Medieval London church balanced 45ft above ground in ‘unprecedented feat of engineering’

A medieval London Church Tower was suspended above 45FT from where it was described as ışı an unprecedented engineering success ”.
The entire Hallows painting tower was balanced on the Stilts on a 60,000 square meter excavation area on 50 Fenchurch Street as part of a large London city building project.
On Tuesday, a “coming out of the bottom” ceremony arrived after the removal of more than 125,000 tons under the tower to lead a 650,000 square meter office tower.
The construction of the basement levels of 50 Fenchurch Street Development will reunite the church tower with the ground level to form a part of a new green public space. Development is expected to be completed in 2028.
The new 36 -storey tower will include placed shops, an office area of 62,000 square meters and a public roof garden, as well as a 360 -degree “public world experience”.
As part of development, the other buildings in the field, including St Olave Hart Street Church Hall and Historical Kumless Workers Hall, have already been destroyed.
Everything from all the heirloom paintings built in the 14th century is the tower extending to 1320.
In 1666, he survived the great fire of London, but he collapsed five years later – an event that was believed to be caused by too many graves on the site.
The church is one of the two buildings listed in which the project will work, and the other is Lambe’s chapel crypine.
London Dawber, Deputy Mayor of London Business and Growth, said: orum Fifty Fenchurch Street is a remarkable project and I am pleased to attend this unique ceremony, which pointed out an important construction milestone for the development of this 36 -storey flagship.
“Such development projects in London emphasize the position of our capital as a world leader place for leading businesses to invest.”




