Tuesday, February 8, 2011

1000 meter buildings – The sky is apparently not the limit

On January 4th this year, the tallest structure in the history of the earth opened its doors for the first time. Towering some 828 meters (2,717 feet) above ground, the Burj Khalifa punctures the clouds above Dubai, dwarfing its neighbors, the 50-story buildings. Erected in less than five years, it’s an unfathomable feat of engineering, and a symbol of human capacity. But more importantly, the Burj Khalifa is just the first little snowball of the impending avalanche of super tall skyscraper construction.

Here’s an overview of which projects are on the skyscraper horizon:
The first building to break the 500 meter barrier was the Taipei 101 in 2004. Currently, more than twenty 500m+ buildings are under construction. The world’s skylines are in a stage of rapid transformation, and tomorrow’s cities will look radically different from the one you grew up in.
261009-raffles-mecca The Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat projects that in 2020, half of the 20 tallest buildings will be in the Middle East. One exciting development is the Royal Clock Tower Hotel, a massive structure set to open later this year. At 577 meters, the hotel will exceed the height of Taipei 101, the world’s tallest building until last year. Its clock, visible from 17 kilometers away, will announce daily prayers to the Muslim world.
Several lofty projects have been proposed, such as the 2,000 meter pyramid in Tokyo Bay, the 1600 meter (one mile) Dubai City Tower and the 1,280 meter Bionic Tower. While these buildings are immensely fascinating and may well be realized within 2025, they remain long term prospects.
Several planned 1000 meter+ buildings have been put on hold due to the credit crunch, but most of these are set to begin construction once the funding has been secured. This includes the Mile High Tower in Saudi Arabia, the 1,022 meter Murjan Tower in Bahrain and the equally tall Sky City in Tokyo which is set to house 35,000 residents and 100,000 workers.
Mubarakal-Kabir-001 I saved the best for last. In Kuwait, science-fiction is coming to life. Construction has already begun on the new City of Silk, a pillar of human achievement in its own right, which will include the Burj Mubarak al Kabir, a 250-story, 1000 meter (3,284 feet) mixed use skyscraper. The planned building will consist of seven vertically stacked 30-story neighborhoods, with 4 story “town squares” separating them. The structure, designed by Eric Kuhne, is scheduled for completion in 2016 and will be the world's tallest.
One thing’s for sure: during the course of the current century, humans will be living at increasingly higher altitudes. Now all we need is personal flying machines to take us home.


1 comment:

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