The new headquarters of Adjaye Associates comprises four floors with capacity for 180 people. Its form is characterized by a finned façade and a 26-meter cantilever, creating over 1,300 square meters of open-plan office space, highlighting its structural clarity and spatial efficiency.
In terms of construction, the building utilizes locally sourced materials and systems used in contemporary building, such as rammed earth and low-carbon concrete. Inside, the building integrates natural light through the system of glazed fins and employs earthen materials and wooden surfaces to create warm and inviting environments.

Adjaye Associates Studio by Adjaye Associates. Photograph by Mutahi Chiira.
Project description by Adjaye Associates
“Grounded in earth and shaped by light, the building dissolves the boundaries of the conventional office, creating a workplace that is at once social, climatic and deeply connected to its surroundings.”
Designed by David Adjaye, the building is the Accra home of his own global architecture practice, Adjaye Associates. The Shippon Offices establishes a new Grade-A workplace in Cantonments, one of Accra’s most central and established neighbourhoods. The four-storey building marks a significant moment for a globally recognized practice inhabiting a building of its own design in West Africa.
The building’s identity is defined by a striking finned façade and a 26-metre cantilever that extends beyond the parking structure at ground level. This gesture elevates the primary workspace and creates over 1,300 square meters of column-free office area, balancing structural clarity and spatial efficiency. The building is designed to accommodate up to 180 people.
Materially, the building is constructed of rammed earth and low-carbon concrete, reflecting the practice’s commitment to environmental performance and the use of local materials and knowledge systems in contemporary construction. Rammed earth fins create a largely opaque exterior that ensures privacy and solar control, while their depth and spacing frame precise views across the city. The finned façade operates as an environmental filter and the building’s defining architectural language.
Internally, the building is shaped by a calibrated interplay of light and earthen material. Daylight is drawn through the glazed fin system, producing interiors that are warm, grounded and tactile, with timber and earthen surfaces reinforcing the human-scaled working environment.