Britannic House is the name of three buildings in the City of London that have served as the UK headquarters of BP and its predecessor companies.
Britannic House, 23 Great Winchester Street, EC2N 2DB, A 4-floor building. Headquarters of the
Anglo-Persian Oil Company (founded in 1909) from November 1917 until c. 1925. Nos. 23, 24, 25 Great Winchester Street are group listed Grade II (list entry number 1358913, 16 January 1981).
Britannic House, 1-6 Finsbury Circus, EC2M 7EB. Also known as
Lutyens House. Designed by Edwin Lutyens, Grade II* listed (entry number 1064691, 4 January 1950), and located in the northwest quadrant of
Finsbury Circus. British headquarters of the Anglo-Persian Oil Company from c. 1925. Company was renamed the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company in 1935, and British Petroleum in 1954. British Petroleum relocated to Ropemaker Street in 1967, and then back to Finsbury Circus in 1991, and subsequently to 1 St. James’s Square, SW1Y 4PD.
Britannic House, 1 Ropemaker Street, EC2Y 9HR. The subject of this article. Designed by F. Milton Cashmore and H. N. W. Grosvenor, a 35-storey 122-metre (400-ft) tall building, constructed 1967. Occupied by BP from 1967 to 1991. Renamed
Britannic Tower in 1991, and
Citypoint after refurbishment in 2000. ==Image gallery==