IBM North Harbour


IBM North Harbour is the former headquarters of IBM in the UK. The site is now a larger business park, Lakeside North Harbour, and IBM is no longer present at the site.

History

IBM sold the main building in 2005. In November 2015 IBM sold two more buildings. In October 2024 IBM left the North Harbour site and moved its Headquarters to IBM Hursley.

Construction

The site was chosen in 1969, and drained during 1971 under direction of Grontmij N.V. of the Netherlands. In 1972 construction of the lake took place, directly bounded to the south by the construction of the M27 embankment. The foundations were built in 1973, with 30 m-deep piles. The building was formed with pre-cast concrete sections, built on the piles.
Structural engineering and architecture was by Arup Associates. It was built by Taylor Woodrow Construction. It cost £17.2m.

Opening

Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh opened the site on Friday 3 December 1976. The Prince had flown by aircraft, being met by William Harris, 6th Earl of Malmesbury, the Lord Lieutenant of Hampshire.
IBM also had ten acres at Interchange Park, a nearby manufacturing plant, which opened in 1967.

Visits

Structure

The site is accessed via the A27, at the terminus of M27. Cosham railway station is within walking distance, to the east. It is next to junction 12 of the M27.
A Porsche retail centre opened nearby in 2012, on the site. In 2012 three acres near Porsche were sold for a 124-bed hotel.

Tenants

IBM UK

In early the 1990s, IBM employed 14,000 people in the UK
Chief executives of IBM UK are

Popular culture