Whereas the last wave of riverside housing, which was concentrated in the Docklands areas, tended to be a cautious mix of yellow brick, steel balconies and pitched roofs verging on the banal, the latest developments are powerful architectural statements.
Part of this new-found confidence can be traced back to the previous government's Thames Strategic Guidance of 1996, which sought to promote the river as a national asset and encouraged mixed use to turn the riverside into a throbbing public space.
Add to this pressure from the government to use up brownfield land for housing and the fact that developers can add more than a third to the price if there is any chance of glimpsing water from a window, and it is little wonder that 1980s schemes such as Barratt's neoclassical sweep around Rotherhithe are beginning to look terribly old-fashioned.
Many of these developments are challenging planning guidance on height and density, successfully arguing for developments that are denser and taller than we usually warm to in this country. Stepped blocks cascading down to the river in fingers are a popular solution for breaking down the mass, letting light into sheltered courtyards and knitting bigger schemes with lower neighbours, while at the same time creating plenty of lucrative roof terraces with river views.
Mixed-use developments such as St George's 拢30m scheme in Vauxhall, 225 apartments at Charter Quay, Kingston, or Rialto's Gargoyle Wharf at Wandsworth offer microcosms of Lord Rogers' proposed urban renaissance. Shopping, restaurants, leisure facilities, doctors' surgeries, public walkways and affordable housing (fast becoming an almost mandatory component if a scheme is to woo council planners) sit alongside luxury apartments where a quarter of a million will barely get you two bedrooms, and penthouses that are strictly for multimillionaires.
Much of the development is on the south bank of the river, in areas such as Wandsworth, Battersea, Greenwich and Thamesmead. The north bank, with the exception of Docklands, was filled long ago. With the sun coming from behind the buildings, architects are realising the importance of the silhouette, resulting in some bold shapes and soaring roof forms such as the wing-topped towers of St George Wharf at Vauxhall and the soaring slopes at Trinity Wharf in Rotherhithe.
With the banks filling fast, and most sites from upstream Teddington Lock in the west to Thamesmead beyond the tidal Thames Barrier on the east now earmarked for development, an exciting new public space is being opened up along the river. Here, 精东影视 selects 10 of the Thames' new residential landmarks.