flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Best Tall Buildings around the world favor unusual shapes and hybrid functions

High-rise Construction

Best Tall Buildings around the world favor unusual shapes and hybrid functions

The Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat selects winners in four regions.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | June 29, 2016

Taipei 101, a 2.1-million-sf, 1,667-foot-tall office building in Taiwan that was completed in 2004, was chosen by the Council of Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat as the winner of its 2016 Performance Award for efficiency and sustainability. CTBUH also selected what it considers to be the best tall buildings in four regions of the world. Image: @Taipai Financial

A pyramid, the giant spiral, a residential-office building with vegetation sprouting from its exterior, and a structure that takes its cue from Rubik’s Cube.

These are the characteristics of the four Best Tall Building Award winners of 2016, as chosen by a jury representing the Chicago-based Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat (CTBUH). The eight-person main jury was chaired by Karl Fender, director Fender Katsalidis Architects in Melbourne, Australia. The eight-person technical jury was chaired by SawTeen See, managing partner with the engineering consultant Leslie E. Robertson Associates, New York.

The winning buildings were selected from 132 submissions representing 27 countries. They will be recognized during the Council’s 15th Annual Awards Symposium on November 3, at which time the Awards Jury will pick the Best Tall Building Worldwide from the regional winners:

 

Via 57 West. Image: @Nic Lehoux

The Americas:

•Via 57 West, New York City. This pyramid-shaped, 940,012-sf residential building is 467 feet tall, with 709 apartments within 34 above-ground floors. Via 57 has been called a “courtscaper,” because it combines a European perimeter block and the traditional Manhattan high-rise that encompasses a 2,040-sf courtyard. The Building Team included The Durst Organization (owner/developer); Bjarke Ingels Group (design), SLCE Architects (architect of record), Thornton Tomasetti (SE), Dagher Engineering (MEP engineer), and Hunter Roberts Construction Group (GC).

 

Shanghai Tower. Image: @Connie Zhou

Asia and Australasia:

•Shanghai Tower, Shanghai, China. This 632-meter hotel and office tower is the second-tallest in the world. It is the third of a trio of towers in the heart of Shanghai’s new Lujiazui Finance and Trade Zone. Its curved façade and spiraling form allowed for a 24% savings in structural wind loading compared to a rectangular building of the same height. The 4.5 million-sf tower includes 258 hotel rooms, and sports the world’s fastest elevator, at 20.6 meters per second. The Building Team: Shanghai Tower Construction & Development (owner/developer), Gensler (designer), Tongji Architectural Design Group (architect of record), Thornton Tomasetti (SE), Cosentini and Aurecon (MEP), Shanghai Construction Group (GC), Shanghai Jianke Engineering Consulting (project manager).

 

The White Walls. Image: @Yiorgis Yerolymbos, courtesy of Nice Day Developments

Europe:

•The White Walls, also known as Tower 25, in Nicosia, Cyprus. This 107,639-sf residential-office tower is 228 feet high. It has 18 floors above ground, and three below. There are eight apartments in the building. Its distinguishing feature is its Mediterranean design, and concrete white exterior walls accented by numerous square perforations, through which vegetation hangs. Native plants, in fact, cover 80% of the façade. The building was completed last year. Its Building Team included Nice Day Developments (owner/developer), Ateliers Jean Nouvel (designer), Takis Sophocleous Architects (architect of record), KAL Engineering (SE), Mitsides Samouhi & Partners (MEP), Lois Builders (GC),

 

The Cube. Image: @Matthijs van Roon

Middle East and Africa:

•The Cube, in Beirut, Lebanon. This 60,278-sf, 186-foot-high residential building, completed last year, includes 21 apartments with fluid spaces, large balconies, and wall-to-wall window frames. The building design stacks 14 rotated floor plans on top of a lobby. The structure uses self-consolidating concrete, allowing loads to be directed to four areas of rotated girders on every floor, with no additional structural slabs added to the façades. The building has 15 floors above ground, three below. Its Building Team included Mash­­arii (owner/developer), Orange Architects (designer), CBA Group (architect of record), Bureau d’Etudes Rodolphe Mattar (SE), Ussama Mogharbei (MEP), and K.Abboud (GC).

The finalists for the Best Tall Buildings Award were:

In the Americas: 423 Park Avenue, New York; The Tower at PNC Plaza, Pittsburgh; and Torre Reforma, Mexico City.

In Asia and Australasia: Beijing Greenland Dawangjing Tower, Beijing; Jiangxi Nanchange Greenland Central Plaza, Nanchang, China; Shinsegae International, Seoul, South Korea; SkyHabitat, Singapore; and South Beach, Singapore.

In Europe: Allianz Tower, Istanbul, Turkey; Allianz Tower, Milan, Italy; ECB - European Central Bank, Frankfurt, Germany; Grattacielo Intesa Sanpaolo Torino, Turin, Italy;

In the Middle East and Africa: Iris Bay, Dubai.

The Urban Habitat Award winner is Wuhan Tiandi Site A, an urban regeneration master plan in China. 

 

Wuhan Tiandi. Image: @Shui On Land

 

Related Stories

| Jan 20, 2015

Avery Associates unveils plans for London's second-tallest tower

The 270-meter tower, dubbed the No. 1 Undershaft, will stand next to the city's "Cheesegrater" building.

| Jan 13, 2015

A new record: 97 buildings taller than 200 meters completed in 2014

Last year was a record-breaking year for high-rise construction, with 97 tall buildings completed worldwide, including 11 "supertalls," according to a new report from the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat.

| Jan 9, 2015

Technology and media tenants, not financial companies, fill up One World Trade Center

The financial sector has almost no presence in the new tower, with creative and media companies, such as magazine publisher Conde Nast, dominating the vast majority of leased space.

| Dec 28, 2014

Robots, drones, and printed buildings: The promise of automated construction

Building Teams across the globe are employing advanced robotics to simplify what is inherently a complex, messy process—construction.

| Dec 27, 2014

'Core-first' construction technique cuts costs, saves time on NYC high-rise project

When Plaza Construction first introduced the concept of "core first" in managing the construction of a major office building, the procedure of pouring concrete prior to erecting a steel frame had never been done in New York City.

| Dec 22, 2014

Studio Gang to design Chicago’s third-tallest skyscraper

The first U.S. real-estate investment by The Wanda Group, owned by China’s richest man, will be an 88-story, 1,148-ft-tall mixed-use tower designed by Jeanne Gang.

| Dec 18, 2014

11 new highs for tall buildings: CTBUH recaps the year's top moments in skyscraper construction

The Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat cherrypicked the top moments from 2014, including a record concrete pour, a cautionary note about high-rise development, and two men's daring feat.

| Dec 17, 2014

11 predictions for high-rise construction in 2015

In its annual forecast, the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat predicts that 2015 will be the "Year of the Woodscraper," and that New York’s troubled B2 modular high-rise project will get back on track.

| Dec 16, 2014

'Wedding dress' tower to be tallest in Africa

The $1 billion tower will have 114 stories, alluding to the 114 chapters of the Koran.

| Dec 16, 2014

Architect Eli Attia sues Google over tall building technology

Attia and tech company Max Sound Corp. have brought a lawsuit against Google because of Flux, a Google X-developed startup launched in 2014. Flux creates software to design environmentally-friendly buildings in a cost-effective way.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




Curtain Wall

7 steps to investigating curtain wall leaks

It is common for significant curtain wall leakage to involve multiple variables. Therefore, a comprehensive multi-faceted investigation is required to determine the origin of leakage, according to building enclosure consultants Richard Aeck and John A. Rudisill with Rimkus. 

halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021