Somehow I am not yet a believer here. Tall buildings have problems that
increase exponentially as we increase in height. However, with these
folks, they have obviously worked through the issues. What remains
to see is whether the economics will fly and if the consumer will
accept the product.
Recall 31400 people are going to want to leave and enter the building
every day. This means a couple of thousand per hour. Those
elevators will be loading and unloading constantly.
Even providing as many commercial services as possible will still see
folks heading out.
Besides the modular design ensures a lack of significant atriums to
provide interior airflow although I could be wrong on this.
Beyond all that, it needs to be economically viable and that is
something that I simply do not trust as sustainable of a continuing
basis.
Will really Sky
City, China, overtake Dubai's Burj Khalifa by March 2013?
At 838metres, the
tower is slated to be 10m higher than Burj Khalifa
By Parag Deulgaonkar
Published Sunday,
November 25, 2012
Standing 838 metres
high, 10 metres higher than Dubai’s Burj Khalifa, currently the
world’s tallest tower, Sky City in Changsha, China, will be built
in mere 90 days and completed by March 2013, according to media
reports.
Broad Sustainable
Building (BSB) Senior Vice-President Juliet Jiang told The Malay Mail
that the company’s plan to construct the skyscraper “will go on
as planned with the completion of five storeys a day.”
“We have not issued
any press statement on this and it will go on as planned ... we have
not said anything about 210 days,” Jiang said, adding they were
still waiting for approval for the project from the Chinese
government.
The tower, the company
says, will be able to withstand earthquakes of up to 9.0
magnitude, will be fireproof resistant for up to three hours and have
10 fire escape routes for evacuation of a floor within 15 minutes
during an emergency.
Sky City will also
have 15cm thermal insulators, four paned windows, fresh air heat
recovery system, non-electric air conditioners, cooling-heating power
system and LED lighting.
Although the Malaysian
newspaper did not report on when the project will be completed,
Construction Week Online said the foundation work is expected to
go ahead by the end of the month, while the planned three month
construction period runs from the end of the year to the end of March
2013.
Sky City will use BSB
modular technology which features 95 per cent factory prefabrication
with a construction pace of five storeys a day. The projected cost is
four billion yuan (Dh2.35 billion) and will be able to house 31,400
people. People will use 104 electricity-saving auto-power generated
lifts in the 220 storey hi-rise.
BSB says the
residential area will use 83 per cent of the building, while the rest
will be offices, hospitals, restaurants, shops and schools. People
will travel up and down using 104 high-speed elevators.
Last month at a
meeting of the Council for Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat in
Shanghai, Adrian Smith, who worked on the design of Burj Khalifa and
is currently working on the one-kilometre-high Kingdom Tower, Saudi
Arabia, said that rapid urbanisation in China would fuel major
expansion in tall buildings.
William Baker, a
structural engineer at Skidmore, Owings and Merrill who worked with
Adrian Smith on designing the system that allowed Burj Khalifa to be
built, told the atlanticcities.com in September that the
buttressed core design of Burj Khalifa can be used to build
structures even taller than the world’s tallest tower.
“It’s totally
feasible to build much taller than even the one-kilometre high
Kingdom Tower, which is expected to be completed by mid-2017. We
could easily do a kilometer. We could easily do a mile,” he
said.
BSB, which has built
20 “modular” structures in China, showcased its construction
abilities to a wider audience in January, when it constructed a
30-storey hotel in 15 days.
In July, Zhang Yue,
Chief Executive Officer, Broad Sustainable Building, told a Reuters
magazine that he plans build at a two-kilometre high, 636-floor
tower.
Yue was quoted,
saying: "One hundred per cent! Some say that it's sensationalism
to construct such a tall building. That's not so. Land shortages are
already a grave problem. There's also the very serious transportation
issue. We must bring cities together and stretch for the sky in order
to save cities and save the Earth."
In June, Kingdom
Holding Company (KHC) Chairman Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, said the
1,000-metre high tall Kingdom Tower in Jeddah will be completed by
mid-2017.
Following KHC
announcement, an Azerbaijan company said it plans to build the
tallest tower in the world, standing at 1,050 metres, surrounded by
number of artificial islands and a Formula One racetrack. The project
is likely to be completed between 2020 and 2025.
Burj Khalifa has 900
studios, one-, two-, three- and four-bedrooms, while the Armani
Residences has 144 fully furnished private apartments. It offers
luxurious recreational and leisure facilities including four swimming
pools, an exclusive residents' lounge; health and wellness
facilities; At.mosphere, the world's highest fine dining restaurant
at level 122 and At the Top, the world's highest observatory deck,
with an outdoor terrace on level 124.
Dubai is also home to
three tallest residential towers in the world - the 414-metre
Princess Tower, the 395-metre 23 Marina and the 381-metre Elite
Residence. All the three towers have been completed and the handover
process to unit owners has already commenced.
Earlier this year,
Barclays Capitals Skyscraper Index report found an “unhealthy
correlation” between the building of skyscrapers and impending
financial crashes as “remarkably accurate”.
In January, Andrew
Lawrence Director, Property Research, Asia Ex-Japan Equities,
Barclays Capital, told ‘Emirates24|7’ that the index had not
taken into account the Kingdom Tower as it only includes under
construction towers, but on completion it will raise a concern over
the country’s economic outlook 2016/17.
China is set to
complete 53 per cent of the 124 skyscrapers under construction over
the next six years. The country now has 75 completed skyscrapers
above 240 metres in height.
That is one of the developing infrastructures in China. Thank you for sharing your insights about that.
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