Sellar and Obayashi’s proposals for a 36-storey tower in the City of London are likely to be given the green light next week.

The 60 Gracechurch scheme has been recommended for approval by City planning officers ahead of a committee vote next Friday (6 December), although it is facing a set of weighty objections from heritage groups including Historic England.

3XN’s proposals for 60 Gracechurch Street are likely to be approved next week

The scheme has been designed by 3XN, a Danish practice with a growing profile in London which has designed two large projects for British Land, a £400m extension of Euston Tower in Camden and the 2 Finsbury Square scheme in Broadgate.

It would contain around 52,000 sq m of office space and replace the site’s existing nine-storey Allianz House, a mid-1990s building containing 13,300 sq m of office space.

In a 336-page report published this week, planning officers said 60 Gracechurch would be a “striking new addition” to the City’s eastern tower cluster.

Officers praised the design’s “dynamic and distinctive architectural character” with its facade system of angled metal ‘fins’ which would cover most of the south side of the building.

>> See also: New pictures of Sellar’s 36-storey City tower revealed as plans are submitted

The report also welcomed the proposed creation of new public realm in a 368 sq m sheltered ‘undercroft’ which would be built beneath the tower and include seating and greenery.

But objections and comments have been received by Historic England, Historic Royal Palace, St Paul’s Cathedral and the London Borough of Tower Hamlets due to the scheme’s proximity to heritage assets including the grade I-listed St Mary Woolnoth church.

The Department for Culture, Media and Sport has also notified the application to Unesco and is set to submit a report in the coming days to the United Nations World Heritage Centre on the impact which the City’s tower is cluster is having on the Tower of London world heritage site.

Meanwhile, plans for a neighbouring tower by Hong Kong firm Tenacity could be in doubt because the scheme’s planning consent has lapsed.

Fletcher Priest’s proposals for 55 Gracechurch Street, pictured to the left of the Walkie Talkie

Images of the 32-storey 55 Gracechurch Street, which was designed by Fletcher Priest, were removed in the latest visual impact statements submitted as part of the application for 60 Gracechurch.

The former had been approved by the City in January 2021 and began its three-year window of consent the following September. Consultants which were working on the scheme included heritage specialist Montagu Evans, QS Alinea and structural and facade engineer AKT II.

Fletcher Priest has been contacted for comment.