Sky City in Changsha, south-east China, will be a 220-storey structure standing at an incredible 2,749ft (838m).
It will house 17,400 people and also boast hotels, hospitals, schools and office space with occupants using 104 high-speed lifts to get around.
It will dwarf the Shard in London, standing more than 530m above the western Europe's tallest building and, when completed, will mean nine of the 10 tallest skyscrapers in the world are in Asia. But the most impressive thing about Sky City is that its designers, Chinese-based Broad Group, plan to start and finish it in just 90 days.
This astonishing pace, which will see five storeys go up a day, is down to the revolutionary method of prefabricated building where blocks are built off site and slotted together to save time.
Despite concerns about its structural rigidity, Broad Group says the half-mile high building will be able to withstand a magnitude 9.0 earthquake.
The idea isn't pie in the sky thinking either, with Broad making headlines last year when they built a 30-storey building in 15 days.
Ambitious: Sky City will house 17,400 people and also boast hotels, hospitals, schools and office space with occupants using 104 high-speed lifts to get around
WORLD'S TALLEST SKYSCRAPERS
- Burj Khalifa, Dubai, UAE - 163 floors / 2,717ft
- Makkah Royal Clock Tower Hotel, Mecca, Saudi Arabia - 120 floors 1,971ft
- Taipei 101, Taipei, Taiwan - 101 floors / 1,670ft
- Shanghai World Financial Centre, Shanghai, China - 101 floors / 1,614ft
- International Commerce Centre, Hong Kong - 118 floors / 1,588ft
Spread over 1million square metres and be made up of 200,000 tonnes of steel, Sky City will be a mini town when completed.
It will have more than 5,000 residential properties playing home to 17,400 residents as well as a hotel for 1,000, a hospital, five schools and office space with overall capacity standing at 31,000.
Sky City is expected to cost around £400 million, significantly less than the £940 million Burj Khalifa which took more than five-years to build.
Broad is still awaiting final approval from the Chinese government, but it is hoping the project will get off the ground towards the end of December and be completed before April 2013.
DailyMail Click to signup for FREE news updates, latest information and hottest gists everyday
Advertise on NigerianEye.com to reach thousands of our daily users
That money is not enough to build a 10 floor office apartment in Nigeria if it is managed by Govt officials, but it can do astonishing wonders elsewhere in the world. CORRUPTION!
ReplyDeleteThe chinese are an advanced race. Period. Slowly taking over the world with a mix of innovation, intelligence, cost reduction and rigid organisation. Unlike my dear country nigeria still a slevery to corruption and poor leadership.
ReplyDeleteWeird people on plannet. Nigeria is a constelation of absurdity
ReplyDelete