Read our guide to find out what type of flexible workspace is offered by Trinity Buoy Wharf
Trinity Buoy Wharf is like a city within a city and is home to studios, offices for rent, event space, a pier, two schools, and rehearsal rooms, as well as food and drink establishments.
It offers studios and office space to rent in a range of buildings including Clipper House and Riverside Building as well as its striking Container City developments that have been created from shipping containers.
Studios and offices range in size from approximately 200 square feet to approximately 500 square feet and are equipped with sinks, and kitchen areas and many have balconies.
There are also workshops available at the site and 2012 Studios offers music studios that overlook the River Lea.
64 Orchard Place, Poplar, London, E14 0JW
We have the pleasure of providing access to Trinity Buoy Wharf flexible workspace in Poplar in East London.
Who are Trinity Buoy Wharf?
Trinity Buoy Wharf is described as a place devoted to creative and arts activity on the banks of the River Thames in London’s Docklands.
Established in 1998, the site was developed by Urban Space Management Ltd which took it from an empty, derelict site and, through the provision of low-cost workspaces and studios, created a community of over 500 people, and a base for organisations including the English National Opera, Uber Boat by Thames Clippers, Faraday School, The Big Draw, The Prince’s Foundation and many others.
Trinity Buoy Wharf is now a place with studios and offices for people working in the creative industries, workspace for people who work to provide transportation on the river, classrooms for education, indoor and outdoor spaces for arts events and a wide range of activities such as conferences, workshops and product launches.
It is also home to a range of food and drink options, a sculpture park, and London’s only lighthouse!
Trinity Buoy Wharf offers unique office space and workspace solutions in a truly unique location with a built-in exciting creative community.
The space is home to year-round exhibitions that cover an eclectic range of worlds and is also home to The Faraday Effect which is one of London’s smallest museums and studies the works of everyone’s favourite Victorian electromagnetist.
With strong links with the site, the SS Robin returned in December 2023. The only complete Victorian steamship in existence was built 150 metres from Trinity Buoy Wharf in 1890.
The ship joined the rest of the collection of heritage vessels at Trinity Buoy Wharf, which is now a free to enjoy, maritime museum that celebrates London’s maritime history.
There is also a rather unique dining experience to be had at Trinity Buoy Wharf in Fat Boy’s Diner.
Originally built in 1956 in Worcester, Massachusetts, USA, the original American Diner was transported to London in the late 1990s and was finally moved to Trinity Buoy Wharf in 2003!