place

40 Charter Street

Buildings and structures in the London Borough of Tower HamletsBuildings and structures under construction in the United KingdomResidential skyscrapers in LondonSkyscrapers in the London Borough of Tower HamletsUse British English from September 2025
40 Charter Street, 29 August 2025
40 Charter Street, 29 August 2025

40 Charter Street is a residential skyscraper under construction within the Wood Wharf development on the Isle of Dogs in London, England. Part of Phase Three of the larger Wood Wharf masterplan, the building is being developed by the Canary Wharf Group. It was designed by the architecture firm KPF and rises to 178.6 metres (586 ft). The building was a finalist for the Net Zero Award at the Building Awards 2024, and a finalist at the New London Awards 2023.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article 40 Charter Street (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

40 Charter Street
Charter Street, London Isle of Dogs

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: 40 Charter StreetContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.5019 ° E -0.0123 °
placeShow on map

Address

40 Charter Street

Charter Street 40
E14 9XU London, Isle of Dogs
England, United Kingdom
mapOpen on Google Maps

40 Charter Street, 29 August 2025
40 Charter Street, 29 August 2025
Share experience

Nearby Places

South Dock railway station

South Dock was a railway station on the Isle of Dogs in east London. It was between Millwall Junction and Millwall Docks on the Millwall Extension Railway (MER) branch of the London and Blackwall Railway (LBR) which opened to goods traffic on 18 December 1871 and to passenger services on 29 July 1872. The station was on the northern side of the South Dock of the West India Docks, near the eastern end. It had an island platform as it was the only passing loop on the branch. The station buildings were of timber with a slate roof. Platform was brick faced. Station was staffed entirely by dock employees, company issued its own tickets.The station was renamed South West India Dock in July 1881 but reverted to its original name of South Dock in May 1895. It stood in a relatively isolated location in the docks area, some distance from the nearest road. Passenger usage of the station was always light and services to it, and the rest of the MER extension, ceased in May 1926, though goods services continued until the demise of the docks in the 1970s. Extensive rebuilding in the 1980s Docklands redevelopment has left no trace of the station or the line (the Docklands Light Railway reuses much of the LBR's route but runs further to the west in this area to serve Canary Wharf). Until the mid-2010s, the site was occupied by a BT telecommunications building. As of 2021, it is occupied by the 20 Water Street building, part of the Wood Wharf development.