Partner Article
Hull’s Spencer Rail completes London St. Pancras move
Hull-based rail infrastructure company, Spencer Rail, has completed its move to new offices between two of London’s busiest railway stations.
Spencer Rail’s southern head office had previously been based in Waterloo but it has moved to One St Pancras Square - known as Gridiron.
Located between London St Pancras and London King’s Cross stations, the Grade A island office building is in a prime spot.
David McLoughlin, group managing director at Spencer Group, said: “Our new prestigious office is an absolutely fantastic base for our people and our customers.
“We are now positioned at the heart of London’s busy rail network and it provides us with fantastic work space in order to continue to deliver some great rail projects across the south of England.”
Spencer Rail’s old base in Waterloo is due for redevelopment in the coming years, which kick started the search for new premises.
David said: “The Waterloo office has served its purpose exceptionally well but the opportunity to move into ultramodern premises at One St Pancras Square came at the perfect time.
“The Gridiron is also ideally placed for our customers and our staff based in Scotland, the north and the midlands whose train journeys often bring them into nearby Euston, St. Pancras and/or King’s Cross stations.”
This was posted in Bdaily's Members' News section by Clare Burnett .
Enjoy the read? Get Bdaily delivered.
Sign up to receive our popular Yorkshire & The Humber morning email for free.
Putting in the groundwork to boost skills
£100,000 milestone drives forward STEM work
Restoring confidence for the economic road ahead
Ready to scale? Buy-and-build offers opportunity
When will our regional economy grow?
Creating a thriving North East construction sector
Why investors are still backing the North East
Time to stop risking Britain’s family businesses
A year of growth, collaboration and impact
2000 reasons for North East business positivity
How to make your growth strategy deliver in 2026
Powering a new wave of regional screen indies