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    Summer School URBAN STEEL STRUCTURES

    July 11 15, 2005 Gdask, Poland

    TALL BUILDINGS PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE DEVELOPMENTSR. KOWALCZYK

    University of Beira Interior, Covilha, Portugal

    1. IntroductionTall building, as an element of urban environment is rapidly gaining the importance.

    It is more and more the dominant element of the city skyline and often becomes eventhe symbol of the city. Also the impact of the tall building on the city is enormous. It

    influences the environment of the whole neighbourhood in many aspects from problems

    connected with transport till such small aspects as shadows. Therefore planning anddesign of tall building in city environment is an interdisciplinary problem, which has to

    be dealt with be a teams of specialists from various specializations.

    2. Council on Tall Buildings and Urban HabitatMission:

    The Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat, is an international non-profit

    organisation, which task is to facilitate professional exchanges among thoseinvolved in all aspects of the planning, design, construction and operation of tall

    buildings and the urban habitat.

    The Council's primary goal is to promote better urban environments by maximisingthe international interaction of professionals, and by making the latest knowledge

    available to its members and to the public at large in useful form.

    The Council has a major concern with the role of tall buildings in the urbanenvironment and their impact thereon. Providing adequate space for life and work

    involves not only technological factors, but social and cultural aspects as well.

    While not an advocate for tall buildings per se, in those situations in which they areappropriate, the Council seeks to encourage the use of the latest knowledge in their

    implementation.

    2.1. Council Authorities:The Steering Group is the "Board" of the Council. An Executive Committee carries

    out the policy of the Steering Group. Council Headquarters is located at: Illinois

    Institute of Technology. S.R. Crown Hall, 3360 S. State Street. Chicago, Illinois 60616USA, www.ctbuh.org, [email protected]. Correspondence: Geri Kerry, Council on Tall

    Buildings and Urban Habitat, PO Box 4363Bethlehem, PA. USA 18018 email

    [email protected].

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    ChairmanRon Klemencic, Skilling Ward Magnusson Barkshire, Seatle, USA.

    Executive Director Director EmeritusDavid M. Maola Lynn S. Beedle

    Vice Chairmen:

    Africa: Syd Parsons

    Australia: Henry J. Cowan Ph.D

    Europa: Ryszard Kowalczyk, Ph.D

    Middle East: Sabah Al Rayes Ph.D

    North America: Joseph P. Colaco, Ph.D

    Northern Asia: Prof. Fu-Dong Dai

    South America: Edison Musa

    Southern Asia: Kenneth Yeang, Ph.D

    Vice Chairman at Large: M. Ridzuan Salleh Ph.D

    2.2. Need:

    the growing world population, generally urban, creating increase

    demand for tall buildings in areas experiencing urban growth

    the consequent requirement for economy in construction

    the frequent neglected of human factors in urban design at the

    expense of livability and the quality of life

    the need to revitalize urban areas experiencing decline through

    poverty or crime

    the new research required in the field and the necessity of

    establishing priorities

    2.3. Activities:

    Publications

    Conferences and Congresses

    Database and Information Resources

    Identification and Implementation of needed research

    3. Tall building - definitionPerhaps the first question, which should be answered, is the definition, what is

    considered to be a tall building. Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat dives

    following definition of tall building: A tall building is not defined by its height ornumber of stories. The important criterion is whether or not some aspects of tallness

    influence the design. It is a building in which tallness strongly influences planning,

    design, construction and use. It is a building, whose height creates conditions differentfrom those that exist in common buildings of a certain region and period. Lest me

    explain this in a manner Dr Beedle, the founder of the Council and my friend has

    explained this. If the fire brigade comes to extinguish a fire in a building and its

    equipment is not sufficient to reach some floors it means that for the fire brigade this

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    building is considered tall. If in a town where there are only buildings let say two threefloors high suddenly a building is built with twelve stories and it looks tall therefore it

    is considered as a tall. The definition is therefore relative, and depends from the aspects

    taken into consideration. Talking about Civil Engineering aspects the building can beconsidered as tall when the structural systems depend on tallness, that commonly means

    that horizontal forces decide on structural system of the building.

    Tallness makes that many problems, which can be disregarded in commonbuildings in tall buildings appear as very important ones which must be solved to

    achieve a proper solution.

    Thornton [ How Tall Engineering News Record 1983]:I think everybody has the question do we really want 200-story buildings? Im not sure

    we do. Im sure that engineers and architects could produce one and the construction

    industry in the US could produce it with no problem. But the interesting thing aboutworking on 200-story building or long span structures is that you learn a lot about

    exaggerated magnitudes of behavior. When you are working on 20, 30 or 40-story

    building, there have been 100 of these built before. When you start talking about 200,

    400, 500 - story buildings, everything gets exaggerated - differential column shortening,drift, acceleration, dynamic behavior and as we study them in a tall building, we

    wonder, why we didnt think about them on a shorter building.

    Present tall building is a result of close co-operation of a team of specialists ofvarious areas and only, if this co-operation is close from the very beginning a

    successful solution is possible.

    Structural system and vertical transportation were usually the main factors limitingthe height of a building

    Taking into account present developments in technology, these two factors

    constitute no real limitation to the height nowadays.

    Fig. 1. One Mile Dream

    4. Tall building and its role and function

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    Although tall buildings are generally considered to be a product of the modernindustrialized world, inherent human desire to build skyward is nearly as old as human

    civilization. It is recorded in the Bible in the story of the Tower of Babel and they said:

    go to, let us built a city and a tower whose top may reach onto heaven. The buildersthought, that they could reach heaven with their construction and their audacity was

    punished by God. This tale expresses clearly one of human aspirations: to reach heaven

    by the extreme height of the structures, to reach sky and go far above our earthly realmto a place that is higher, purer, with not obstructed view around.

    The Egyptians started to built pyramids some 5000 years ago, and ziggurats in

    Mesopotamia are almost as old. Also Mayan pyramids, Egyptians obelisks, Chinesepagodas and Moslem minarets thought are not as tall but they create an vertical element

    so much taller than anything around, a vertical marker against the horizon. Steeples of

    churches in the Christian tradition, campaniles have played a similar role. This isanother attribute of very tall structures that they are place markers. Very tall structures

    do not only mark a place, but they often become the symbol of a place as for instance

    Eiffel Tower in Paris.

    In the 20th century office buildings have become the dominant, tall objects in ourcities, representing often private wealthy corporations or individuals. Perhaps it is

    difficult to accept the fact that those buildings have replaced traditional sacred or civic

    structures as the symbols for new cities. The earliest skyscrapers were received bypublic with great enthusiasm. Now in several places they have become too many, often

    some of them being insensitive to their cities and environment or less than beautiful and

    they provoked a well justified negative reaction. But in many places they continue to bebuilt with great enthusiasm, most notably in eastern Asia. They continue to be a great

    architectural and structural undertaking which appears simple at the surface, but is

    surprisingly difficult to be solved well.The Council book Architectural Design of Tall Buildings [1] says following: Tall

    building should respond to the two primary criteria: first to the smaller circle of its

    affected users and second to the larger urban environment. In regard to the firstcriterion, the building itself must be ganged relative to its purpose, how its lives up to

    its expectations. The second criterion must be evaluated in its functions an element in

    the immediate urban setting. The degree to which tall buildings add or detract from thequality of their surroundings is dramatic, affecting not only the immediate users but,

    because of their size and scale the context of the entire city now and in the future.

    Ceasar Pelli the famous architect and designer of several tall buildings in his paper

    Cosmic Pillars [2] makes following important comment: A new skyscraper is amember of an important class of buildings with well defined characteristics. It belongs

    also to the place where it is built. It needs to respond in a creative and responsible

    manner to the climate, surrounding buildings, architectural tradition and to thecharacter, history and ideas of the city and its people. Only than it will be noble and

    worthy of respect and affection. These are general principles which have to be taken

    into consideration whenever a tall building is planned for the city. Unfortunately notalways was so.

    5. Large Cities Around the World and Tall Buildings

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    Stating that the tall building is a significant element of the urban environment lets uslook at the different parts of the world and evaluate the tendencies for tall buildings.

    In Europe there is some growing tendency to construct tall buildings in cities, but

    with some limitation of the height, without any race for the records. Most of the tallbuildings are designed for large companies or banks. The reasons for building tall is toaccommodate in one building the offices of the company, to have some office space for

    renting, which in some cities is still a good business, and utilize in most effective way

    the urban space which is very expensive.

    In the USA the tall building in great towns is just a common thing. The main reasonfor going tall is high price of the lot in the city. In some cases there is still a desire for

    regaining the world record in tallness.

    Asia presently seems to be the spot, where tall building are considered as one of the

    solutions to the rapidly growing population. Most of the very high buildings presently

    designed aiming at the world records in height are situated in Asia.

    Australia: No shortage of space in the country. However in cities many tallbuildings emphasising importance and prestige of large banks, enterprises, hotels.

    Mixture of tall and small buildings in big townsCentral and South America: Tall buildings in cities of big towns. Prestigious

    companies, banks, hotels, offices are often located in cities in tall buildings

    Africa: Tall Buildings in some capital cities. Relatively many t.b. in cities of SouthAfrica such as Johannesburg, Cape Town, Durban. Egypt, Cairo also several t.b. All of

    moderate height.

    Middle East: Many new T.B. particularly in Emirates. Interesting architectural

    expression.Many of them very expensive. A survey of various Cities and their skyline

    and tall buildings (many slides)

    6. Development of Structural Systems.

    6.1. Structural Systems and Outside Envelope

    The outside image, the architecture, is the first expression of tall building and

    usually T.B. can be recognised by its characteristic shape and its architecturalexpression. (First Part was showing many images of T.B. around the world).

    However for structural engineer, most significant in each building is the structure,

    which very often is covered under the skin of the building, under its outsideenvelope.

    It is the structure, which similarly to the spine of human body, holds upright the

    building, carries on all acting loading and makes possible the building erection andexistence.

    Not very often a building exposes its structure, as for instance the John Hancock

    Centre or the Onterie Centre in Chicago.

    In the majority of buildings the structure is not exposed. It is located inside the

    building and covered by outside envelope.

    This fact was one of the reasons that the Council on Tall Buildings and UrbanHabitat devoted one of the Monograph volumes to reveal the structural skeleton, to

    demonstrate its role in carrying loads and to describe the evolution and development

    of structural systems.

    The book: Structural Systems for Tall Buildings is a main source of materials for

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    this presentation.

    The source of presented figures is either CTBUH slide collection or Internet:

    www.skyscrapers.com.

    6.2. Historical Development of Structural SystemsThe history of modern Tall Buildings starts in the US in Chicago in the end of

    nineteenth century after the great 1871 fire, which devastated the city. It is generally

    acknowledged that the first skyscraper was built in Chicago in 1885 and it was a HomeInsurance Building. This building was designed by William le Baron Jenney as 55

    meters high building, which unlike traditional buildings in which the exterior walls

    were self-supporting solid masonry, the structure of this building consisted of skeletonof iron or steel frames, which carried the vertical and horizontal loads to the

    foundations. This was a completely new structural solution. The building became a first

    logo for the Council on Tall Building and Urban Habitat.The rapid development of tall buildings in the beginning of twentieth century was

    parallel with the development of building materials of better quality such as steel and

    later on concrete and combination of basic structural systems such as bearing (shear)wall, frame and truss.

    6.3. Effects of Tallness on Structural SystemsWith increasing height of the building, the influence of horizontal loads governs the

    selection of structural system. The major concern of the designer is to select a systemstrong enough to take over all loads and actions, stiff enough to keep deformations

    (drift) in prescribed limits and still economically sound. Of course there is some

    premium which has to be paid for height, but the goal of selection of appropriatestructure is to keep this premium at the possible lowest level.

    6.4. Basic Structural Systems and their CombinationsIn general the structural systems for tall buildings are composed of purposely

    selected combination of one or several of the following basic systems:

    shear wall load bearing wall)

    frame (braced frame, moment resisting frame)

    truss (braced frame, outrigger)

    6.4.1. Braced Frame and Moment Resisting Frame

    This fundamental lateral force resisting system evolved during the beginning of

    high-rise construction in the early twentieth of this century.

    Frames are normally arranged as planar assemblies in orthogonal directions to create

    planar frames or tube frame systems.

    The two systems may be used together as an overall interactive system and are used

    today as effective structural system in buildings up to 40 - 50 stories.

    6.4.2. Shear Wall Systems

    Shear walls have been the most common structural systems used in the past for

    stabilising building against horizontal forces.

    With application of reinforced concrete, shear wall systems have been used widely

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    even to stabilise the tallest building structures.

    Introduction of high strength concrete expanded even more the possibilities of

    resisting horizontal loads by shear wall systems.

    Usually, a shear wall system for tall building groups shear walls around servicecores, elevator shafts and stairwells and forms a stiff box-type structure. (internal

    core)

    Multiple shear walls throughout a tall building may be coupled to increase overallbuilding stiffness

    Shear walls in form of closed boxes provide also efficient solution against torsion.

    6.4.3. Frame Truss Interacting Systems:

    Shear trusses combined with moment resisting frames produce a frame-trussinteracting system.

    The linear wind sway of the moment frame - combined with cantilever parabolic

    sway of the truss - gives the system increased lateral stiffness.

    Often core trusses are combined with moment frames, which are located on the

    perimeter of the building.

    Optimum efficiency is achieved, when columns designed for gravity loads are usedas truss chords, without increasing their dimensions for wind forces.

    These are than combined with gravity designed exterior columns and spandrel

    beams with rigid connections. If for such combination the lateral stiffness isadequate - the solution would provide an optimal design.

    6.4.4. Core and Outrigger Systems:For modern high-rise buildings frequently chosen system is central elevator core

    combined with perimeter frame, which gives the possibility to arrange large columnfree floor space between the core and the exterior support columns. This solution allows

    greater functional efficiency, but also effectively disconnects the two major structural

    elements: core and columns, available to resist the critical overturning forces present inhigh- rise building.

    The incorporation of outriggers couples these two components - shear core and

    support columns on the perimeter of the building and increases very significantly thesystem ability to resist overturning forces. (example City Spire N.Y.C 75 stories, 248m

    high; City Bank Plaza, Hong Kong, 41 stories, 220m high)

    Typical structural systems used in steel and concrete tall buildings of moderateheight were:

    Shear wall systems

    Frame - shear wall interacting systems (internal core, frame on the periphery)

    Core, frame, outriggers

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    Fig.2. Structural Systems

    6.5. Tubular SystemsFAZLUR KHAN - Milestone in the evolution of tall building systems: Development

    of the equivalent cantilever tubular system.All previous improvements in structural systems contributed to extend the range of

    applications of frame-type behaviour, the radical departure occurred only when the

    structure was placed on the perimeter and was so interconnected to act like threedimensional cantilever utilising the entire exterior form.

    The characteristic of this exterior structure was that of wall, giving rise to the

    terminology tubular structure to designate silo-like cantilever behavior of this

    structure.With this innovation the structure had emerged from the interior to the exterior,

    thereby significantly impacting the architectural expression of the faade and shaping of

    the overall form. The best example of efficiently applied in steel of a tube structure isJohn Hancock Building in Chicago.

    The Trussed Tube:The trussed tube is a solution which uniquely suits the qualities of structural steel

    and was first applied for this material.The ideal tubular system is one which interconnects all exterior columns to form a

    rigid box, which can resist lateral shear by axial forces in its members rather than

    trough flexure. This can be achieved by introducing a minimum number of diagonals oneach faade and arranging these diagonals in such a way, that they intersect at the same

    points at the corner columns.

    The behavior of framed tubes under lateral load is indicated on the next figure (Fig.5.), which shows the distribution of axial forces in the exterior columns.

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    Fig.3. Layout of the building in frame structure and tube structure

    Fig. 4. Tubular Systems: a. Frame/brace with belt truss, b. Framed tube,

    c. Diagonally braced tube, d. Framed bundled tube,e. Diagonally braced tube without internal columns,

    f. Diagonally braced tube without internal columns,

    g. Space truss, h. Interior diagonally braced frame

    Fig. 5. Framed tube behavior

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    The more the distribution is similar to that of a fully rigid box cantilevered at thebase, the more efficient the system will be. For the case of a solid wall tube, the

    distribution of axial forces would be expected to be uniform over the windward and

    leeward walls and linear over the sidewalls.As the tubular walls are punched creating beam-column frame, shear frame

    deformations are introduced due to shear and flexure in the tubular members as well as

    rotations of the member joints. This reduces the effective stiffness of the system as acantilever. The extend to which the actual axial load distribution in the tube columns

    departs from the ideal is termed the shear lag effect.

    In behavioral terms, the forces in the columns toward the middle of the flangeframes lag behind those nearer the corner and are thus less than fully utilised. Limiting

    the shear lag effect is essential for optimal development of the tubular system. A

    reasonable objective is to strive toward at least 75% efficiency such that the cantilevercomponent in the overall system deflection under wind load dominates.

    The idea of tube structures so efficiently applied in steel for John Hancock Building

    was also applied by Khan for his concrete buildings for instance One Shell Plaza

    building in Huston and others, in which framed tube structure was placed on theperimeter of the building.

    The framed tube system consists of the arrangement of closely spaced exterior

    columns and deep spandrel beams rigidly connected together, with entire assemblage,continuous along each faade and around building corners.

    The system is a logical extension of the moment resisting frame, whereby the beam

    and column stiffness are increased dramatically by reducing the clear span dimensionsand increasing the member depth. The monolithic nature of reinforced concrete is

    ideally suited for such a system, involving fully continuous interconnections of the

    frame members.This solution was also applied in steel, when for framed tube welded beam-column

    connections were utilised to develop rigidity and continuity of joints. (Examples:

    concrete - One Shell Plaza 218m high, steel - World Trade Centre 417 m high)

    Tube in Tube systems and bundled tube systems

    The development of the interior core system as a wall tube, was applied in many

    buildings. Arrangement the interior core together with exterior one in a form a framedtube, braced tube offered opportunities for larger stiffness and therefore possibilities for

    greater heights. Such systems are called TUBE IN TUBE. Many systems shown before

    were just tube in tube systems.

    Fig. 6. Tube in tube and Bundled tube

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    Other structural solution: spatial arrangement of tubes - bundled tube system is

    also credited to Fazlur Khan. This concept was born from the requirement of verticalplanning modulation and shear lag for very tall buildings. It allows to arrange wider

    column spacing in the tubular walls, than would be possible with only the exteriorframe tube form, and this is advantage for interior space planning.

    In general any closed form shape can be used to create the bundled form. SEARS

    TOWER (Fig. 7) is an example of bundled tube structure.

    Fig. 7. Sears Tower - example of bundled tube

    The Trussed Tube concept was first applied by F. Khan for steel in John Hancock

    building in Chicago already in 1965 year (starting of erection of the building).

    The trussed tube concept can also be applied to reinforced concrete construction byarranging diagonals in the facades of the building.

    A diagonal pattern of windows perforation in an otherwise framed tube is filled inbetween adjacent columns and girders (Onterie Center, Chicago, 171m high).

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    connected by steel diagonal members to a braced steel core Examples: in the bookStructural Systems for Tall Buildings

    The examples suggest that hybrid structures are likely to be the rule rather than the

    exception for future tall buildings, whether to create acceptable dynamic characteristicsor accommodate the complex shapes demanded by modern architecture. Hybrid

    structures are not something to be tackled by the novice engineer armed with a powerful

    microcomputer and a structural analysis software package. A sound knowledge andunderstanding of material behavior (such as ductility, damping, creep and shrinkage)

    which is not included in analysis and design packages and mostly not codified is

    essential and constructability must be a parallel consideration.However, without hybrid structural systems many of our modern tall buildings may

    never have been built in their present form.

    7. Trends for the Future

    7.1 Basic AspectsDesigning of a tall building is a complicated process in which many, some times

    controversial, requirements are to be solved and compromised. The tall building istherefore a work of team of architects, structural engineers, mechanical and electrical

    engineers and many others working together from the very beginning of the design

    process and the solution and economy of structure as well as fulfilling the expectationsof users depends on the good cooperation of designing team. It is difficult to predict

    what kind of structural systems will be used in the nearest future as this depends

    strongly on the development of technology, new materials, new computationalcapabilities.

    For Tall Buildings for the future the following aspects are to be taken into

    consideration in selection of material and structural system:

    It seems that there will be greater emphasis on quality.

    Computer will become ever more significant. It can be a basis for powerful

    knowledge-based planning, design and operation of facilities. Computer assisteddesign allows to examine a variety of designs and variety of sophisticated solutions

    and makes easier the selection of the optimal one for given requirements.

    The structure of the building cannot be considered alone. In the future buildingsmore attention will be devoted to integrating structure with service system and

    architectural requirements. Under service system we understand vertical transportation,

    HVAC, plumbing, electrical systems, fire protection, environmental systems andsecurity. It is worthwhile to mention that the cost of building service systems in a

    modern high rise building can be over one-third of the building total first cost, and over

    two-thirds of its 25-year total life cycle cost.

    The energy conservation is a major concern and is reflected in the best designsavailable throughout the world. Good effects could be achieved by integration of above

    mentioned systems monitored and coordinated by computers. More and more buildings

    are considered as intelligent buildings in which high-technology, intelligentintegrated systems are applied in the building.

    More attention is devoted to develop a better faade of the building. Modern faade

    should have the ability of storing and channeling the energy therefore contribute

    more efficiently to the energy balance of the building.

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    More attention is to be given in design to the interaction of building structural

    systems and non structural components like partitions and claddings. Thelateral load-resisting structural system of a tall building and the non structural

    components of the building interact with each other in two basic ways, that are ofpractical significance. Firstly deformations of the structural system due to lateralloads can introduce distortion and possibly damage in the non-structural elements.

    And secondly, the stiffness and energy absorption capacity of the non-structural

    elements can affect the response of the structure to loading.Besides the above mentioned aspects, from the analysis of the recent projects, both

    already erected and others not built yet, some general trends can be derived for the

    nearest future, which can affect the selection of structural systems:

    broad use ofcomposite structures

    broad application ofhigh-strength (HSC/HPC) concrete particularly for super-

    columns. (Examples: Increased height of concrete buildings recently erected 1960:

    Lake Point Towers - 164m, 1976- Water Tower Plaza- 262), 1990: 311 SouthWacker Drive - 292m, 1992: Central Plaza H.K. 374m, 1998: Petronas Towers -

    472m

    application of outrigger systems to assure better interaction of internal core andperimeter structure, broad application of tube systems

    use ofactive and passive damping systems

    use ofbetter analytical tools and testing facilities (i.e. wind tunnels)

    use ofmixed systems andmega-structures

    After September 11, 2001 terrorist attack some new recommendations wereelaborated in order to increase the safety in tall buildings and possibilities of

    evacuation.

    The race for building the world tallest does not stop and moved rather to Far East.Seven of the worlds tallest buildings were completed in the late 90s; eight of the top

    10 are in Asia. Kuala Lumpur has passed the crown to Taipei in the end of 2004, andTaipei, is likely to Shanghai or other city later this decade. Hong Kong, Seoul and

    Tokyo are also in the race as well as Dubai.

    7.2. How Tall ?The question how tall will be the buildings in the nearest future perhaps needs

    some consideration. With present technological developments buildings of the range of200 stories and higher seem possible from structural and vertical transportation point of

    view. The other question is whether we need such a tall buildings for our cities and

    whether the solution will be economically sound.The race for building the world tallest did not stop and moved rather to Far East.

    Seven of the worlds tallest buildings were completed in the late 90s; eight of the top

    10 are in Asia. Kuala Lumpur has passed the crown to Taipei in the end of 2004, and

    Taipei, is likely to Shanghai or other city later this decade. Hong Kong, Seoul andTokyo are also in the race as well as Dubai.

    Why the race? Ron Gluckman in his paper: How high will they build? [Popular

    Science, March 2003] says: To be blunt, in Asia today, as in New York 70 years ago,nothing is more demonstrative than a huge, well, upright symbol. Rival nations and

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    corporations work overtime to show they are high-tech powerhouses. Height as amanifestation of technology, is tied up with cultural aspirations says Eric Howler, an

    architect with KPF, which is designing Union Square, a 108-story building that will,

    Howler says, be the worlds tallest when completed in 2007.In China KPF-designed Shanghai World Financial Center has restarted with

    redesign that will top Taipei 101. Kohn says but I guarantee it will be the tallest.

    SOM has started with the Burj project for Dubai which is planned to be 705m high.There are also plans for a building in Seoul of the range above 530m.

    This competition may raise the question: haw tall can buildings go? Craig Gibbons

    [Popular Science, March 2003] director of the Hong Kong office of Arup, a globalstructural engineering firm we could build a kilometre-tall building right now, noquestion about it. Two hundred, even 300 stories tall, is possible because we can take

    advantage of lighter, high strength materials.The problem which Gibbson sees is wed need an advance in lift technology and in

    cranes .

    Ron Klemencic says: The limitations are more financial and practical, how to move

    people up and down those great heights. Above 80 stories, the area you need to devoteto vertical lift, like elevators, versus rentable space, just is not viable.

    This however again is not a problem: Advances in material and elevators make tall

    buildings more efficient. In Shanghai Jin Mao building are used high speed elevators(9m/sec). There are double deck elevators, and recently Twin elevators were introduced

    by Thyssen Krupp allowing operation of two cars in one shaft. This considerably

    reduces the demand for elevator space in the building.Efficient dumping devices became a common solution reducing dramatically

    movement of buildings caused by typhoons and earthquakes. Taipei 101 will feature

    the worlds largest passive tuned mass damper, an 660-ton sphere around 5,5m indiameter which will swing like a pendulum from 92nd floor in the view of restaurant-

    goers.

    New Code regulations were introduced in some Asian countries even beforeSeptember 11:

    Composite structures are commonly used for tall buildings - this solution gives more

    fire resistance

    Every 25 floors Hong Kong building must have a refugee floor-- empty anddesigned to resist smoke accumulation. Many stairwells are pressurized.

    Atrium size is restricted

    Water tanks on the roofs of tall buildings are sometimes engineered to let the waterslosh about, doing double duty as wind dampers

    Dedicated firemens lifts are required in many Asian countries In Hong Kong they

    are required to reach any floor in the building in an extremely short period of time,so they are profiled like a bullet to avoid drag, and travel as fast as 9m/s.

    The idea of super-tall towers, vastly higher than anything now built, has long

    fascinated architects and urban planners. In 1956 Frank Lloyd Wright. designed theIllinois Tower, a mile high, 528 stories in all.. It was technically feasible, he said ,

    but for the elevator problem.

    Later were many proposals as for instance Tokyo Sky City 1000m high, Sir Norman

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    Foster sketches for Millennium Towers in Tokyo and Shanghai both around 800 m.Mir M.Ali architecture professor at the University of Illinois asks: But who wants

    live in a building 1 mile high? A more realistic height for the 21 century, he believes is

    around 150 stories and 600m.Architects like Pelli have already designed such towers. Likewise SOMs and

    KPFs. Humanity has an obsession with building big says Pelli, whose Two

    International Finance Center will soon become Hong Kongs tallest tower. Part of it isthe human element. Thats why a tall TV tower isnt so important. When we see

    humans in a building, and know there are eyes up there, thats emotional connection.

    Tall has power

    8. Examples of Application of New Structural Solutions

    8.1. Existing Buildings:

    8.1.1. Petronas Towers, Kuala Lumpur

    Record height holder till 2004 - Petronas Towers (452m) in Kuala Lumpur Malaysiaare twin buildings equivalent to 95 stories in height. Composite construction was an

    important part of their design from early in the project, to provide long span openfloors, fast erection and future adaptability. The structural system consists of the core,and sixteen ring columns, which are connected by a haunched ring beam on each level.

    Lateral loads are shared by the columns and the structural concrete core trough floor

    diaphragms. Floor construction consists of composite metal decking and steel infillbeams. Concrete outrigger beams, which link the core and perimeter at levels 38 and 40

    round out the composite system.

    8.1.2. Bank of China Building, Hong Kong

    In time of its erection (1989) Bank of China building in Hong Kong was a major tallstructure outside the United States (368m) in which economy and elegance go together.

    Thanks close co-operation of architect I.M.Pei and structural engineer Leslie Robertson

    both designers came up with unique form which provides both the structural andesthetic elegance of the tower and the economy of structural solution. The idea of

    diagonal bracing as in John Hancock Center and the cut-off tube idea of the Sears

    Tower were brought together in a original way. For the first time a pure space-truss wasused to support almost the entire weight of the building while making use of the same

    system to resist lateral thrust of the wind (wind loads in Hong Kong are twice those

    required in New York and these wind loads are four times larger than the earthquakeforces that would be required in Los Angeles).

    The structure of the tower is a square tube made up of eight vertical plane frames,

    four of which comprise diagonal bracing. All of the buildings loads are collected andtransferred through frames to four massive composite steel corner columns. A fifth

    column extends through the center of the tower from the top to the 25-th floor, where it

    transfers the accumulated loads diagonally to the four corner columns. By sending

    gravity loads to the extreme corners of the building, resistance to high wind forces isincreased and the building interior remains column free.

    8.1.3. Plaza Rakyat, Kuala LumpurThe construction of the 77 story, 382 m. high, Plaza Rakyat building in Kuala

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    Lumpur is on hold. Expected construction end is 2006. Building was designed bySkidmore Owings & Merrill office in Chicago and belongs to one of the tallest

    reinforced concrete building in the world and also one of the most slender with an

    overall aspect ratio of over 8 to 1. The innovative solution belt wall/core interactingsystem was introduced, which is applicable to very tall buildings in low to moderate

    wind climates and to buildings in the mid-height range in moderate to high wind

    climates. The lateral load resisting system components are the concrete core walls andcoupling beams, the exterior beam/column frame, and the two story belt and outrigger

    walls located at levels 28, 51 and 73.

    8.1.4. Jin Mao Tower, Shanghai, China

    The composite structural system for the 88-story, 421m high building in Shanghaiwas designed by the Skidmore, Owings & Merrill office to resist typhoon winds,

    earthquake forces and accommodate poor soil conditions, while providing a very

    slender tower to be fully occupied for office and hotel uses. The building is the tallestbuilding in China.The superstructure of the tower resisting lateral loads is composed of

    a octagonal central reinforced concrete shear wall core interconnected with eightcomposite mega-columns through composite outrigger trusses two story high located onlevels: 24,51 and 85. The foundation system for the Tower consists of open steel pipe

    piles capped by a reinforced concrete mat.

    Many systems of the building are monitored and integrated by computer. Thebuilding is considered as one of examples of intelligent buildings.

    8.1.5. Burj Al Arab, DubaiThe ultramodern hotel, shaped like traditional sailboat was shortly opened in Dubai.

    This hotel with its 321m heights is the worlds tallest hotel. The building was built on

    the artificial island linked by bridge to Dubai and is characterized by a dramaticstructural steel exoskeleton and a soaring 200 m tall atrium, shielded from outside view

    by a sail shaped, 50 m wide stretched-fabric wall. Atkins Company was responsible for

    total design, construction management and procurement of everything.

    In its V-shaped footprint, the towers two roughly 90-m-long, 15 m-wide guestaccommodation wings, made of concrete walls and slabs, spread from a service core.

    Wing walls and the core transmit vertical loads down to the pile foundation. Wind and

    earthquake resistance in one direction is provided by the highly visible exoskeletonacting compositely with the core.

    The exoskeleton is a pair of steel trusses rising 273 m above ground. Each

    aluminum-clad truss stands upright, like an archers bow, with the vertical element builtcompositely with the core. The curved legs stand, only lightly connected to the wings,

    about 12 m outside the curtain walls. The generally 1,8 x 4,5 m uprights of each bow

    are braced together with horizontal and diagonal elements.Wind stability in the other direction is from a stack of three structural steel crosses,

    bracing and connecting the open ends of the guest-room wings to close the V plan, andsharing loads with core. The bracing, about 50 m across, is hidden behind a two-layeredwall of translucent glass fiber fabric, coated with polytetrafluoroethylene. To form a

    atriums 50 m wide, 200 m tall outwardly curved wall, fabric is stretched over a ladder

    of bowed, horizontal trusses between ends of the wings.

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    Easier ways to stabilize the tower were certainly available but the plan by Atkinsproject architect Tom Wills-Wright had the winning aesthetic appeal.

    The building is designed for a 50-year wind of 45m per second and 0,2g seismic

    ground acceleration. Two tuned mass dampers, weighting about 2 tones each limitvibrations in the tubular steel mast that projects 60 m above the building.

    8.1.6. Swiss Re. London

    Height: 180 m. (41 floors). Largest floor external diameter (level 17): 56,15 m.

    Completed in 2000. Architect: Foster & Partners Struct. Eng. Ove Arup & Partners. The

    development of the building form is the result of synthesis of number of criteria.Imaginative and strong architectural and structural concepts come together to create a

    building that positively addresses all of these issues. The upper three levels of the

    building from level 38 provide corporate facilities for Swiss Re and other tenants,restaurant and upper viewing mezzanine offering 360 views over London. These levels

    are enclosed with a steel and glass dome structure of 30 m diameter raising 22 m. from

    its support on the top of the perimeter diagrid.

    Tall building design for the Swiss Re building makes it possible to reduce thefootprint and help the office floors to be well proportioned for natural light.

    The unique curved form developed generates also further benefits:

    the building streamlined aerodynamic shape protects against a windy environment at

    street level

    the diameter of the building is able to gradually increase over the lower levels tomaximise the internal space relative to the footprint

    the reduction in floor diameter towards the plant floors at the top culminating in the

    glazed domed roof, ensures that the building enhances but does not dominate the

    London skyline.The structural system of the building consists of internal core composed from 16

    internal columns and external shell - perimeter diagrid structure.

    The office floors are organised into six spokes or fingers, arranged on 1,5 m gridaround a circular service and lift core. Between the spokes are triangular zones that are

    used as perimeter light-wells. The light-wells are offset at each successive floor by 5

    degrees. This twist creates balconies at each level and opens up dramatic views throughand out of the building.

    Perimeter diagrid structure was developed specifically for the Swiss Re building

    in order to address the issues generated by the unusual geometry in a manner that wasfully integrated with the architectural concept and generated the maximum benefit for

    the client.

    The final design solution avoids large cantilevers and keeps the light-wells free offloor structure by inclining the perimeter columns to follow the helical path of the

    six-fingered floors up trough the building.

    A balanced diagrid structure is formed by generating a pattern of columns spiralling

    in both directions, intersecting at two- storey intervals at node points The columns are straight between nodes, with a change in direction and orientation

    at each node point.

    This gives rise to significant horizontal forces at these points, even under balancedgravity loading. These forces are carried by perimeter hoops at each node level,

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    rather than through the floor structure.

    The variation in the diagrid geometry results in compression in the hoops at the top

    of the building (where the columns are more steeply angled and lighter loaded) and

    very significant tension forces at the middle and lover levels. The horizontal hoops turn the diagrid into a very stiff triangulated shell, providing

    excellent stability for the tower and equilibrium for any asymmetric or horizontal

    loading conditions.

    This means that the core is not needed to resist wind forces and can be designated as

    an open-planned steel structure providing adaptable internal space

    8.1.7. Post Tower, Bonn, Germany

    Height: 163 m 42 floors (OG) and 6 floors (UG). Completed in 2002.Archit.:Murphy/Jahn Struct.: Werner Sobek Ing. Post Tower was chosen as 2nd best of the year

    2002 out of 350 nominated buildings. It is an excellent example of Transparent

    Building.Post Tower structural system: internal shear wall core and perimeter columns. Both

    parts of the building structure are connected by bracing on several levels and byoutrigger in technical floor. Interaction of the core with perimeter composite columns issecured by stiff reinforced concrete floor slabs.

    The R.C. slab has total thickness of 0,3 m and is supported by a suspender beam

    running between the columns.Each circle segment has two stiffening cores with a wall thickness of up to 0,8 m

    and 19 steel composite pivoted columns of diameter varying between 762 and 406 mm

    depending on the altitude at which they are installed.The concrete cores are linked at five levels by means of diagonal stiffening crosses.

    Further stiffening is provided halfway up the building, on the technical installations

    level, by additional diagonal outriggers linking the cores with the external support

    cores.

    The envelope consists of second-skin faade, which allows windows to be openedeven on the upper levels and forms an integral part of the energy concept of thebuilding, which is based on minimal energy inputs. Part of this concept is also the watercooling built into the reinforced concrete ceiling.

    8.1.8. Taipei 101, Taipei, TaiwanHeight: 509 m (101 floors OG, 5 floors UG). Presently the highest building of the

    world. Completion: 2004. Archit.: C.Y. Lee & Partn. Struct.: Thornton-Tomasetti

    Taipei. 101 was designed for extreme loads which can appear in Taipei: typhoon winds

    and heavy earthquake oscillations.

    The footprint of the building is roughly 53-m square. The four exterior walls of thelower 25 stories slope inward nearly 5. Above that, eight stacked dimensionally

    identical modules, each eight stories and with 7 outward-leaning faades rise to level

    90. At the top are 11 mechanical equipment levels and 60m tall pinnacle, rising fromthe 101 story up to 508m.

    The stepped profile creates external safety decks at the base of each eight floor

    module. Shelters inside these levels have fire fighting, smoke displacement andcommunication equipment. Each module is isolated by smoke and fire barriers, and

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    region, and the patterning systems embodied in Islamic architecture. The tower iscomposed of three elements arranged around a central core. As the tower rises from the

    flat desert base, setbacks occur at each element in an upward spiraling pattern,

    decreasing the mass of the tower as it reaches toward the sky. At the top, the centralcore emerges and is sculptured to form a finishing spire. A Y-shaped floor plan

    maximizes views of the Persian Gulf.

    8.2.6. Russia Tower, Moscow, Russia

    Height 648 m. Construction end: 2010. Archit. & Struct. SOM. Status: approved.

    8.3. Examples of Interesting Solutions for Tall Building Projects which were not

    erected

    8.3.1. 7, South Dearborn St. Chicago, USA, Height: 478 mArchit. & Struct.: Skidmore Owings Merrill. Planned in 1999 as a new worlds tallest

    building. The extremely narrow structure, would have occupied only about a quarter of

    a city block. Designed as a mast-like tower, supporting 3 overhanging blocks of office

    and residential floors at the middle and upper levels. Height to the roof top 478 m. - 108 stories; height to the top of telecommunication

    antennae 610 m.

    Mixed use: parking on 11 floors, than the offices and above them residential space

    on 40 high rise floors; telecommunication facilities on the top 13 floors.

    Six distinctive groups of floors are visible in the design.

    The structural design for the tower represents a major achievement in the

    evolution of structural systems for super-tall buildings

    The unique structural system is termedstayed mast structure.

    The building is unusually slender of overall aspect ratio on nearly 8,5 : 1.

    The central spine mast of the system is composed of square (20 m on a side)

    reinforced concrete core walls up to 1,2 m thick at the base. The core is linked and stabilised to the perimeter structure (stays) through multi-

    story structural steel outrigger trusses (spreaders) at two transitions points along

    the tower shaft: at the parking/office and office/residential boundaries.

    The central core wall utilises high strength concrete up to 100MPa

    Foundations for the building are straight-shaft caissons socked 1.8 m into bedrock

    and are designed to support a uniform load of 19MPa

    The top 137 m of the tower is composed of two telecommunication masts

    specifically designed to broadcast digital television. The exterior perimeter of the

    lowest 18 parking levels is composed of a continuous RC wall silo, which serves totransfer a major portion of the overturning moment due to the wind to the perimeter.

    The upper residential and telecom. floors are cantilevered up to 9 m from the

    central core walls allowing an uninterrupted panorama from these floors.

    The floor system for the upper cantilevered floors are tapered cast-in-situ

    prestressed post-tensioned reinforced concrete beams and conventionally reinforced

    one-way slabs.

    By cantilevering these floors, the core is essentially pre-compressed with gravity

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    loads, thus allowing the central core walls to withstand the full shear andoverturning moment due to wind above the lowest stay.

    The architectural design has been influenced by the structural solution in choosing

    to express the cantilevered nature of the construction in the upper floors.

    8.3.2. Miglin-Beitler Tower, Skyneedle, Chicago, USA. Height: 610 m.This project was also not erected. But the structure designed for the building seems

    to be interesting and following logical interaction of various elements of the system.

    The 141 story, 610 m high (from street to roof) building was designed by Cesar Pelli

    Associates and Thornton-Tomasetti structural engineers. The resulting cruciform tube

    scheme offers structural efficiency, superior dynamic behavior, ease of constructionand minimal intrusion at leased office floors. The cruciform tube structural system

    consists of the following six major components:

    a 19 by 19m concrete core

    eight cast-in-place concrete fin columns located on the faces of the building

    eight link beams connecting the four corners of the core to the eight fin columns at

    every floor. In addition to enhance the interaction between exterior fin columns and

    the core sets of two-story-deep outrigger walls are located at levels 16, 56 and 91.

    a conventional structural steel composite floor system

    exterior steel Vierendel trusses consisting of the horizontal spandrels and two

    vertical columns at each of the 18,6m wide faces on the four sides of the buildingbetween the fin columns.

    a 183m tall steel-framed tower at the top of the building

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