Building of former Docklands offices sold for £27m
A Docklands building which used to contain London offices, but has since been turned into a data centre, has been sold for £27 million.

Evans Randall snapped up Sovereign House at 227 Marsh Wall from AXA Real Estate on behalf of a holding company it is invested in, alongside Saudi Arabian private investors.

The E14 premises was originally built in 2001 to deliver London offices, but the tenant - a subsidiary of Telecity Group - turned it into a data centre.

Commenting on the deal, Evan Randall's chairman Michael Evans said: "The acquisition is further evidence of Evans Randall's commitment to London Docklands as a strategic investment location and gives us exposure to the rapidly expanding data centre sector."

He added Sovereign House offered value as a result of its use, its location and the fact it has been converted.

Last month, it was revealed talks were underway for the sale of a building of City offices that was bought by Evans Randall in 2010 for £242.5 million. It could offload the Drapers Garden premises for as much as £285 million.

Posted by John Evans

News provided by Adfero in collaboration with Mellersh & Harding. Please note that all copy belongs to (c)Adfero Ltd and does not reflect the views or opinions of Mellersh & Harding unless explicitly stated.ADNFCR-2799-ID-801313715-ADNFCR Back

Contact

Contact Mellersh & Harding

Call us on +44 (0)20 7522 8500

Email Us Directly

What our clients say

"What made dealing with Mellersh & Harding LLP a pleasure was the response time on queries from all parties and the way in which they...

Tom Catton, Book Tokens Ltd

What our clients say

"Proactive and responsive...you get the impression that they are enjoying what they do and that it feeds through and makes it a much more pleasant environment to work in..."

Grosvenor

What our clients say

"Paul Brewster’s background combined with his enthusiasm for personally getting involved with the tasks at hand made him the best route in resolving my company’s..."

Graham Begg, Film Tree

D2 Interactive