Office Fit-Out Project Management in London: What Tenants Need to Know.

FACILITATE Splunk BOARDROOM

Office fit-out projects in London involve a regulatory framework, landlord approval process, and construction market that are distinct from other major global cities. For organisations new to the UK market, or for those undertaking their first significant fit-out in London, understanding the process from brief to handover, the key regulatory requirements under CDM, and the practical considerations specific to London’s diverse building stock is essential for delivering a project on time and within budget.

London’s Office Submarkets: What Tenants Need to Know

London’s office market is divided into several distinct submarkets, each with its own building stock characteristics, rent levels, and fit-out implications. Selecting the right submarket is as important as selecting the right building, and the choice has lasting consequences for cost, talent attraction, and brand positioning.

Submarket Rent Level Building Stock Fit-Out Considerations
City of London PREMIUM Mix of modern towers and older buildings. Strong institutional landlord base. Strict conservation and heritage requirements in parts. High proportion of Listed Buildings and conservation areas. Heritage constraints can affect reinstatement obligations and scope of alterations.
West End
Mayfair, St James’s
PREMIUM+ Period and Georgian buildings alongside modern developments. Boutique stock. Strong prestige positioning. High proportion of Listed Buildings. Landlords often impose stringent fit-out guidelines to protect building character. Alterations to facades or structure require listed building consent.
Midtown
Holborn, Farringdon
HIGH Mix of Victorian warehouse conversions and modern developments. Creative and legal sector focus. Improving transport with Elizabeth line. Industrial conversions offer generous ceiling heights. Column grids may be irregular. Fire services coordination important in older buildings with modified structures.
South Bank / Southwark HIGH Strong modern Grade A stock. Growing media and tech tenant base. Good transport links. Purpose-built modern buildings generally offer cleaner fit-out conditions. Flood risk and proximity to listed structures may affect structural works.
Tech City
Shoreditch, Old Street
MOD–HIGH Industrial conversions, new-build developments, and serviced office stock. Strong tech and startup culture. Industrial heritage suits open-plan and biophilic design approaches. Building management quality varies. Verify technical specifications carefully.
Canary Wharf COMPETITIVE Primarily 1990s–2000s tower stock with newer additions. Large floor plates. Strong institutional management. Efficient for large occupiers. Standard fit-out process. Less central location may affect talent attraction for some sectors.

Competitive ·
High ·
Premium ·
Premium+   — relative London office rent levels

The Fit-Out Process: Phase by Phase

A standard London office fit-out follows a consistent sequence of phases from brief to handover. The timeline below reflects a mid-sized project of 5,000 to 15,000 square feet. Larger or more complex projects, or those in buildings with extensive heritage constraints, will require additional time, particularly in the design and landlord approval phases.

Phase Stage Timeline Key Activities
1 Brief & Feasibility Weeks 1–4
  • Develop the workplace brief: headcount, space ratios, specification level, programme
  • Commission condition survey and ceiling void survey of the proposed space
  • Obtain and review landlord fit-out guidelines and CDM pre-construction information
  • Develop order-of-magnitude budget and programme for board approval
2 Design Development Weeks 4–12
  • Appoint design team: interior designer, MEP engineer, structural engineer if required
  • Develop schematic design and present to client for approval
  • Prepare detailed design including M&E coordination and coordinated services drawings
  • Confirm CDM Principal Designer appointment and begin Health and Safety file
3 Landlord Approval Weeks 10–16
  • Prepare and submit fit-out drawings and specifications to building management
  • Respond to landlord comments and resubmit as required
  • Obtain written licence to alter from landlord before any works commence
  • Confirm contractor insurance, approved contractor lists, and site rules
4 Procurement Weeks 12–18
  • Prepare tender documents including drawings, specification, and form of contract
  • Issue to shortlisted contractors and manage tender period
  • Evaluate submissions and present recommendation to client
  • Place long-lead FF&E orders
5 Construction Weeks 18–30+
  • Mobilise Principal Contractor and confirm CDM compliance documentation
  • Demolition and enabling works
  • M&E rough-in, structural works, and builder’s work
  • Architectural finishes, joinery, glazing, and IT infrastructure
6 Completion & Handover Final 2–3 weeks
  • M&E testing and commissioning across all systems
  • FF&E delivery, installation, and dressing
  • Snagging inspection and contractor rectification
  • Handover of O&M manuals, as-built drawings, and Health and Safety file

Pre-construction  
Approval gate  
Construction  
Handover

Planning an office fit-out in London?

As an independent project management firm, Facilitate brings international experience and local market knowledge to London fit-out projects. We manage the full process from brief to handover, including CDM coordination, landlord approval, and contractor procurement. Contact our team to discuss your project.

CDM Regulations: What Every London Tenant Needs to Know

The Construction (Design and Management) Regulations 2015, known as CDM, impose legal duties on everyone involved in a construction project in the United Kingdom, including office fit-outs. Understanding CDM is not optional. The client, which in a tenant fit-out means the organisation commissioning the works, has specific legal duties that cannot be delegated away.

CDM applies to virtually all commercial fit-out projects. The key principle is that health and safety must be considered and managed throughout the design and construction process, not addressed reactively when problems arise on site.

CDM Role Who Fills This Role Key Duties
Client The organisation commissioning the fit-out. This is the tenant, not the landlord. Appoint a Principal Designer and Principal Contractor in writing. Ensure adequate time and resources are allocated. Notify the HSE if the project exceeds the notification threshold (more than 30 working days with more than 20 workers simultaneously, or more than 500 person-days).
Principal Designer Typically the lead designer, such as the interior designer or architect. Must hold appropriate skills, knowledge, and experience. Plan, manage, monitor, and coordinate pre-construction health and safety. Prepare and maintain the pre-construction information pack. Ensure designers comply with their CDM duties.
Principal Contractor The main contractor appointed to carry out the construction works. Plan, manage, monitor, and coordinate construction-phase health and safety. Prepare and maintain the Construction Phase Plan. Ensure all workers on site comply with site rules and health and safety requirements.
Designers All members of the design team including interior designer, MEP engineer, and structural engineer. Eliminate foreseeable risks during design. Reduce or control risks that cannot be eliminated. Provide information to the Principal Designer for the pre-construction information pack.
Independent PM The independent project manager appointed by the client. Advise the client on CDM appointments and obligations. Coordinate between the Principal Designer and Principal Contractor. Monitor CDM compliance throughout the project. Ensure the Health and Safety file is completed and handed over at project close.

⚠ Client liability is real

Failure to comply with CDM obligations can result in enforcement action by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE), including improvement notices, prohibition notices, and prosecution. The client, not just the contractor, can be held liable. An independent project manager helps clients understand and discharge their CDM duties from the outset of the project.

Landlord Approval in London Commercial Buildings

Every commercial landlord in London requires tenants to obtain formal approval, known as a licence to alter, before carrying out any significant fit-out works. The process varies by building and landlord but follows a broadly consistent structure across London’s commercial market.

The London Landlord Approval Process: What to Expect

1

Obtain and review the fit-out guidelines

Request the landlord’s fit-out guide and technical specifications before commencing design. These documents define permitted structural loads, M&E connection points, approved contractors, construction hours, and material specifications. Designing without them risks costly revisions at approval stage.

2

Submit drawings and specifications for approval

The landlord’s surveyor or building manager reviews the proposed works against the fit-out guide and raises comments or objections. The review period is typically three to six weeks for a standard submission. Incomplete or non-compliant submissions restart the clock.

3

Negotiate the licence to alter

Once the design is approved in principle, the landlord’s solicitors prepare a formal licence to alter. This is a legal document that sets out the approved works, reinstatement obligations, and conditions of the approval. Review it carefully with your solicitor before signing, as it defines your reinstatement liability at lease expiry.

4

Allow for Listed Building and Conservation Area consents

Buildings in conservation areas or with Listed Building status require additional statutory consents for works affecting their character or structure. These are separate from the landlord’s approval and are granted by the local planning authority. The consent process can add two to three months to the pre-construction programme.

5

Confirm contractor requirements

Many London landlords require contractors to be approved or registered with the building before commencing works. Confirm this requirement before appointing your contractor. Using an unapproved contractor can result in the landlord halting the works.

Key Regulatory Considerations for London Fit-Outs

Beyond CDM, London office fit-outs engage several other regulatory frameworks that affect design, specification, and the approval process.

Building Regulations approval is required for certain categories of works, including structural alterations, material changes of use, and works affecting fire safety. In most London commercial buildings, the building owner will have a Registered Building Control Approver or local authority Building Control officer engaged for the building, and the tenant’s works must be notified and approved through this route.

Fire safety requirements are governed by the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005. Any works that affect compartmentation, means of escape, or fire detection and suppression systems require careful coordination with the building’s fire safety provisions and, in most cases, approval from the fire safety responsible person for the building, which is typically the landlord or building manager.

Energy performance requirements are governed by Part L of the Building Regulations. Fit-out works that include new lighting, HVAC, or building envelope modifications must comply with current Part L standards, which set minimum efficiency requirements for these systems. Unlike California’s Title 24, Part L compliance is administered through the building regulations process rather than a separate energy code.

The Case for Independent Project Management

A London fit-out involves a greater concentration of regulatory, commercial, and technical complexity than most other commercial property markets. CDM obligations, Listed Building constraints, a landlord approval process that can involve multiple parties including the freeholder, superior landlord, and their respective solicitors and surveyors, and a construction market with its own commercial dynamics all require active management throughout the project lifecycle.

An independent project manager coordinates all of these workstreams from a single point of accountability. Their independence from any commercial relationship with the design team, the contractor, or the landlord ensures that advice is objective and that the client’s interests are represented at every stage. This is the same value that Facilitate delivers across its markets in Asia, Australia & New Zealand, EMEA and the United States, applied to the specific context of London’s commercial property landscape.

Conclusion

Office fit-outs in London are complex but manageable with the right preparation and the right team. Understanding the submarket, the regulatory framework, the landlord approval process, and the construction market before committing to a lease and a brief consistently produces better outcomes than discovering these factors mid-project.

Organisations entering the London market for the first time, or those undertaking a significant fit-out after a long period in the same space, benefit most from independent advice at the earliest possible stage. The time invested in proper preparation is always recovered in reduced delays, lower cost, and a workspace that serves the business for the full duration of the lease.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does a typical London office fit-out take from brief to handover?

For a standard mid-sized office fit-out of 5,000 to 15,000 square feet in London, allow 24 to 36 weeks from brief to handover. Buildings with Listed Building status, complex M&E requirements, or phased delivery will require more time. The landlord approval process, including licence to alter negotiation, is typically the longest pre-construction lead-time item and should be initiated as early as possible.

Do CDM regulations apply to all office fit-outs in the UK?

CDM 2015 applies to virtually all commercial construction projects in the United Kingdom, including office fit-outs. The threshold for formal notification to the HSE is a project lasting more than 30 working days with more than 20 workers simultaneously, or more than 500 person-days in total. However, the duty to appoint a Principal Designer and Principal Contractor, and to comply with the general principles of CDM, applies regardless of whether the project meets the notification threshold.

What is a licence to alter and why do we need one?

A licence to alter is a formal legal agreement between the tenant and the landlord that sets out the works the tenant is permitted to carry out, the conditions attached to that permission, and the reinstatement obligations at lease expiry. It is a binding legal document and should be reviewed by the tenant’s solicitor before signing. Carrying out works without a licence to alter is a breach of the lease and can result in the landlord requiring the works to be removed at the tenant’s cost, even if the works themselves are of good quality.

How does Facilitate’s approach to independent project management differ from using the design team to manage the project?

An independent PM works exclusively in the client’s interest with no commercial relationship with the design team, the contractor, or the landlord. A designer acting as project manager has an inherent conflict of interest when their design decisions are questioned on cost, programme, or practicality grounds. Independent PM oversight ensures that the project brief is protected, the budget is managed objectively, and the client receives advice that is not influenced by any party’s commercial stake in the outcome.
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