TallBuildings

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Research notes about Architecture

Collected notes/links about buildings/constructions and systems required to design them.

Is There a Limit to How Tall Buildings Can Get?

"A 1990s-era concept for a two-and-a-half-mile volcano-looking supertower in Tokyo called the X-Seed 4000"

"The race is always on. Within the span of just two years, the world's tallest building was built three times in New York City – the 282.5-meter Bank of Manhattan in 1930, the 319-meter Chrysler Building in a few months after, and then 11 months later the 381-meter Empire State Building in 1931. The era of architectural horse-racing and ego-boosting has only intensified in the decades since. In 2003, the 509-meter Taipei 101 unseated the 452-meter Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur after a seven-year reign as the world's tallest. In 2010, the Burj Khalifa in Dubai far surpassed Taipei 101, climbing up to 828 meters. Bold builders in China want to go 10 meters higher later this year with a 220-story pre-fab tower that can be constructed in a baffling 90 days. And then, in 2018, the Kingdom Tower in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia (below, right) will go significantly farther, with a proposed height of at least 1,000 meters."

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What affects skyscraper construction?

  • Materials
  • Human comfort
  • Elevator technology
  • Capital

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"What do you think is the single biggest limiting factor that would prevent humanity creating a mile-high tower or higher?"
Video interview with architects on the subject here

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William Baker - Structural Engineer on Burj Khalifa

  • Buttressed core method
  • "You could conceivably go higher than the highest mountain, as long as you kept spreading a wider and wider base." - Baker
  • "The Burj Khalifa, he estimates, is about 15 percent structure and 85 percent air."

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source: http://www.theatlanticcities.com/design/2012/08/there-limit-how-tall-buildings-can-get/2963/