ASYMPTOTE tower to be completed in the United Arab Emirates

by Terry 15 Replies latest social current

  • Terry
    Terry

    Construction has begun on Strata Tower by New York-based architects Asymptote in Abu Dhabi, UAE.
    Due to be completed in 2011, the tower will have 40 stories and be 160 metres high.

    The Strata Tower, a forty-story, luxury residential building designed by architects Hani Rashid and Lise Anne Couture of Asymptote, has broken ground on Al Raha Beach and is now under construction. The tower is scheduled for completion in early 2011 and, at a height of 160 meters, will be the tallest building in the Al Dana precinct, the centerpiece of Aldar Properties PJSC’s prestigious Al Raha Beach development. The project and development will be showcased at Cityscape Abu Dhabi from May 13–15, 2008. The landmark Strata Tower is designed to signify a dignified and important future for Abu Dhabi and the region.

    As a signature architectural statement, the Strata Tower’s articulate, striking physical presence seeks to encapsulate meaning through the use of abstract form drawn from both local cultural landscapes and motifs and dynamic forces of global influence. The Strata Tower’s design utilizes primarily mathematical means in its design to achieve both a poetic, as well as highly pertinent, architecture for the UAE, a region in flux with ambitions for continued rapid growth.

    The Strata Tower’s innovative form was created using state-of-the-art, advanced parametric modeling tools and techniques from the onset of the design process to the production phase. The building’s design emerged from various influences and factors including economies of production and fabrication with special consideration given to environmental sustainability. Sophisticated computer modeling and tools were utilized to produce the building’s intelligent, environmentally responsive louver system that is held in a unique, cantilevered exoskeleton structure. The exoskeleton veils the entire tower in a shimmering curvilinear form set against Abu Dhabi’s surrounding desert and sea, embracing and reflecting the ever-changing light and atmospheres that enfold and contain it.

    As architecture the Strata Tower resists being an overt, singular gesture reliant on a set meaning or association. Rather, the mathematical properties used, not unlike those in the manifestation of the arabesque or abstract calligraphy, give the building its supreme elegance, prominence and potential for meaning and significance.

    Principal Architects: Hani Rashid and Lise Anne Couture
    Structural and MEP Engineer: ARUP, New York
    Façade Consultant: Front Inc., New York
    Building Information Modeling (BIM) Consultant: Gehry Technologies, Los Angeles & New York
    Environmental Designers: Atelier Ten, New York & London

    About Asymptote Architecture

    Asymptote Architecture was founded by principals Hani Rashid and Lise Anne Couture in 1989. Since Asymptote’s founding the New York-based firm has been at the forefront of technological innovation in the field of architecture and design and received international acclaim for visionary building designs and large-scale master plans. Asymptote is currently working on a broad range of commissions at sites in the United States, Europe, the United Arab Emirates and Asia including three landmark towers in Tbilisi, Georgia; commercial office towers in Budapest and Prague and the World Business Center Busan in Busan, South Korea, slated to be one of the tallest buildings in Asia upon its completion in 2011. In addition to the Strata Tower, projects designed by Asymptote now under construction include an innovative, high-end condominium building in New York City and a 500-room hotel in the United Arab Emirates.

    Current President of the United Arab Emirates, Sheikh Khalifa Bin Zayed Al Nahyan

  • yknot
    yknot

    Purdy.....

  • ziddina
    ziddina

    Yeah, but how earthquake-resistant is it????

  • wobble
    wobble

    Is it taller than the tower of Babel ?

    Will Jehoobe get all riled up and do something to the workers on it ?

    Wobble

  • finallysomepride
    finallysomepride

    He will confuse them by mixing up their language & disperse them to the 4 corners of the world

  • JWdaughter
    JWdaughter

    Do I just have a dirty mind or does anyone else wonder if they are going for a phallic symbol kind of a thing there?

  • SirNose586
    SirNose586

    Interesting name, Asymptote...they can be approached, but never touched. Vertical ones, at least. Horizontal ones are a different matter.

  • Terry
    Terry

    I love extraordinary architecture!

    This is an example of the kind of thing we don't much encourage in the U.S.

    I think of the sort of hand made architecture the Old World sported and then look at our boxy buildings and bland freeways and wonder how the arti went out of us so easily.

    I'd bet anything we'll be seeing these buildings in a James Bond movie before long!

    I always thought an asymptote was a curved line that continually approached a straight line without coming within a finite distance.

    Didn't know you could design a building with it!!

  • daniel-p
    daniel-p

    This is an example of the kind of thing we don't much encourage in the U.S.

    I think of the sort of hand made architecture the Old World sported and then look at our boxy buildings and bland freeways and wonder how the arti went out of us so easily.

    What you are describing is the modernist architecture of the 50s and 60s, primarily, where the emphasis was on the function of buildings and the art being derived from that function. Great idea, but many structures were poorly executed and it simply became another "style" to be repeated over and over. A classic example is the Twin Towers. Modernist architecture was more a celebration of engineering feats and other "left-brain" mentalities than an organic expression. Couple that with the Euclidean zoning practices that had dominated local planning by this time and you got lots of mindless boxes scattered everywhere.

  • HintOfLime
    HintOfLime

    Reminds me of a TED talk, regarding suburbia and "designing places worth caring about". I'm very jelous of the other countries I see that have interesting and amazing buildings and cities. Too much of America now is just not worth giving a damn about - an endless sea of cookie-cutter Walmarts and Starbucks. I swear, the city I live in just repeats over and over every 10 square miles or so.

    http://www.ted.com/talks/lang/eng/james_howard_kunstler_dissects_suburbia.html

    Visionaries are a dying breed in America - or at least American businesses are not interested in taking risks anymore. (And when that happens, all that's left is a slow lingering death.)

    - Lime

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