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The building looks potentially ugly, and I question the design for the height of the building because of wind at that height, but the speed at which it is getting built makes sense if it is all prefabricated in a warehouse.
With this building I think there might be a number of problems, like does it have a core, how does it handle wind and sway, how does it handle commuting within the building (elevator speeds and elevator shafts.) It could take someone over a half hour to get to the upper floors.
This is really all I have seen on this building and usually I ignore these super tall buildings because they almost never get built so I really don't know how serious this proposal really is.
Maybe they will be like us Americans and "just figure out the small details as we go"
I don't see this as happening. I live in Chicago and the tallest building here at 1440 feet (110 floors) already sways so much at the top on windy days, it actually makes some people experience motion sickness. And the amount of space needed for elevators and mechanical stuff like plumbing and such would take up a huge amount of space. While it is possible for the Chinese to build it, it would make far more economic sense to build 2 towers of 110 floors and even more sense to build 4 of 55 floors.
Just seeing the word "sway" and picturing 220 storeys is making me feel vertiginous
I've been up the Sears (I still can't think of it as Willis) Tower and to the bar at the John Hancock Observatory on more than a few occasions and both of those buildings were PLENTY high enough for me. I can't imagine being comfortable in a tower twice that height for 5 minutes let alone spending all day working or living up there. I imagine one would be in a constant state of subconscious or conscious anxiety which amplified with every gust of wind. No thanks (((shudder)))
Technically it should, this construction timeline is more on site construction.
Does the time cutting the tree down, making the 2x4's 4x4's and 2x8's for a house count towards its construction time? Or is it just the materials on site, how fast can you put it together?
I'm reading a lot of people who are wishing them ill in this endeavor. If you think the US should have the tallest building in the world, tell your local politicians to support one. I'd like to see us endeavor to build a space elevator myself. Sky's the limit? Hardly.
Just seeing the word "sway" and picturing 220 storeys is making me feel vertiginous
I've been up the Sears (I still can't think of it as Willis) Tower and to the bar at the John Hancock Observatory on more than a few occasions and both of those buildings were PLENTY high enough for me. I can't imagine being comfortable in a tower twice that height for 5 minutes let alone spending all day working or living up there. I imagine one would be in a constant state of subconscious or conscious anxiety which amplified with every gust of wind. No thanks (((shudder)))
I agree. I know I wouldn't want to spend any extended period of time in that building. I've been atop the tallest tower in the world in Dubai and as long as I am comfortable with the building quality, I have no problem with heights. But hell, that is a tall building!
I agree. I know I wouldn't want to spend any extended period of time in that building. I've been atop the tallest tower in the world in Dubai and as long as I am comfortable with the building quality, I have no problem with heights. But hell, that is a tall building!
It would make an awesome video if it collapsed like other Chinese constructed buildings
I don't think there will be quality issues. The Chinese know what is at stake with such a giant tower. Maybe they used to be a bit sloppy with smaller units in the past, but they learn fast and after a few scandals the standards have probably been increased quite a bit already. And don't forget that modern Chinese cities already have lots of skyscrapers that seem to be reliable.
The Chinese have been developing that modular approach for some time, they must have a lot of experience by now. Frankly, I would rather enter that new Chinese tower than any of those towers in the Emirates which have been built by workers from so many different countries speaking various languages that there are bound to be mistakes somewhere along the chain.
Nor am I sure buildings in the West are much better, there is corruption etc. in Western countries as well, especially in the construction industry.
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