• Hey, guest user. Hope you're enjoying NeoGAF! Have you considered registering for an account? Come join us and add your take to the daily discourse.

Dubai is at it again! "Dubai Looks to Build Tallest Skyscraper "

Status
Not open for further replies.

Firest0rm

Member
Dubai Looks to Build Tallest Skyscraper

Middle East - AP

By JIM KRANE, Associated Press Writer

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.

capt.9f7355b30c504bc85db4aa51062f56c0.pjpeg

AP Graphics Photo

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."

----

They just keep spending and spending :S.
 

AntoneM

Member
well, they may keep spending, but I know that if I ever get to the Middle East, Dubai will be a priority for me.
 

djtiesto

is beloved, despite what anyone might say
I'm glad to see the race for the tallest is back on... it's a shame that America seems to be too afraid to build any more superstructures... Personally, I'd love to see NY with the world's tallest again.
 

suaveric

Member
No one is going to outspend and out build those crazy guys in Dubai. But the US is still building some tall buildings. Trump Tower in Chicago (under construction) is going to be the city's (and country's) seccond tallest building and Freedom Tower in NYC is going to be pretty damn tall as well.
 
The Dubai government also has another 'world's tallest' building under construction. But they're really taking their time with that one, as the government is waiting for other countries to top Burj Dubai with their towers (which they estimate 2 years after) and then Dubai can just quickly finish up the second tower, making it even higher than the others, and end up having the highest once again. There are also plans for a third AND a fourth, in case the second or third get beaten quickly.

Dubai seems intent on making everything they have the largest. By late 2006, they will have the world's largest shopping mall, and also the world's largest theme park.
 

Nerevar

they call me "Man Gravy".
What is the point of this? It just sounds like a colossal waste of money. It at least made sense when they were building tall buildings in NYC.
 

djtiesto

is beloved, despite what anyone might say
I haven't really heard *ANYTHING* about the Freedom Tower under construction... from what I've heard there's still a huge layer of beauracracy... cost, stability, design issues. I (and like nearly everyone I talked to) think that they should just bring back the original twin towers, maybe make them taller than before.
 

Bregor

Member
djtiesto said:
I haven't really heard *ANYTHING* about the Freedom Tower under construction... from what I've heard there's still a huge layer of beauracracy... cost, stability, design issues. I (and like nearly everyone I talked to) think that they should just bring back the original twin towers, maybe make them taller than before.

The foundation construction for Freedom Tower has been underway for a while. The Twins are not coming back.
 

Lathentar

Looking for Pants
Nerevar said:
What is the point of this? It just sounds like a colossal waste of money. It at least made sense when they were building tall buildings in NYC.
The entire city is pretty much a colossal waste of money. I lived there for two years when they really really started the super projects. The Burj-Al-Arab Hotel, the Wave Hotel, the Water Park, and then I left just as the Palm Islands idea was starting off.

The city is great.
 

SteveMeister

Hang out with Steve.
Judging by this chart:

capt.9f7355b30c504bc85db4aa51062f56c0.pjpeg


at 1776 feet, Freedom Tower will at least briefly be the tallest building in the world, if it is completed before the Burj.
 

miyuru

Member
It's not a waste of money if they're making money out of it. I mean those apartments sold out in 8 hours...
 

Jak140

Member
They are obviously trying to turn themselves into a popular tourist spot to create a new source of income for when their oil wells start to dry up. This as anything but a waste of money if you look at it in the long term.
 

Lathentar

Looking for Pants
Jak140 said:
They are obviously trying to turn themselves into a popular tourist spot to create a new source of income for when their oil wells start to dry up. This as anything but a waste of money if you look at it in the long term.
Trying?

They've pretty much already suceeded. The place is crazy.
 

Firest0rm

Member
Dubai's goal is to become the international hub for anyone going form the east to the west or vice versa. And I think their doing a bang up job, the best airline with some of the best places to stay at.
 
'Is it expensive to get around, like food and stuff?'

Everything is cheap there. What helps is that the country does not have any taxes.
 
Dubai is a funny place

I like the little islands that they built shaped like a world map just like they did with the palms
you can buy your own country
 

XMonkey

lacks enthusiasm.
How tall are some of the other buildings in Dubai compared to this gigantic thing proposed? It could look cool (or awkward) if its the only thing remotely skyscraper-size in the area...
 
XMonkey said:
How tall are some of the other buildings in Dubai compared to this gigantic thing proposed? It could look cool (or awkward) if its the only thing remotely skyscraper-size in the area...
You must have missed the last GAF Dubai thread that city is a skyscraper monster
 

FightyF

Banned
Bah...it's only a sign of the rich getting richer and the poor getting poorer.

Hopefully some of the tourism money trickles down...
 

AntoneM

Member
Smiles and Cries said:
I see... still wonder would Americans not fear going there
it could become a new hotspot to target them.

interesting thing about Americans (and most western culture) we tend to look forward more than we look back. So, I would say that most Americans wiil not have any problem working in the Freedom Tower, in fact I'm sure many will be proud to do so.
 

nitewulf

Member
damn, dubai is like a modern version of babylon. and this is the fabled tower of babel.
underwater hotel? craaaaazy.
dubai is like a city from the future.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top Bottom