Burj Khalifa
Burj Khalifa
Burj Khalifa
World Records
At over 828 metres (2,716.5 feet) and more than 160 stories, Burj Khalifa
holds the following records:
Height to tip
Height is measured from the level of the lowest, significant, open-air,
pedestrian entrance to the highest point of the building, irrespective of
material or function of the highest element. This includes antennae,
flagpoles, signage and other functional-technical equipment.
Inspired Design
While it is superlative in every respect, it is the unique design of Burj
Khalifa that truly sets it apart. The centrepiece of this new world capital
attracted the world's most esteemed designers to an invited design
competition.
Ultimately, the honour of designing the world's tallest tower was awarded to
the global leader in creating ultra-tall structures, the Chicago office of
Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP (SOM) with Adrian Smith FAIA, RIBA,
consulting design Partner. The selected design was subject to an extensive
peer review program to confirm the safety and effectiveness of the
structural systems.
Architecture
The architecture features a triple-lobed footprint, an abstraction of the
Hymenocallis flower. The tower is composed of three elements arranged
around a central core. The modular, Y-shaped structure, with setbacks
along each of its three wings provides an inherently stable configuration for
the structure and provides good floor plates for residential. Twenty-six
Interiors
The interior design of Burj Khalifa public areas was also done by the
Chicago office of Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP and was led by awardwinning designer Nada Andric. It features glass, stainless steel and polished
dark stones, together with silver travertine flooring, Venetian stucco walls,
handmade rugs and stone flooring. The interiors were inspired by local
culture while staying mindful of the building's status as a global icon and
residence.
Artwork
Over 1,000 pieces of art from prominent Middle Eastern and international
artists adorn Burj Khalifa and the surrounding Mohammed Bin Rashid
Boulevard. Many of the pieces were specially commissioned by Emaar to be
a tribute to the spirit of global harmony. The pieces were selected as a
means of linking cultures and communities, symbolic of Burj Khalifa being
an international collaboration.
Excavation started
February 2004
Piling started
March 2005
Superstructure started
June 2006
Level 50 reached
January 2007
March 2007
April 2007
May 2007
July 2007
September 2007
building
Level 150 reached - world's tallest
April 2008
free-standing
structure
Level
160 reached
- world's tallest
January 2009
man-made
Completion structure
of spire - Burj Khalifa
September 2009
January 2010
Construction Highlights
Over 45,000 m3 (58,900 cu yd) of concrete, weighing more than 110,000
tonnes were used to construct the concrete and steel foundation, which
features 192 piles buried more than 50 m (164 ft) deep. Burj Khalifa's
construction will have used 330,000 m3 (431,600 cu yd) of concrete and
39,000 tonnes (43,000 ST; 38,000 LT) of steel rebar, and construction will
have taken 22 million man-hours.
Exterior cladding of Burj Khalifa began in May 2007 and was completed in
September 2009. The vast project involved more than 380 skilled engineers
and on-site technicians. At the initial stage of installation, the team
progressed at the rate of about 20 to 30 panels per day and eventually
achieved as many as 175 panels per day.
The tower accomplished a world record for the highest installation of an
aluminium and glass faade, at a height of 512 metres. The total weight of
aluminium used on Burj Khalifa is equivalent to that of five A380 aircraft
and the total length of stainless steel bull nose fins is 293 times the height
of Eiffel Tower in Paris.
The amount of rebar used for the tower is 31,400 metric tons - laid end to
end this would extend over a quarter of the way around the world.
Podium
The podium provides a base anchoring the tower to the ground, allowing on
grade access from three different sides to three different levels of the
building. Fully glazed entry pavilions constructed with a suspended cablenet structure provide separate entries for the Corporate Suites at B1 and
Concourse Levels, the Burj Khalifa residences at Ground Level and the
Armani Hotel at Level 1.
Exterior Cladding
The exterior cladding is comprised of reflective glazing with aluminum and
textured stainless steel spandrel panels and stainless steel vertical tubular
fins. Close to 26,000 glass panels, each individually hand-cut, were used in
the exterior cladding of Burj Khalifa. Over 300 cladding specialists from
China were brought in for the cladding work on the tower. The cladding
system is designed to withstand Dubai's extreme summer heat, and to
further ensure its integrity, a World War II airplane engine was used for
dynamic wind and water testing. The curtain wall of Burj Khalifa is
equivalent to 17 football (soccer) fields or 25 American football fields.
Structural System
In addition to its aesthetic and functional advantages, the spiraling Y
shaped plan was utilized to shape the structural core of Burj Khalifa. This
design helps to reduce the wind forces on the tower, as well as to keep the
structure simple and foster constructability. The structural system can be
described as a buttressed core, and consists of high performance concrete
wall construction. Each of the wings buttress the others via a six-sided
central core, or hexagonal hub. This central core provides the torsional
resistance of the structure, similar to a closed pipe or axle. Corridor walls
extend from the central core to near the end of each wing, terminating in
thickened hammer head walls. These corridor walls and hammerhead walls
behave similar to the webs and flanges of a beam to resist the wind shears
and moments. Perimeter columns and flat plate floor construction complete
the system. At mechanical floors, outrigger walls are provided to link the
perimeter columns to the interior wall system, allowing the perimeter
columns to participate in the lateral load resistance of the structure; hence,
all of the vertical concrete is utilized to support both gravity and lateral
loads. The result is a tower that is extremely stiff laterally and torsionally. It
is also a very efficient structure in that the gravity load resisting system has
been utilized so as to maximize its use in resisting lateral loads.
As the building spirals in height, the wings set back to provide many
different floor plates. The setbacks are organized with the towers grid, such
that the building stepping is accomplished by aligning columns above with
walls below to provide a smooth load path. As such, the tower does not
contain any structural transfers. These setbacks also have the advantage of
providing a different width to the tower for each differing floor plate. This
stepping and shaping of the tower has the effect of confusing the wind:
wind vortices never get organized over the height of the building because at
each new tier the wind encounters a different building shape.
Spire
The crowning touch of Burj Khalifa is its telescopic spire comprised of more
than 4,000 tons of structural steel. The spire was constructed from inside
the building and jacked to its full height of over 200 metres (700 feet) using
a hydraulic pump. In addition to securing Burj Khalifa's place as the world's
tallest structure, the spire is integral to the overall design, creating a sense
of completion for the landmark. The spire also houses communications
equipment.
Mechanical Floors
Seven double-storey height mechanical floors house the equipment that
bring Burj Khalifa to life. Distributed around every 30 storeys, the
mechanical floors house the electrical sub-stations, water tanks and pumps,
air-handling units etc, that are essential for the operation of the tower and
the comfort of its occupants.
Burj Khalifa will be the first mega-high rise in which certain elevators will be
programmed to permit controlled evacuation for certain fire or security
events. Burj Khalifa's Observatory elevators are double deck cabs with a
capacity for 12-14 people per cab. Traveling at 10 metres per second, they
will have the world's longest travel distance from lowest to highest stop
The Park
Inspired by Burj Khalifa's unique triple-lobed shape, The Park's 11 hectares
of greenery and water features serve as both entry to Burj Khalifa and
outdoor living space. The landscape design includes three distinct areas to
serve each of tower's three uses: hotel, residential and office space. These
exquisite grounds include a promenade along the Dubai lake, outdoor
spaces, outdoor dining, prow lookout, leisure forest grove, playing area,
water features and much more.
The three spaces are located at the hotel entry, residential entry and the
grand terrace. The tower and pedestrian pathways link the three areas.
Spectacular stone paving patterns welcome visitors at each entry. The main
entry drive is circled with a palm court, water features, outdoor spaces and
a forest grove above. The grand terrace features garden spaces, all-around
pedestrian circulation, custom site furnishings, a functional island and a lake
edge promenade. The grand water terrace is composed of several levels
that step down towards the lake's edge. The water terraces provide further
visual interest by reflecting the tower on their surfaces. The landscape
design includes six major water features: the main entry fountain, hotel