for Opus, the first residential building at Bankside Yards – the transformative £2.5 billion development on London’s South Bank. Designed by PLP Architecture, the 170-metre tower will be the tallest residential building in prime central London and a new icon of sustainable, luxury urban living.

PLP Labs Publishes Symbiocene Architecture: Rethinking How We Build with Nature

What if architecture could help us reconnect with nature – not by dominating it, but by working in harmony with it? Symbiocene Architecture, the new book from PLP Labs, imagines this possibility. Exploring the promise of mycelium – the root-like networks of fungi – the book sets out a vision for a new design paradigm, where buildings are grown, not built, and where the built environment becomes regenerative by design.