Ion Development Director, Rob Mason, added: “It is a delight to see the completion of i9, another milestone in the Interchange scheme's acclaimed regeneration journey. It has been important to ION from the outset of this development to deliver a building that is sustainable, flexible and future proofed. To successfully marry this very forward-thinking approach to an external building design that fully reflects Wolverhampton’s commercial heritage is a true testament to the skills of the design and construction team.”
The Council and Ion, selected Glenn Howells Architects’ design for i9 as the winner from a strong field of ten UK leading architects and urban design practices in a national design competition.
The design has drawn influence from Wolverhampton’s family of red-brick Victorian buildings - providing a complementary, contemporary addition fit for 21st century working life.
GRAHAM Regional Director, Ronan Hughes, said: “We’re proud to have played such a key role in the delivery of this new commercial development for the city of Wolverhampton. Setting the standard for offices locally, the building is future fit for the new way of working with modern facilities and digital infrastructure complemented by a sustainable design that acknowledges its impact on the environment. We couldn’t be more delighted with the end result.”
The Black Country Local Enterprise Partnership (LEP) is also supporting the development of i9, which is ideally placed to benefit from HS2 – cutting journey times to London and elsewhere dramatically.
Tom Westley DL, Black Country LEP Chair, added: “The Black Country LEP are delighted to see completion of the City of Wolverhampton’s i9 development, a major milestone in the regeneration of Wolverhampton Interchange. Developments like i9 will bring jobs and investment opportunities to the Black Country, the timing is very helpful - it remains crucial that we are all focused on economic recovery in response to the Covid-19 pandemic.”
Images by Glenn Howells Architects