
Shell Mex House
'Shell Mex House' is at 80,
Strand, London, UK. Broadly speaking in an
Art Deco style, it was designed by
Ernest Joseph, a Jewish architect who was a leading designer of synagogues, including the Art Deco-style synagogue at Sheepcote Street, Birmingham, and the classical-style synagogue in St. John's Wood Road, London (of which only the facade remains).
The current building was completed in 1930–31 on the site of the
Cecil Hotel (so called because it was built on the site of
Cecil House), and stands between the Adelphi building and the Savoy Hotel.
Standing 58 m (190 ft) tall, with 537,000 sq ft of floor space, Shell Mex House has 12 floors (plus basement and sub-basement) and is immediately recognizable from the
River Thames and the
South Bank by the clock tower positioned on the south side of the building (flanked by two large, hieratic figures at the south corners). In the words of architectural historian
Nikolaus Pevsner, the building "is thoroughly unsubtle, but succeeds in holding its own in London's river front."
The building was for many years the London headquarters of
Shell-Mex and BP Ltd for whom it was originally built. Shell-Mex and BP Ltd was a
Joint Venture company created by
Shell and
British Petroleum in
1932 to market petroleum products in the
British Isles. On the "Brand Separation" of Shell-Mex and BP Ltd in 1975, Shell Mex House became the head office of Shell UK Ltd, which was Shell's "UK operating company". Changes in the way that Shell was run in the 1990s led to the disposal of the property by Shell and today most of its floors are occupied by companies of
Pearson PLC, including
Mergermarket.
During the
Second World War, the building became home to the
Ministry of Supply which co-ordinated supply of equipment to the national armed forces. It was also the home of the "Petroleum Board" which handled the distribution and
rationing of petroleum products during the war. It was badly damaged by a bomb in
1940. The building reverted to Shell-Mex and BP Ltd on
1 July 1948 with a number of floors remaining occupied by the Ministry of Aviation (latterly the Board of Trade, Civil Aviation Division) until the mid 1970s.
On 17 May 2006 ''
The Times'' reported that the building was for sale and that the Indian-Kenyan Kandhari family were the front-runners in the battle to buy the it from the present owners, Robert and Vincent Tchenguiz. It was said that they had offered £530 million for the building but were competing with other interested groups, including
Menorah, the Israeli insurer, an Irish company, and several British companies. An offer believed to be £520 million ($1.02 billion) was made in December 2006 by
Istithmar, the investment agency of the Dubai government, who withdrew their offer before completion.
See also
★
Shell Centre
★
Reference
★ ''
The Times'', Business,
17 May 2006, p. 63