Serviced Offices in Temple & Blackfriars
The Inns of Court have trained barristers here since the Knights Templar departed in 1312. Seven centuries later, Temple remains London's undisputed legal quarter. If you work in law, this is where your profession lives; chambers, law libraries, and the infrastructure of legal practice.
The Vibe
Scholarly, contemplative, and steeped in tradition. Barristers in robes cross cobbled courtyards. Law libraries provide hushed reference space. The River Thames brings light and perspective. Less frenetic than the commercial City; conversations happen at length, precedent matters, precision rules.
The Buildings
Historic Inns of Court provide Grade I and II-listed chambers with centuries of character. Modern serviced offices at Tallis House offer contemporary facilities while respecting conservation standards. The mix spans medieval to modern, with riverside developments adding glass-and-steel options.
Getting Around
Temple station (Circle, District) sits at the heart. Blackfriars (Circle, District, National Rail, Thameslink) provides north-south connections. City Thameslink links to Farringdon and beyond. Chancery Lane (Central) is 10 minutes walk. River buses offer scenic alternatives.
Who this neighbourhood suits
Best for: Barristers, law firms, legal services, IP specialists, dispute resolution. Not for: Tech, creative, or anyone uncomfortable with formal professional culture. Non-legal firms might find the environment oddly specialised.
Highlights
- 700+ years of continuous legal practice in one location
- Inns of Court: Middle Temple, Inner Temple heritage
- Thames riverside setting with Victoria Embankment gardens
- Blackfriars: Thameslink direct to Gatwick, Luton, Brighton
- Law libraries, legal publishers, professional infrastructure
How it compares
Temple vs nearby alternatives:
Chancery Lane
- Price: £500+ (comparable)
- Vibe: Legal adjacent, more mixed occupancy
- Best for: Law firms wanting Midtown location
St Paul's/Cheapside
- Price: £600+ (slightly higher)
- Vibe: Commercial, cathedral setting
- Best for: Professional services wanting City prestige
Transport options
| Station | Lines | Walk (mins) |
|---|---|---|
| Temple | Circle, District | 3 |
| Blackfriars | Circle, District, Thameslink | 5 |
| Chancery Lane | Central | 12 |
Pricing
Typical monthly price range (per desk): £550–£1,000.
Private offices typically £650-£850/desk. Premium for Inns-adjacent. (January 2026 data)
Methodology: Surveyed from managed office providers in this area. Updated quarterly.
Nearby neighbourhoods
- Chancery Lane (chancery-lane): Legal profession, Midtown connection
- St Paul's/Cheapside (st-pauls-cheapside): Cathedral views, commercial City
- Holborn (holborn): Central location, mixed professional
- Strand (strand): West End edge, media nearby
FAQs
Why do law firms cluster in Temple?
Historical momentum and practical necessity. The Inns of Court have trained barristers here for 700 years. Chambers, law libraries, courts, and professional infrastructure concentrate here. Networking, briefing, and professional collaboration happen within walking distance.
Can non-legal businesses work from Temple?
Yes, though the environment is specialised. Serviced offices at Blackfriars accept any professional tenant. But the area's character is thoroughly legal; if your business has nothing to do with law, you may find the surroundings oddly specific.
What are the Inns of Court exactly?
Professional associations that regulate barristers. Middle Temple and Inner Temple occupy this area. They control who can practise at the Bar, provide training, and maintain the historic buildings. It's a closed professional ecosystem with centuries of tradition.
Is the riverside location actually useful?
Yes. Victoria Embankment gardens provide green space for lunch breaks. River buses offer alternative transport. The Thames brings light and air that dense City locations lack. Walking along the embankment provides perspective between intense work sessions.
How formal is the dress code?
Professional; suits expected for client meetings and court appearances. Day-to-day can be business casual in serviced offices. But the area's culture is conservative; casual dress stands out. If your firm has a startup dress code, Temple may feel uncomfortable.
What's the after-work scene?
Traditional and professional. Wine bars and pubs serve lawyers discussing cases. The Blackfriar pub (Art Nouveau interior) provides character. For livelier options, South Bank is across the bridge, Fleet Street nearby. It's not a late-night destination.
Are there good serviced office options?
Several quality operators. Tallis House at 2 Tallis Street provides modern flexible space. The area supports professional meeting facilities appropriate for legal work. Options exist for solo practitioners through mid-sized firms.






