The Mill (building)

Coordinates: 52°03′08″N 1°09′19″E / 52.0523°N 1.1554°E / 52.0523; 1.1554
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The Mill
The Mill as seen from Stoke Bridge
The Mill (building) is located in Suffolk
The Mill (building)
Location within Suffolk
General information
StatusUnder construction
TypeResidential
Architectural stylepostmodernism
AddressThe Mill, Foundry Lane
Town or cityIpswich, Suffolk
Country United Kingdom
Construction started2007
Completed2009; 15 years ago (2009)
(exterior)
Cost£42 million
OwnerCity Living Developments (Ipswich) Ltd
ManagementRSM UK
Height71.00m
Technical details
Materialconcrete
Floor count23
Design and construction
Architect(s)John Lyall Architects
DeveloperCity Living Developments (Ipswich) Ltd
Main contractorLaing O'Rourke
References
[1]

The Mill is a 23 storey, mixed-used development located on the Ipswich Waterfront with access from College Street in Ipswich, Suffolk, England. The Mill was the first phase of the Cranfield Mill development at Albion Quay on the waterfront at a cost of £42 million and was designed by John Lyall Architects and was proposed to be the 'landmark' building of Ipswich.[2] The development had financial difficulties only the shortest block, A3, was fitted out.

Design[edit]

The Mill consists of 300 apartments, offices, shops and restaurants.[2] There is a paved courtyard in the centre of the development which provides access from College Street to the waterfront. The towers exterior was completed in 2009 and Dance East moved into the building later the same year through a different contractor. The main tower was designed to make the building visible from the town centre. At the base of the building there are many restaurants that sit on the promenade of the waterfront. The building is also home to the highly successful Jerwood Dancehouse, Dance East which is cladded in dark zinc panels. The apartment complex next to the main tower is built with dark bricks and dark cladding to reflect the historic mills on the waterfront.

The main tower is constructed out of concrete, cladded with white polystyrene tiles with splashes of colour to create a landmark of Ipswich.[3]

Cladding[edit]

In 2014, fire experts warned that the Expanded Polystyrene (EPS) cladding on The Mill was so unsafe that all residents should be moved out.[4]

In 2023, residents of The Mill protested outside of the building's administrator's offices in Bury St. Edmunds, RSM UK, due to unresolved cladding and structural problems. The Mill's residents said they felt like "prisoners in their own homes", because their properties have become worthless due to the unsafe cladding.[5]

Tom Hunt, Ipswich's MP, raised The Mill in Prime Minister's Questions in 2024,[6] and later, a report showed that repairs and cladding replacement work at The Mill would cost upwards of £30 million, and if that price cannot be justified, The Mill would be demolished.[7] In April 2024, the decision was made to repair The Mill, and Tom Hunt said that "the day that the scaffolding goes up on The Mill will be a good day."

Damage[edit]

Damage to Cranfield Mill, taken from Dock Street

In October 2013 The Mill was subject to gale force winds causing damage which resulted in a road closure and criticism of the building's design. After a storm, many of the Mill's polystyrene tile cladding was ripped from the south facing façade. The building was assessed as there was many concerns of more cladding peeling off. The damage was not severe but the building aesthetics suffered as the concrete skeleton became exposed.[8]

As of April 2024, the damage has not been repaired but the damaged south façade has had most remaining panels removed due to cladding issues caused by new regulations.[9] There are also still ownership struggles at the block.

Financial difficulties[edit]

The company City Living Developments (Ipswich) Ltd had been involved with many commercial and residential projects along the waterfront including The Mill and The Regatta Quay hit financial difficulties after borrowing from the Anglo Irish and Allied Irish banks who went into administration. The project ran out of money and the interior was never completed.[10]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Cranfield Towers". Emporis. Archived from the original on 23 May 2015.
  2. ^ a b "The Mill". Domus.
  3. ^ "John Lyall Architects: Jerwood DanceHouse at Cranfields Mill, Ipswich". Architecturetoday. January 2010. Archived from the original on 23 September 2015. Retrieved 12 October 2014.
  4. ^ "Cladding dangers discovered at Suffolk's tallest building before Grenfell 'kept quiet', worried tenants claim". Ipswich Star. 21 October 2020. Retrieved 26 April 2024.
  5. ^ "'Prisoners in our own homes': Flats' leaseholders to protest over safety concerns". Suffolk News. 4 July 2023. Retrieved 26 April 2024.
  6. ^ "'Cruellest form of limbo' - Ipswich tower block cladding scandal raised in PMQs". Ipswich Star. 18 January 2024. Retrieved 26 April 2024.
  7. ^ "Cladding work at Suffolk's tallest building on Ipswich Waterfront 'could cost £30m'". Ipswich Star. 4 March 2024. Retrieved 26 April 2024.
  8. ^ "The Mill Damage". BBC. October 2013.
  9. ^ cite https://www.ipswichstar.co.uk/news/combustible-cladding-at-the-mill-building-ipswich-6528124 cite. {{cite web}}: Check |url= value (help); Missing or empty |title= (help)
  10. ^ "Firm behind Ipswich waterfront scheme in administration". BBC. January 2010.

52°03′08″N 1°09′19″E / 52.0523°N 1.1554°E / 52.0523; 1.1554