New London Architecture

Connected Capital

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Connected Capital: London and the World’s Built Environment is the third report in NLA’s recent research trilogy exploring the future of the built environment sector. 

Following Skills for Places: Inspiring Future City Makers, which examined the talent pipeline shaping the next generation of industry leaders, and The Built Environment Sector, which quantified the sector’s economic contribution to the UK, this report turns outward to explore London’s global role. 

Connected Capital highlights London as a hub for city-making expertise, connecting talent, capital and knowledge to projects across the world and makes the case for recognising the built environment as a strategic national growth sector. 

The findings will help inform discussions at the Built World Summit at Guildhall (29 June - 1 July 2026), bringing together global leaders to explore the future of city-making and the international role of London’s built environment sector.

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Foreword

The built environment is already the UK’s largest economic sector—yet it remains largely invisible in national economic policy. London’s built environment sector is one of the UK’s most powerful—yet consistently underestimated—drivers of economic growth.

The NLA’s previous research showed the sector contributes £568 billion to national GVA—almost a quarter of the UK economy—and supports 3.8 million jobs, or one in eight across the country. By comparison, Finance and Insurance contributes £214 billion to national GVA.

Yet despite being collectively far larger, the built environment is still rarely recognised as a single, strategic sector within government economic strategy.

This report makes the case for change.

Connected Capital shows that the built environment is not simply an enabler of growth for other industries, but a globally traded, high-value growth sector in its own right. In 2023, UK built environment industries exported more than £168 billion of goods and services—around one fifth of all UK exports. That exceeds exports from Finance and Insurance, which generate around £120 billion annually.

Demand will only grow. The world’s urban population stood at 2.3 billion in 1980 and is expected to exceed 9 billion by 2080. The need to plan, finance, design and deliver sustainable cities and infrastructure will shape global economic development for decades—and the UK is uniquely positioned to lead that transition.

These figures place the built environment among the UK’s most internationally competitive industries, yet it still lacks equivalent strategic recognition.

London sits at the heart of this success. It is a global hub for citymaking expertise and a gateway through which capital, talent, and ideas flow into the UK and out to the world. Firms based here deliver complex projects across Europe, North America, the Middle East, and Asia, drawing on experience developed in one of the world’s most demanding urban environments. From regeneration and infrastructure to sustainability and low-carbon transition, London has become a proving ground for solutions now exported worldwide.

And this international success strengthens the whole country.

Regional centres across the UK host world-class expertise, while London connects that capability to global clients and capital. Investment, skills development, and supply-chain activity generated through London projects support jobs and productivity across the UK. This is not a zerosum relationship. It is mutually reinforcing. Yet, the sector still lacks a clear champion in government.

Responsibility remains fragmented, and the built environment is too often treated as disconnected industries rather than a single strategic whole. At a time when ambitions for growth, housing delivery, infrastructure renewal, and net zero all depend on this sector, that disconnect is no longer sustainable.

The NLA is calling for government to recognise the built environment as one sector—collectively the largest contributor to the UK economy and central to national growth and prosperity. Recognising it within the Industrial Strategy as an additional growth sector would unlock the sector’s full potential, enabling clearer leadership, stronger coordination across government and more effective support for firms competing internationally.

This publication sits at the heart of the NLA’s Built World Exchange network. Through research, convening, international engagement and advocacy, we are strengthening London’s global networks and championing the expertise that allows UK firms to succeed at home and abroad. From The London Centre to our programme of international partnerships—and the launch of the Built World Summit at Guildhall in 2026—we are committed to making the sector’s contribution visible and valued.

London has the expertise, talent, and global reach to help shape the cities of the future. The challenge now is not capability, but recognition and action. If the UK is serious about growth, resilience and long-term prosperity, the built environment can no longer remain hidden in plain sight. It must be placed where it belongs—at the centre of the nation’s economic strategy.

Nick McKeogh
Chief Executive, NLA
Connected Capital Project Directory

Connected Capital Project Directory

The Connected Capital project showcase highlights global projects delivered by London-based built environment firms, demonstrating the international reach and impact of UK expertise. 

From infrastructure and regeneration to sustainability-led urban development, these projects illustrate how London’s planning, design, engineering and development capabilities are shaping cities worldwide, while generating economic value, skills and investment across the UK. 

Explore the projects and discover how London’s built environment sector is contributing to the future of global city-making.
View the full directory

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Publication Contents

04 Foreword
06 Executive Summary
08 Introduction
10 London as a global centre of city-making expertise
14 Case study: Savills 
16 How does London’s built environment sector benefit the UK?
28 Case Study: Related Argent
30 Case Study: Newmark
32 What makes London’s city-making expertise distinct?
40 Case Study: Foster + Partners
42 Case Study: Arup
44 How can London unlock its built environment potential?
52 Case Study: Mace 
54 Our actions: How will the NLA champion London as a global connected capital?
57 Research data, results and supporting evidence
58 The Built Environment Sector as a Key Export Driver
62 The Built Environment Sector in London and New York City: a comparison
68 International project showcase
108 Endnotes
110 Acknowledgments

Publication details

Published 11 March 2026
114 pages

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