Dubai City Tower : Vertical City (2.4 Kilometer)


Recommended Posts

Dubai City Tower (also called ?Vertical City?) is an architect?s proposal that began circulating in emails and at a skyscraper forum published in August 25th, but its origins are yet to be determined.

The professional project pitch de400 habitable storieses, topped400m energy-producing spirere, maki2.4km highgh. The tower is proposed to be sited along the persian gulf where part of the building could push into the ocean creating a marina and a destination for cruise ships and tourism. The proposed tower is organized into four 100 story "neighborhoods" connected vertical bullet trainin that quickly distributes people between Sky Plazas that separate the different vertical neighborhoods.

By comparison, Emaar?s Burj Dubai is largely predicted to be around 800m high and 160 floors.

A ?mile-high tower? in Jeddah has been planned by Kingdom Holdings, while Nakheel is building Al Burj, which, according to project sources, will have a final height of 1.28km, although the developer is keeping the details under wraps.

I would not be surprised to see this project under construction. Only Dubai would build such crazy project. It is worth mentioning that there are many amazing architectural projects under planning and construction in Dubai.

dubai-city-tower-image.jpg

dubai-city-tower-pic.jpg

dubai-city-tower-view.jpg

dubai-city-tower-show.jpg

dubai-city-tower-plan.jpg

dubai-city-tower.jpg

http://www.realtyna.com/dubai_real_estate/...city-tower.html

nope....not gonna happen...not the way the property market here in Dubai is playing out currently...

(but if it does....great :p I'm working in a field related to construction after all)

Oh yea...no oil money used here.... mostly foreign investments....which is why the market is seeing a downward trend in the last few months.

it's twice as high as any other building... they can't possibly make this a reality, it's too damn big.

It does look nice, but surely there has to be safety concerns over this...

It's called an arcology and the dubai people are not theonly ones doing it, in fact it's probably the least likely place for the first one to happen.

The Projects in Japan will most likely happen first. they are a lot further along with multiple test models in developements and lots of experimentation going on, they also have the land for them set out and have so far been waiting on matierial technology and other variants that don't require such advanced matierals.

The original tower they planned in the harbor of some japan city I hink is ostly hindered by material developements, while the newer concept of a semi pyramidical one, with vertical steel suport beams going all the way up, similar to the Taipei 101 building (wich was an experiment if tht technology would work) is more feasable in the short term, it's also been tested so they know it's safe in case of fires and other emergencies. by diving the pyramid tower up in slices with air inebtween ad parks and such in the middle of each section.

So no arcologies isn't just a pipedrea, they are happening just slowly, as they require an incredible amount of resources to build, and so much research before consturction to make sure everything works and is safe. This is why the pramid version if closer, their construction method of using the steel beams have allredy been tested on a smaller buildign and they work.

that's all BS.

Kuwait announces Silk City at 1100m

Then Saudi announces Mile Tower at 1,400m

Then Qatar announces Heaven's Gate at 2,000m

and then the Emirates say they're making Vertical City at 2,400?

It's all hype from Dubai's end to make the other Middle Eastern cities major projects look weak

that's all BS.

Kuwait announces Silk City at 1100m

Then Saudi announces Mile Tower at 1,400m

Then Qatar announces Heaven's Gate at 2,000m

and then the Emirates say they're making Vertical City at 2,400?

It's all hype from Dubai's end to make the other Middle Eastern cities major projects look weak

As usual, Dubai leads, the rest follow.

Never heard of the heaven's gate though.

It sounds like another cheesy clone for Dubai's projects in Qatar.

VidER

@vider, how does Dubai lead when most of the projects in the Emirates are FUNDED by Qatari investors?

You want cheesy, look down when you're flying over Dubai.

This is why Dubai's getting into Debt and the others are biding their time.

a very small part of UAE & other gulf countries are populated, I really don't understand why they don't expand in empty lands rather than going vertical.

80 years ago they were living in tents out in the desert and that's where they'll be in another 80 years if they don't invest their money correctly.

Edited by Hani
This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • I think it depends on what you're looking for to do, and the time you have to spare. With my Dwarf 3, I easily spend 3-4 hour sessions; half an hour driving to an un-light polluted place, unpacking and setting up the smart scope + tripod for equatorial tracking, mucking around with settings, maybe shoot some calibration frames, spending a few hours shooting, merging with past photo sessions, etc. It's crazy how time flies and I often get home later than I expected. It's something I still need to set aside a good part of an evening to do, all in all. For one session, where you often need like four for best results when it comes to deep space objects. With practice, I can probably begin cutting time here but I think where smart scopes find their home is among people who love to shoot the night sky but don't have the spare time to go deep with the "navigator level" attunement to the night sky itself. Having said this, _if_ you have even more time to spend on this hobby, it will probably be even more rewarding to do it more by hand and learn the skies and the details of how it all works.
    • I misread the title and thought Teams itself would be redesigned. Imagine having this one as a native WinUI app.
    • Dell, HP PCs ran into endless reboot, BitLocker recovery loops but Windows 11 isn't to blame by Sayan Sen Last month Neowin reported on a major issue on Dell systems wherein a bug in its official support tool was leading to endless blue screen of death (BSOD) and restarts. Following our report, Dell officially acknowledged its SupportAssist-related crash issue, confirming that the culprit is not Microsoft's operating system but rather a faulty version of its own remediation software. In a newly published support advisory, Dell stated that version 5.5.16.0 of Dell SupportAssist Remediation and Alienware SupportAssist Remediation can trigger blue screen errors and unexpected system restarts. The company notes that the problematic component operates independently of the main SupportAssist application, meaning users should not remove the primary SupportAssist software when troubleshooting the issue. According to Dell, the crashes are linked specifically to the SupportAssist Remediation service, which is bundled with SupportAssist OS Recovery Tools, and as such it has since released an updated version, 5.5.16.1, which is said to resolve the problem. Affected users are advised to first verify whether version 5.5.16.0 is installed by checking the Installed Apps section in Windows Settings. If so, Dell recommends updating SupportAssist OS Recovery Tools through either SupportAssist's "Update Software" feature or Dell Command Update. Dell also advises users to back up important data before performing the update and to ensure systems remain connected to power throughout the installation process. If you are still having issues though make sure to report to the Dell support forum. As it turns out though Dell is not the only PC maker currently dealing with update-related headaches as HP is also facing a separate but probably equally frustrating issue involving recent Windows Secure Boot updates that were released with recent Windows 11 Patch Tuesdays. Similar to Dell, HP also put up its own support article where it explains the issue. The company says that affected devices could hit a brick wall when booting as they run into a BitLocker recovery loop after the April 2026 updates. The problem appears to affect systems wherein the new UEFI Secure Boot CA 2023 certificates fail to apply properly. As such affected users will find themselves entering their recovery key over and over again despite the system otherwise functioning normally. HP says such PCs should be updated to the latest available BIOS version and configured with the necessary Secure Boot certificates before installing Microsoft's Windows 11 Patch Tuesday updates. Systems that are already experiencing the problem may require BIOS configuration changes to restore normal boot behavior. Admins can find information regarding that in the support article here on HP's official website.
    • Getting further away from the artistic study of mental disease that was the first game... (which never needed any sequels to begin with) But I get it, a company has to make money. And the second was at least visually impressive, if not in any other way.
    • If its the devs fault you would think Unreal would help M$ take full advantage of Unreal and work with them to fix the performance issues. Otherwise they are catching unwarranted bad press.
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Month Later
      DJC50PLUS earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      DJC50PLUS earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Proficient
      Eric Biran went up a rank
      Proficient
    • Dedicated
      Conjor earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • Week One Done
      Windows Guy earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      493
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      246
    3. 3
      Steven P.
      72
    4. 4
      +Edouard
      69
    5. 5
      neufuse
      68
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!