Dubai about to build the mother-of-all tallest buildings:

aria

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I've heard the early proposals about this monster... but many of these proposals end up dying off (like the one in Melbourne). But the hype-monster for this thing kept growing, as well as the UAE's penchant for building simply awe-inspiring urban-planning/architectural constructions (impressive in sheer size). Since the normal topography is simply unremarkable desert on the Gulf, they have no problems doing amazing things to spruce it up. It's kind of like the reckless abandon that guides Las Vegas, only dominated by far fewer strands of architectual style.

Well, this sucker looks like a go!

How tall is it? The world's current tallest, in Taipei, is 101 floors. The Sears Tower in Chicago has 108 floors. This thing will at least be over 150 floors (they're keeping it a secret, but it could be even taller -one button had 189 :eek:

Here's an article, graph, and link to the official website.

----------------------------------

Dubai Looks to Build Tallest Skyscraper
Wed Mar 30, 2:41 PM ET
By JIM KRANE, Associated Press Writer

capt.9f7355b30c504bc85db4aa51062f56c0.pjpeg


DUBAI, United Arab Emirates - For now, the world's tallest building-to-be is just a flower-shaped concrete tattoo on the desert sands, but its pilings are already in place, plunging 160 feet into the earth. When it's finished, visitors will swoon over this city from 123 stories high, if not more.

In fact the Burj Dubai will be much higher, the developers say — dozens of stories taller than skyscrapers in Taiwan, Chicago or anywhere else. But they are keeping the exact height a secret to flummox competitors in the world's furious race for the title of tallest skyscraper.

"We're going to records never approached before. Not only will it be the tallest building, it will be the tallest manmade tower," said Robert Booth, a director at Emaar Properties, the Dubai construction firm developing the spire-shaped, stainless-steel-skinned tower.

Booth said jokingly that once completed in 2008, the $900 million Burj will sport a movable spire to keep observers from ever gauging the true height.

"Only the chairman will know how tall it is," he joked.

He refused to reveal the total number of stories, but a mock elevator at the site held a button for a 189th floor. The building's 10 foot sway in the wind means designers need to prevent whiplash in the ultra-long cables hauling up 50 elevators.

The craze for height has hit hardest in industrializing Asian countries like Taiwan, Hong Kong and China, which boast seven of the world's 10 tallest buildings. The current tallest, at 101 floors, is the Taipei 101 in Taiwan, though Toronto's CN Tower is 180 feet higher, largely because of its huge antenna.

The Persian Gulf city of Dubai has staked its fame on engineering audacity such as its vast archipelagoes of artificial holiday islands, and the Burj, Arabic for "tower," is one of its more extreme mega-projects.

New York built skyscrapers because land was scarce; Dubai is doing it to get on the international map.

"It's image, clearly," said Richard Rosan, president of the Washington-based Urban Land Institute. "There is no practical reason for having a building this tall."

On paper, the Burj looks something like a giant space shuttle about to be launched into the clouds.

Booth took reporters to the open-air 37th floor of a neighboring building, a vertigo-inducing experience in itself, and chatted breezily while standing perilously close to the abyss.

"Can you imagine what it's going to be like on the 137th floor?" he said. "You can't be scared of heights to do this job."

Developers say the silvery steel-and-glass building will restore to the Middle East the honor of hosting the earth's tallest structure — a title lost in 1889 when the Eiffel Tower upset the 43-century reign of Egypt's Great Pyramid of Giza.

Designers have planned for catastrophes, manmade and other, said Greg Sang, Emaar's project manager for the Burj. Sang believes the concrete-core building would withstand an airliner strike of the sort that brought down the steel-frame World Trade Center.

"Concrete is much more robust than steel when you hit it. It's also much better at resisting fire," he said.

The tower owes its shape to American architect Adrian Smith, of the Chicago firm Skidmore, Owings & Merrill. Smith also designed Shanghai's 1,378-foot Jin Mao tower, the world's fourth tallest.

Workers from the chief contractor, South Korea's Samsung, are already swarming over the slab, shaped in three rounded lobes like a local desert flower.

A hotel will occupy the lower 37 floors. Floors 45 through 108 will have 700 private apartments — already sold in just eight hours, the developer said.

Corporate offices and suites will fill most of the rest, except for a 123rd floor lobby and 124th floor observation deck — with an outdoor terrace for the brave. The spire will also hold communication equipment.

As for the title of world's tallest, Sang expects the Burj to hold it for a few years. "But someone, somewhere will come along and build a taller building. It's just a matter of time and money."

http://www.burjdubai.com/
 
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LWK

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That will be something else man..
Real ashame the only thing I think of when I see tall buildings is 9/11. =(
 

'Lord Yamazaki'

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Lord Wolfgang Krauser said:
That will be something else man..
Real ashame the only thing I think of when I see tall buildings is 9/11. =(
9/11 was also the first thing I thought after reading this :crying:

Anyways, that is seriously some crazy shit. Me living in texas, tallest building I've ever walked to was like 15 floors lol, and that was already super tall to me.

The guys on the 150th floor will be able to drink coffee not only with their comrades, but also with God lol. It's truly gonna be a modern architectural wonder if it is ever finished. Not sure if I would ever wanna go all the way to the top floor myself tho. :make_fac:
 

Nesagwa

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I thought they had already started on this thing.
Saw them planning it on that PBS show about the TaiPei 101 building and that one in China that has the big circle at the top.

Eh, its a cool looking building.
 

Eric

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What happened to the super tall building they wanted to build in New York? :spock:

Does this building have it beat before construction can even begin?
 

soulthug

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Drinking coffee with god? cool! maybe have a drink with elvis while your up there...
 

aria

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Eric said:
What happened to the super tall building they wanted to build in New York? :spock:

Does this building have it beat before construction can even begin?

The Freedom Tower (the replacement for the WTC) is going to be 100 ft taller than Taipei 101, but it sort of "cheated" anyway: if you look at the design, the office building section is actually much shorter than the total height (70 stories at the top) -instead it's the spire and other decorative elements that punch it to its highest spot.

If you look at this current design photo, you'll get what I mean:
home_2-10-05.jpg


Comparisons
Freedom_Tower_specs.jpg
 
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bokmeow

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Eric said:
What happened to the super tall building they wanted to build in New York? :spock:

Does this building have it beat before construction can even begin?

Edit: Bobak! beat me to the punch.

Just watch, there will be an announcement for an even taller tower than the Dubai tower soon, in the next 2-3 years.
 
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Eric

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There was an article about it in Maxim or Stuff or something a couple of months ago.

Looks like our tower lost already. I had forgotten about the 1776 ft part.

Has construction even started on it yet? Hell, aside from that article I really haven't heard much about it.
 

dragonwillow

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I really, really hate the Freedom Tower design.
Maybe when this whole ordeal is over those silly people in Congress will let us have French fries and rename it the French Tower.

Taipei 101 isn't too pretty. My friends there all say it looks like a gigantic bamboo stalk.

I really like the Dubai tower design, though.
 

bokmeow

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dragonwillow said:
Taipei 101 isn't too pretty. My friends there all say it looks like a gigantic bamboo stalk.

Learn from Jackie. Bamboo is very strong.
 

shir0

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dragonwillow said:
I really, really hate the Freedom Tower design.
Maybe when this whole ordeal is over those silly people in Congress will let us have French fries and rename it the French Tower.

Taipei 101 isn't too pretty. My friends there all say it looks like a gigantic bamboo stalk.

I really like the Dubai tower design, though.

Fuck the french, and fuck you for suggesting it.
 
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