This is interesting, if you are interested in skyscrapers. Or people.
Category: Architecture and design
Shanghai Tower
After a series of stories about mooted and improbable mile-high buildings, it’s almost a novelty to read about one which is actually being built as we speak. The new Shanghai Tower will be a respectable 632 metres tall, making it the tallest building in China. What I like most about this story, though, is the way the illustrations make Shanghai look as though it’s either in space, or the future, or both.
Good grief
Heavens, quite literally, above.
Even the graphic makes me a bit dizzy.
Yet another tallest building in the world
Soon, you won’t even need to get in a plane to join the mile high club, if plans for this unlikely-looking structure in Dubai go ahead (alright, it’s a kilometre high. That’s ONE KILOMETRE).
Here, courtesy of Device Daily, is a chart comparing it to various other buildings around the world. If you squint, you might just be able to make out Canary Wharf over there on the right:
http://devicedaily.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/10/nakheel-tower-09.jpg
In praise of Croydon
I found myself in Croydon town centre a week or two back for the first time in years. It’s de rigueur to deride Croydon, and I expect you think I’m still going to, but whenever I’m there I remember why I think it’s got one of the best-designed centres of any town I know. It’s not wildly pretty, true, but it has its moments (the old hospital on the corner of the high street and George Street is one; the station at East Croydon is another), and most of all, it just works. Whether you come in on foot, in a car or by public transport the system is designed to get you to where you want to be quickly and with the minimum of fuss. The high street is pedestrianised along most of its length, and there are two indoor shopping centres (the Whitgift is older and a little more run down; Centrale, which replaced the old Drummond Centre, has a silly name but almost all the shops anyone could want to visit), so that it’s an uncomplicated and stress-free place to shop whatever the weather or time of day. The main car parks are just behind or under the high street and cars are deposited there via a system of bypasses and tunnels, so that pedestrians and vehicles rarely meet one another, which can only be a good thing. And the public transport is a dream: there are three mainline stations, countless buses and a speedy and reliable tram network (run by those good folk at TfL).
And it still has an Allders. Bromley’s Allders, where you could buy almost everything, became a giant Primark. Croydon’s goes from strength to strength. Sometimes all you need is a shop with a really good haberdashery department.
New skyscraper for Paris
The centre may be for the most part the same as it was when Georges-Eugène Haussmann introduced his planning reforms in the 1850s, but in other parts of Paris all kinds of interesting things are happening. La Défense, to the north-west of the centre, is the city’s business district and has the highest concentration of skyscrapers of any urban area in Europe. Since the 1980s the most striking of these has been La Grande Arche, which is brilliantly and thoughtfully designed so that it lines up with the Arc de Triomphe and the Arc de Triomphe du Carrousel, whose name I never knew before today, meaning that if you stand in the Tuileries gardens you can look straight through all three of them, over a distance of several miles.
But today inhabitat has designs for a new, ecologically-minded skyscraper which is about twice the height of the Grande Arche (though still smaller than the Eiffel Tower – some things are sacred) and which looks great. I’m very happy to live in a time when people have discovered that buildings don’t have to be square or rectangular. We’re building pyramids and pods as well as star-shaped cities and Teletubby houses. It all makes London’s shard of glass seem almost pedestrian.
Asakusa
After thinking about Tokyo and what a bafflingly unfamilar place it is I was inspired to go and have a look at some of my photos. At almost three years’ remove they look even more fantastical. This unremarkable street scene, for example, looks more than anything to me like a scene from some kind of futuristic, apocalyptic, science fiction film:
I really want to go back. You can see the rest of the set here.
Earthquake ball
I’m mesmerised by this YouTube video, which shows a massive counterweight suspended inside Taiwan’s Taipei 101, the world’s tallest building (for now) acting against the tremors felt from the Sichuan earthquake on May 12. I don’t quite understand the physics behind it, but the weight, which more or less stays still as the building sways around it, apparently dampens the effect of the movement. You’ll find an explanation from someone who knows what they’re talking about over at BLDGBLOG:
As earthquake waves pass up through the structure, the ball remains all but stationary; its inertia helps to counteract the movements of the building around it, thus “dampening” the earthquake.


