The Hotel Kakslauttanen in Finland is in fact an Igloo Village, at which you can have your pick of 20 unique glass and snow igloos for your stay. They aren’t ice houses, but 31 well-maintained log cabins – built from a very special thermo glass that keeps them warmth and comfortable. Because of that, the temperature inside the Igloos is always a normal room temperature and the igloos inhabitants won’t feel any of the polar cold.
Best Home Gallery
Monday, January 16, 2012
The Hotel Kakslauttanen in Finland
New 7 star hotel in Dubai
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Apeiron Hotel is a design concept for a new 7 star hotel in Dubai. Developer and construction schedule have not been announced as of October 2007. The Apeiron Hotel would be the second 7 star hotel to be built in Dubai (The Burj Al Arab hotel was the first 7 star hotel). Designed by UK’s Sybarite Architects, the hi-tech futuristic hotel would feature a two-storeyed jungle at the top of the 28-storeyed building. The seven star hotel is an US $350 million project that would be 300m from the coast of Dubai. Access to the hotel is restricted to water and air only.
HOTEL STATISTICS: total floors: 28 (above ground), total suites: 438, suite sizes: 180m² – 750m², building height: 185m, gross floor area: 300,000m², site footprint area:26,500m², passenger lifts: 14, service lifts: 8, distance off shore: 300m (Building design is equally as powerful within a landlocked site), wind load factor: 350km per hour, structure: steel, reinforced concrete. 
The hotel also contains private cinemas, luxury boutiques, conference rooms and restaurants. Other features will include an art gallery, shops, underwater spa & gym, an underwater restaurant. The hotel’s internal facade has louvers to prevent direct sunlight and will made up of solar cells as is the ribbon that frames the building that can generate some energy for the entire hotel. The 28-storey hotel environs will have an artificial crescent-shaped beach, private lagoons and a central lagoon with colourful coral reefs surrounding it. 
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Dubai Opera House Building
Dubai Opera House Building - News
Reports in the Press that this project is on hold, as are many in UAE.Developer Sama Dubai recently merged with Dubai Properties and received a £6.9 billion government bailout
Information Courtesy of Zaha Hadid Architects
Dubai Opera House - Introduction
Design: Zaha Hadid Architects
The Dubai Opera House design calls for an exciting new cultural centre in the new Seven Pearls district of Dubai. This landmark development will accommodate an opera house, playhouse, arts gallery, performing arts school and themed hotel on an island in Dubai Creek just off the mainland part of the district. All of these facilities will be state of the art to host world class performances and exhibitions. The Dubai Opera House will have a seating capacity of 2,500 while the playhouse will have a seating capacity of 800. The arts gallery with 5000m2 of exhibition space is indeed a full size exhibition facility comparable to the Guggenheim Museum in New York. The hotel will accommodate guests in a 6 star setting. Sited on an island in Dubai Creek, the development will be connected to Greater Dubai by a road connection to the mainland.
Design Concept and Programme Organisation
The Dubai Opera House proposal houses all of the facilities within a single striking structure. The gentle winding form evokes images of mountains or sand dunes. Rising out of the ground, this form is both a part of the landscape yet very much a distinct element in the skyline. The surrounding landscape forms build up to the main building. These constitute open park spaces as well as ancillary functions such as the parking facilities and the monorail station, which are either tucked under or integrated into the landscape forms.
The two peaks correspond to the opera house and the playhouse. The tall requirements of the fly towers are nested under these peaks. From these peaks, the Dubai Opera House form gradually swoops down to touch the earth. The form is scalloped away where the three major entrances are to be found. The main entrances for audiences visiting either of the two performing arts auditoria are on the north side of the building. At the ground level will be the VIP entrance with car drop off right at the entrance and a separate foyer from the main foyer. This foyer serves both the opera house and the playhouse. The main foyer is a gentle multi-tiered landscape at one floor above the ground floor. It also serves the opera house and the playhouse as well as having an interior connection to the arts gallery. Floating above this foyer are further foyer spaces serving the balcony levels. The foyer levels from the main foyer level up are visually connected to each other through a series of voids. This allows for direct views between the main foyer at the first floor all the way up to the highest balcony foyer. Surprising views are abundant in this space.
The Dubai Opera House auditoria are contained in flowing shapes that seem to emerge from the underside of the main shell. This inner shell however, does not quite touch the main shell. Instead, the two surfaces disappear into a light gap between them. Supporting functions found off the foyer are defined by walls that merge into the underside of the main shell.
Dubai Opera Houe & Cultural Centre, Dubai, UAE - Building Information
Date: 2006-tbc
Program: Design for a Cultural Centre and Opera House in Dubai
Architect: Design Zaha Hadid with Patrik Schumacher
Project Director: Graham Modlen
Project Leader: Dillon Lin
Design Team: Christine Chow, Lourdes Sanchez, Yiching Liu, Swati Sharma,
Tyen Masten, Simone Fuchs, Johannes Schafelner
Competition Team: Christine Chow, Lourdes Sanchez, Yiching Liu, Larissa Henke, Claudia Wulf, Hooman Talebi, Daniel Dendra, Simon Yu, Komal Talreja
Engineering Consultant: Arup [London, UK]
Acoustics Consultant: Richard Cowell, Ian Knowles
Structural Engineering: Keith Jones
Building Services Engineers: Tim Thornton
Façade Engineering: Steve Bos
Trump International Hotel & Tower Dubai
Trump International Hotel & Tower Dubai
The Palm Jumeirah2006-
Design: Atkins
Dubai tower images © from Atkins
Trump International Hotel & Tower Dubai - Building Information
Property developer: NakheelLocation: man-made island off UAE
for Nakheel Hotels & resorts / Trump Organisation joint venture
approx. 255m high, 60 storeys
5 star hotel + apartments
Trump International Hotel & Tower
Dubai, UAE
Having been called upon by the Client to carry out a review of the original design of Trump International Hotel and Tower, Palm Jumeirah, Atkins moved towards creating a brand new architectural concept which was subsequently approved by Nakheel Hotel and Resorts and the Trump Organisation.
Dubai tower images © from Atkins
Atkins is now appointed to provide full design consultancy services for this hotel, which is located on Nakheel’s Palm Jumeirah, a manmade Island off the west coast of Dubai. The tower will stand as a powerful landmark on what will be the most prestigious project in the world. The building is striking in design and will incorporate world-class residential, hotel and office facilities.
Background on the Trump Hotel Tower Dubai architects:
Atkins plans, designs and enables the delivery of complex capital programmes for clients in the public and private sectors across the globe. Atkins is the largest multidisciplinary consultancy in Europe; the largest engineering consultancy in the UK; and the world's third largest design firm.
Dubai tower images © from Atkins
Trump Hotel Dubai - Tower Building images / information from Atkins, Architects
Atkins celebrates Iris Bay topping out
Iris Bay
Atkins celebrates Iris Bay topping outAtkins officially celebrated one of the construction industry's oldest customs, the structural 'topping out' of the 32-storey Iris Bay office and retail tower at Business Bay in Dubai.
Sheth Tower, Iris Bay, Dubai
2006-
Architects: Atkins
Aside from the distinctive architectural design of this unusually shaped commercial building, Iris Bay was an early opportunity for Atkins to explore the challenges of sustainable design in a hot climate and incorporates both passive and active environmental features. The firm was commissioned as lead consultants for architecture, structural, mechanical and electrical engineering design, and project management for the entire development.
The tower comprises two identical double curved pixelated shells which are rotated and cantilevered over a four-storey podium, underneath which are three levels of basement designed to facilitate underground parking for 920 cars. The distinctive ovoid shape creates areas of negative pressure that draws air through the building and reduces the dependence upon mechanical ventilation for the underground car park in particular.
The rear elevation is a continuous vertical curve punctuated by balconies while the front elevation is made up of seven zones of rotated glass. This includes naturally ventilated spaces and integrated solar energy and shading films in the glass façade.
Last week, the site supervision team was joined by the client and key members of the design team in hosting a small function to celebrate the major milestone which culminated in the last structural slabs being poured atop the 170m tall structure.
"We are delighted that this project has quietly but successfully advanced to this milestone stage," says Hesham Abdelaziz Gabr, Atkins Resident Engineer for the Iris Bay project. "It was a real challenge for all of us to meet the demands of the unique design, but working alongside the contractor to resolve on-site issues with the full coordination and support from the design teams here in Dubai, we have kept the project fully on track" he added.
Iris Bay tower images / information from from Atkins
Previously:
Iris Bay tower - images © from Atkins
Sheth Tower Dubai - Building information from Atkins
Atkins unveils designs for Iris Bay Tower, Dubai
Atkins has unveiled design images for Iris Bay - a 170m high, 32-storey tower in the heart of Dubai's commercial core, Business Bay.The tower is elevated above a four-story perforated podium which floats over a double height arcade, and houses retail and commercial space totalling 82,000 sq m. The scheme is set to have a major presence along Dubai's Sheikh Zayed Road, which forms the city's main artery.
Iris Bay tower - images © from Atkins
Featuring a revolutionary ovoid design, the tower comprises two identical double-curved shells, rotated and cantilevered over the podium. The interface between the tower and the podium features prayer rooms, a gym and an outdoor pool.
The futuristic development is intended to provide prestige office space to some of the world's leading companies, and will sit in a business region akin to New York's Manhattan or London's Square Mile.
Atkins is developing Iris Bay on behalf of owner/developer Sheth Estates International Ltd.
Iris Bay images © from Atkins
Atkins' Dubai office is the company's largest in the Middle East. Atkins is growing rapidly in the region, with staff numbers now at 1,500, compared to 1,000 six months ago.
Iris Bay Dubai - Sheth Tower images / information from Atkins, Architects
Burj Dubai
Burj Dubai
The Burj Dubai surpasses Taipei as tallest building in the worldAdrian Smith + Skidmore, Owings & Merrill
Burj Khalifa skyscraper
Burj Dubai Skyscraper - World's Tallest Building : Burj Khalifa status ratified - Mar 2010
Press Release : Burj Dubai reaches a record high
512.1m (1,680 ft) - 141 storeys, Burj Dubai is tallest building in the world
A human achievement without equal, says Emaar Chairman Alabbar
Dubai, UAE; July 21, 2007: Today the world has a new global landmark - Burj Dubai. At 512.1 metres (1,680 ft), Burj Dubai, developed by Emaar Properties, is the tallest building in the world. The achievement once again puts Dubai in the international spotlight and underlines Emaar’s arrival as a global developer.
Now a Financial Times Global 500 (FT Global 500) company, Emaar has a significant presence in 30 international markets.
Burj Dubai is now taller than Taipei 101 in Taiwan, which at 508 metres* (1,667 ft) has held the tallest-building-in-the-world title since it opened in 2004. Burj Dubai has now reached 141 storeys - more storeys than any other building in the world.
On schedule for completion in 2008, Burj Dubai will be the tallest structure in the world in all four of the criteria listed by the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat (CTBUH). The council measures height to the structural top, the highest occupied floor, to the top of the roof, and to the tip of the spire, pinnacle, antenna, mast or flag pole.
During its construction, Burj Dubai has left behind the skyscrapers that previously defined tall tower architecture around the world, such as Petronas Towers in Malaysia (452 metres, 1,483 ft); Sears Tower, Chicago (442 metres, 1,451 ft); Jin Mao Building, Shanghai (421 metres, 1,381 ft) and Empire State Building, New York (381 metres, 1,250 ft).
The Burj Dubai story is only beginning. The final height and number of storeys, a topic of enthusiastic debate among media and experts alike, has not yet been revealed. But from now on, the tower will set new records for its technical and architectural ingenuity.
When completed, Burj Dubai will have consumed 330,000 cubic meters of concrete, 39,000 metric tons of steel rebar and 142,000 sq m of glass – and 22 million man hours. The tower will have 56 elevators travelling at 1.75 to 10 metres/sec and double-decker observatory elevators that can carry 42 people at a time.
More than 313,700 cubic metres of reinforced concrete and 62,200 tonnes of reinforcing steel have been used in the tower’s construction so far. Burj Dubai has already set a new world record for vertical concrete pumping for a building by pumping to over 460 metres (1,509 ft). The previous record of 448 metres (1,470 ft) was held by Taipei 101.
Reflecting a no-compromise approach to safety, Burj Dubai has been designed to manage the effect of wind and seismic movements. High-strength concrete makes up the tower’s super-structure, which is supported by large reinforced concrete mats and piles. The 80,000 sq ft foundation slab and 50-metre deep piling are waterproofed and feature cathodic protection.
Burj Dubai became the tallest building in the world in just 1,276 days; excavation work started in January, 2004. More than 5,000 consultants and skilled construction workers are employed on site, and the world’s fastest high-capacity construction hoists, with a speed of up to 2 m/sec (120 metres/min), move men and materials.
Structural steel work for the tower will begin soon, and cladding work using a high-performance system has already started.
The primary cladding materials of reflective glazing, aluminium and textured stainless steel spandrel panels and vertical stainless tubular fins accentuate the tower’s height and slenderness to the eye.
“Four years ago Burj Dubai was conceived by Emaar Properties as a 90-storey structure. It was the UAE Vice President and Prime Minister and Ruler of Dubai, His Highness Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid Al Maktoum, who inspired us to ‘resist the usual’ and build a global icon,” said Mr Mohamed Ali Alabbar, Chairman, Emaar Properties.
He said: “Burj Dubai is not just an architectural and engineering masterpiece in concrete, steel and glass. It is a human achievement without equal. Burj Dubai will inspire future generations to think beyond the ordinary and to challenge their mind and spirit.”
Emaar Properties has partnered with best-in-class consultants such as South Korean construction major Samsung Corporation and New York-based Project Manager Turner Construction to realise the design of internationally admired architect Adrian Smith and Skidmore, Owings & Merrill of Chicago.
Burj Dubai will be at the centre of Downtown Burj Dubai, a US$20 billion, 500-acre downtown development billed as the most prestigious square kilometre on earth.
Burj Dubai will feature residential, commercial and retail components including the world’s first Armani Hotel & Residences, exclusive corporate suites, a business centre, four luxurious pools and spas, an observation platform on Level 124 and 150,000 sq ft of fitness facilities.
Burj Dubai images / information from Edelman 210707 for Emaar Properties
*Note: All figures on the height of various towers as listed by the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat, Chicago
Burj Dubai - Fast Facts : Milestones
Feb 2003: Emaar Properties announces Burj Dubai
Jan 2004: Excavation work for Burj Dubai begins
Jun 2004: Launches Downtown Burj Dubai
Sep 2004: UAE Vice President & Prime Minister and Ruler of Dubai His Highness Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid Al Maktoum witnesses the first pouring of cement for Burj Dubai
May 2005: Inks deal with Giorgio Armani to open The Armani Hotel & Residences in Burj Dubai
Jun 2006: Burj Dubai scales 50 levels
Jan 2007: Burj Dubai reaches Level 100
Mar 2007: Burj Dubai, at Level 110, is the tallest structure in the Middle East and Europe
Apr 2007: At Level 120, Burj Dubai sets new global record for having more floors than any building in the world
May 2007: At Level 130, Burj Dubai is second tallest tower in the world
Jul 2007: At Level 141, Burj Dubai is tallest tower in the world
Jan 2010 : Burj Dubai renamed Burj Khalifa + inauguration of the world's tallest building
Burj Dubai - Fast Facts : Highlights
The tip of the spire can be seen by a person 95 km (60 miles) away.
An estimated 330,000 sq m of cement, 39,000 metric tones of steel rebar and 142,000 sq m of glass will be utilized in the construction of Burj Dubai.
22 million man hours will go into building the landmark.
The foundation slab is 80,000 sq ft in size and the piling is 50 metres deep.
Burj Dubai will set a new global record in vertical concrete pumping in any construction activity.
The Burj Dubai’s Observatory Elevators (double deck cabs) will have the world’s longest travel distance from lowest to highest stop.
Burj Dubai will contain the world’s highest elevator installation.
A Condensate Collection System will collect condensed water from the hot and humid air, which will be used for irrigation requirements for the tower’s gardens. This system will provide about 15 million gallons of supplemental water per year, equivalent to nearly 20 Olympic-sized swimming pools.
The curtain wall of the Burj Dubai will be equivalent to 17 football (soccer) fields or 25 American football fields.
The concrete used for the Burj Dubai is equivalent to a sidewalk 1,900 km long (1,200 miles).
Burj Dubai tower : main page with more images
Burj Dubai renamed to Burj Khalifa
Burj Dubai designer : SOM Architects
Burj Dubai Developers - Emaar Properties PJSC:
Emaar Properties PJSC is one of the world’s largest real estate companies and is rapidly evolving to become a global provider of premier lifestyles. Powered by its Vision 2010 to become one of the most valuable companies in the world, Emaar is charting a new course of growth with a two-pronged strategy of geographical expansion and business segmentation.
Emaar has highlighted its remarkable global growth by debuting on the Financial Times Global 500 ranking, which provides an annual snapshot of the world’s largest companies. Emaar has been assigned A- and A3 ratings with stable outlook by Standard & Poor’s and Moody’s Investor Services, respectively.
Replicating its successful business model in Dubai, Emaar is extending its expertise in creating master-planned communities to international markets. Emaar is also developing new competencies in retail, hospitality and leisure, education, healthcare, finance and industry, which have evolved from its integrated approach to customer service and property development.
Listed on the Dubai Financial Market, part of the Dow Jones Arabia Titans Index and certified to ISO9001:2000 for quality standards, Emaar is developing Burj Dubai, the world’s tallest tower , and The Dubai Mall, one of the world’s largest shopping and entertainment destinations. In Saudi Arabia, Emaar is developing the US$26.6 billion King Abdullah Economic City, the region’s largest private sector-led project. Emaar’s portfolio currently covers the following countries: the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Syria, Lebanon, Morocco, Egypt, Turkey, Libya, India, Pakistan, Indonesia, the US, the UK, France and Canada.
An award-winning developer, Emaar has strengthened its product sale competencies, market reach and best practices through strategic acquisitions and joint ventures. Emaar acquired John Laing Homes, America’s second largest privately held home builder; Hamptons International, UK’s premier realtor; and formed a joint venture with US-based Turner International to strengthen execution capabilities.
Emaar has joined hands with Giorgio Armani and Accor Hotels to strengthen its presence in hospitality, and will launch ten luxury Armani resorts and hotels world-wide and 100 Formule 1 budget hotels in India. The company is opening educational institutions and healthcare centres in South Asia, Middle East and North Africa and the Subcontinent. Emaar acquired Singapore-based leading education provider, Raffles Campus, to extend expertise to its educational institutions.
Emaar holds 30 per cent equity in Dubai Bank, focused on retail and commercial banking. Emaar is also the largest shareholder in Amlak Finance, UAE's leading Islamic home financing company.
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