The Spinnaker Tower is a 170-metre (560 ft) landmark observation tower in Portsmouth, England. It is the centrepiece of the redevelopment of Portsmouth Harbour, which was supported by a National Lottery grant. The tower’s design was chosen by Portsmouth residents from a selection of three different designs in a 1998 public poll.[5] It has three viewing platforms one on top of the other at heights of 100 m, 105 m and 110 m.
The tower was designed by local firm HGP Architects and engineering consultants Scott Wilson and built by Mowlem. The Spinnaker Tower reflects Portsmouth’s maritime history through its design and is named after a spinnaker, a type of sail that balloons outward.[6] The tower was opened on 18 October 2005.
The tower is owned by Portsmouth City Council and is operationally managed by Continuum Leading Attractions, a cultural attractions group based in York. Continuum also runs five other visitor attractions across the country.
The Spinnaker Tower was repainted and rebranded as the “Emirates Spinnaker Tower” from July 2015 following a five-year commercial sponsorship deal with Dubai-based Emirates airline. The Emirates sponsorship deal expired in 2020 and the tower reverted to its original all-white paint scheme and name in April 2021.
The tower, at a height of 560 feet (170 m), is one of the tallest accessible structures in the United Kingdom outside London. The tower is visible around Portsmouth, changing the horizon of the area. It can be seen from the Isle of Wight, the Manhood Peninsula, Highdown Gardens and Cissbury Ring in Worthing and Nine Barrow Down in the Purbeck Hills, Dorset.
The tower represents sails billowing in the wind, a design accomplished using two large, white, sweeping metal arcs, which give the tower its spinnaker sail design. The steelwork was fabricated by Butterley Engineering. At the top is a triple observation deck, providing a 360° view of the city of Portsmouth, the Langstone and Portsmouth harbours, and a viewing distance of 37 kilometres (23 mi). The highest of the three observation platforms, the Sky Deck, has only a wire mesh roof, so visitors are open to the elements. The windows extend above head height, so it is not possible to get a view unobstructed by glass. A glass floor is located on the first viewing deck at 100 metres above sea level. It has three viewing platforms one on top of the other at heights of 100 m, 105 m and 110 m. The tower has a design lifetime of 80 years.[7]
Portsmouth’s Millennium Tower, as it was originally intended to be named, was a project conceived in 1995 to design a monument to commemorate the Millennium celebrations in the year 2000.[8] It received UK National Lottery funding and was intended to open in late 1999.[9][10]
A choice of three different Millennium Tower designs were presented to the people of Portsmouth for a public poll in early 1998.
The poll was undertaken by Portsmouth City Council in conjunction with Portsmouth’s local newspaper, The News between 11 February 1998 and 23 February 1998. The total number of votes received were 9,476, with 65% of the votes selecting Spinnaker, a design by local architects Hedley Greentree Associates Ltd.[14]
Due to political, financial, contractual and construction problems and extra funding requests by the builders Mowlem, construction did not begin until 2001 and was completed in mid-2005. Because of the six-year delay in opening and not having been ready for the Millennium as planned, the tower was renamed Spinnaker Tower instead, the design name it had been called in the 1998 public poll.
A Portsmouth City Council official referring to the building delay said “It is personally very embarrassing as project manager and is very disappointing and upsetting”.[15]
The overall development project was over budget, with the tower costing £35.6 million alone. Taxpayers were never intended to fund the tower, but Portsmouth City Council eventually contributed £11.1 million towards construction.
In March 2004, Portsmouth Council’s former leader Cllr Leo Madden resigned as leader of the Labour Group on the council after a highly critical report of the council’s handling of the project and its failure to exploit revenue opportunities, such as the Millennium. Barry Smith, the project’s legal advisor, also retired after being suspended on full pay,[16] mostly because of controversy over the contract with the builders, which at one point would have cost the council more to cancel than to complete.
The Spinnaker Tower has suffered from a number of issues since opening, including a malfunctioning external glass lift.[17] During the final construction phase, a protester from the rights group Fathers 4 Justice scaled the tower wearing a high-visibility jacket and unfurling a banner in the process.[18] Another incident happened a year later when a base jumper managed to get past site security and jumped off the Tower; he quickly ran off site after parachuting down.[19]
The tower was dedicated on 16 October 2005 and opened two days later. On opening day, the tower’s project manager, David Greenhalgh, and representatives of Mowlem and Maspero were stranded in its malfunctioning external lift (built by Maspero) for an hour and a half. Abseiling engineers were called to rescue them.[20][21][22] Some, including the franchise’s chief executive, felt it was rather fitting that these particular people had been trapped.[23] The external lift was removed during December 2012.
Once open, the tower attracted crowds in excess of expectations, despite only the internal lift working, with more than 600,000 people visiting it in the first year.[24] It is one of a number of observation towers around the world that have become popular, including Vancouver‘s Harbour Centre, Toronto’s CN Tower, Blackpool‘s Tower, New York City’s One World Trade Center (as well as the original Twin Towers) and Shanghai’s Oriental Pearl Tower.
In June 2006, the local press raised a concern that the tower might be forced to close. All public buildings in the UK require disabled access under the 1995 Disability Discrimination Act. With the external lift inoperative and only a single internal lift and stairs available as emergency escape routes, disabled people were not allowed to access the tower if they would be unable to use the stairs because a minimum of two escape routes are required by law.[25] This problem was rectified by investing in an evacuation chair and training staff to use it. In the event of evacuation, should the internal lift be inoperable, those unable to navigate the 570 steps can use the evacuation chair.
The Spinnaker Tower, being a landmark of southern England, features in the title sequence of the BBC South Today news programme. It also features on ITV News.
In June 2009, the tower’s operators succeeded in gaining permission for a freefall ride to be attached.[26] As of 2015 this remains only a plan.[needs update]
In 2006, the tower won the RICS Project of the Year award and the RICS Regeneration award.[27]
In May 2015, as part of a wider effort to “generate additional revenue by using the advertising potential of council-owned land and other assets”, Portsmouth City Council proposed selling the tower’s naming rights to a commercial sponsor.[28][29] The proposed sponsorship deal would include the naming rights for the tower for at least five years, repainting and rebranding the tower in the sponsor’s choice of colours and logos and new signage to be installed “no later than July 17” ahead of the 2015 America’s Cup World Series. Dubai-based airline Emirates was reported to be the favoured sponsor, with the tower to be renamed as the Emirates Spinnaker Tower.[30][31]
On 5 June 2015, the city council confirmed that Emirates had been secured as the sponsor.[32] Councillor Luke Stubbs said: “It’s clearly a very good deal for the city and shows the benefit that Portsmouth is deriving from the America’s Cup… This also associates Portsmouth with a global brand and that can only be a good thing.”[33] The tower was to be repainted in a red and white colour scheme—similar to that of local football rivals Southampton F.C.—as part of the rebranding but following a petition with over 10,000 signatures, Portsmouth City Council decided to rethink the change.[34][35] Portsmouth City Council leader Donna Jones said: “We are working up a new design for the tower [which] will reflect the city’s heritage… I don’t want a tower in the city [that] no one likes the look of.”[36] The new design, unveiled on 19 June 2015, featured a blue, gold and white colour scheme. Tim Clark, President and CEO of Emirates said: “We listened to the feedback and worked with the council to adapt the designs in order to create something that Portsmouth residents will be proud of.”[37] In April 2021 the tower was repainted its original all-white colour, as the five year sponsorship deal with Emirates had ended on 30 June 2020.[38