The Garden of Candlewrich Part 2 Project 2021 Jack Whitehead Nottingham Trent University | UK The scarcity of buildable inner-city space, as a consequence of mass urban density and necessity to achieve maximum economic gain has created a competitive market of investors and developers, capitalising from the forced insertion of privatised function. The booming neo-liberal London economy has reframed the City as a built environment informed through datasets dictating development, based upon plausible financial investment and net capital growth. The city has been blinded by gluttony; primary civic assets have been condensed to their most basic form. A recurring theme of a loss of identity, unsympathetic rejuvenation and an absence of environmental agenda is emerging; clarity is required through a shift in attitudes and legislative design policies. London’s Cannon Street Station will form the basis of the proposal through the conscious and sustainable adaptive reuse of a pre-existing structure, adopting the maximum useable material.The development will allow the people to have greater control in shaping public spaces and provide a structure for the conscious removal of inner-city privatisation. The public can openly embrace the building, rather than watch from afar as is common with many metropolitan spaces, paying homage to the beguiling theatre of the city, a room for London. Tutor(s) Kenneth Fraser