Home » Case Studies » White Post Street
White Post Street is a mixed-use residential development in south-east London being completed by Guildmore. Public planning and project information indicates that the scheme involves two buildings of between three and seven storeys, the refurbishment of railway arches and the delivery of residential units alongside flexible commercial space. The project has had a complex delivery history, with construction having restarted after an earlier pause, and the completed scheme is intended to bring new homes and active ground-floor uses into a tightly constrained urban setting. That combination of residential accommodation, retained infrastructure and commercial frontage makes White Post Street a more intricate project than a straightforward standalone housing block.
Within the residential element, Capricorn Contracts’ blinds package focuses on the living spaces and bedrooms across two blocks and 26 plots. In developments of this kind, window treatments are part of the final stage that turns completed apartments from constructed shells into homes that feel immediately usable. The split between dimout solutions in living areas and blackout performance in bedrooms reflects a thoughtful response to the way occupants will experience the spaces day and night, while the need for consistency across multiple plots supports the overall quality and coherence of the finished scheme.
White Post Street highlights how specialist interior packages contribute to urban residential delivery even when the wider project is architecturally and logistically complex. Alongside the more visible structural and external work, there is an equally important requirement to ensure that the internal living environment is comfortable, private and fit for occupation. Capricorn’s role supports that outcome by helping provide a polished, practical finish within the completed homes, reinforcing the wider ambition of the development to create high-quality new residential space within a busy London context. It is a reminder that successful mixed-use schemes depend as much on internal liveability as they do on planning, architecture and construction logistics.








At White Post Street, Capricorn Contracts delivered a coordinated blinds package across the residential accommodation in two blocks, helping Guildmore bring the apartments to a high-quality finished standard. The works were shaped around the way the homes would be used, with softer light control in living areas and stronger blackout performance in bedrooms to improve comfort, privacy and day-to-day usability. By installing a consistent solution across multiple plots within a more complex mixed-use development, Capricorn contributed to the creation of homes that feel complete, practical and ready for occupation.
Home » Case Studies » White Post Street
White Post Street is a mixed-use residential development in south-east London being completed by Guildmore. Public planning and project information indicates that the scheme involves two buildings of between three and seven storeys, the refurbishment of railway arches and the delivery of residential units alongside flexible commercial space. The project has had a complex delivery history, with construction having restarted after an earlier pause, and the completed scheme is intended to bring new homes and active ground-floor uses into a tightly constrained urban setting. That combination of residential accommodation, retained infrastructure and commercial frontage makes White Post Street a more intricate project than a straightforward standalone housing block.
Within the residential element, Capricorn Contracts’ blinds package focuses on the living spaces and bedrooms across two blocks and 26 plots. In developments of this kind, window treatments are part of the final stage that turns completed apartments from constructed shells into homes that feel immediately usable. The split between dimout solutions in living areas and blackout performance in bedrooms reflects a thoughtful response to the way occupants will experience the spaces day and night, while the need for consistency across multiple plots supports the overall quality and coherence of the finished scheme.
White Post Street highlights how specialist interior packages contribute to urban residential delivery even when the wider project is architecturally and logistically complex. Alongside the more visible structural and external work, there is an equally important requirement to ensure that the internal living environment is comfortable, private and fit for occupation. Capricorn’s role supports that outcome by helping provide a polished, practical finish within the completed homes, reinforcing the wider ambition of the development to create high-quality new residential space within a busy London context. It is a reminder that successful mixed-use schemes depend as much on internal liveability as they do on planning, architecture and construction logistics.







