DSDHA Limited

Exchange Square Park

Exchange Square Park
© Daniel Fisher

Exchange Square Park

DSDHA

ARCHITECTS
DSDHA

LIGHTING DESIGNER
Spiers Major

HORTICULTURE
FFLO

PROJECT MANAGER
Stace Project Management

STRUCTURAL ENGINEER
Arup

M&E ENGINEER
Arup

PROJECT TEAM
Deborah Saunt, David Hills, Tom Greenall, Anne Wynne, Lee McKingley, Paul Bourel, Laura Virto Martinez, Iain Jamieson, Marie Sophie Habermann, Matt Lambert, Sacha Hickinbotham

COST CONSULTANT
Gardiner & Theobald

ACCESS CONSULTANT
David Bonnett Associates

GENERAL CONTRACTOR
Maylim

PLANNING CONSULTANT
DP9

AREA
6000 m²

YEAR
2022

LOCATION
United Kingdom

CATEGORY
Landscape Architecture, Park

Welcome to Exchange Square, a public park suspended above the tracks of Liverpool Street Station and within the Broadgate campus, the largest pedestrianized public realm in Central London.

Exchange Square Park
© Daniel Fisher
Exchange Square Park
© Daniel Fisher

The creation of Exchange Square marks a significant milestone in a seven-year collaboration between the studio and their client to successfully transform the public spaces surrounding one of the UK’s busiest stations.

Reimagined as a bucolic landscape and generously planted green space and designed with inclusivity and accessibility at its heart, Exchange Square establishes a new mixed-use amenity for the City.

Exchange Square Park
© Daniel Fisher
Exchange Square Park
© Daniel Fisher

Blending recreational areas with informal, open-air working facilities and retail units, the square encourages a variety of potential uses and activities at different times of day, extending the dwelling time beyond working hours and helping Broadgate become more receptive to the needs of a wider variety of people, from its local offices and shop workers to the residents of neighboring boroughs.

The site prior to our intervention had been developed in the 1990s and comprised a central lawn area that was popular with people who used the space, but the large, curved feature wall on the western boundary to the lawn created a significant barrier within the square, as well as restricting visual permeability.

Exchange Square Park
© Daniel Fisher
Exchange Square Park
© Daniel Fisher

On the northern edge, steps led up to the Exchange House and provided generous seating, but the extensive use of pink granite appeared monotonous.

Alongside these material challenges, level changes across the square were addressed through various ramps and other stairs, creating barriers to access.

Exchange Square Park
© Daniel Fisher
Exchange Square Park
© Daniel Fisher

Signage was poor throughout the space and entrances to the square lacked legibility.

Well-being, inclusivity, and permeability were vital considerations throughout the design process, driven by the ambition to create a vibrant space that encouraged engagement and interactivity and offered respite from the onslaught of commuters and the noise of Bishopsgate.

Exchange Square Park
© Daniel Fisher
Exchange Square Park
© Daniel Fisher

The 1.5-acre park provides a four-fold increase in planting from its previous state - 14,000 plants and over 140 different species - a 600% increase in biodiversity, and 25% of the area features accessible green space.

An onsite gardener encourages continual learning – offering opportunities for inquiries and involvement from the wider public, whilst maintaining the square.

Engagement with tenants revealed the desire for a less corporate environment with more flexibility for temporary uses, resulting in a more diverse group of people being encouraged to use the space, such as for a community Open Iftar celebrating Ramadan.

Exchange Square Park
© Daniel Fisher
Exchange Square Park
© Daniel Fisher
Exchange Square Park
© Daniel Fisher

We sought to address issues of accessibility and permeability by celebrating the various gateways into the park.

A comprehensive analysis of pedestrian movement helped to identify barriers to access – steps, changes in level, lack of visual contrast and changes in tactility, and poor signage – informing our response of unfolding the space across several levels to create a more naturalistic permeable topography, with gently sloping routes that allow wheelchair and

pushchair access across and through the whole site. Legible material differences at changes in level support neurodiverse users, and clear sightlines across the park from all borders allow users to feel safer when crossing alone or at night.

Exchange Square Park
© Daniel Fisher


Exchange Square Park
© Daniel Fisher
Exchange Square Park
© Daniel Fisher
Exchange Square Park
© Daniel Fisher
Exchange Square Park
© Daniel Fisher
Exchange Square Park
© Daniel Fisher
Exchange Square Park
© Daniel Fisher


Exchange Square Park
Section
Exchange Square Park
Site Plan

DSDHA Limited
T +44 20 77033555
DSDHA Limited
357 Kennington Ln, London SE11 5QY, United Kingdom