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Old March 17th, 2006, 08:06 AM
larven larven is offline
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Default Foster and Partners’ Moscow City Tower

From the Foster website:

Location: Located in Moscow City, 5.5km from the Red Square

Building Type: Mixed-use, super-dense, vertical city for 25,000 people

Uses: Offices, hotel, shopping, leisure and residences with private gardens
Public spaces and observation deck

Site Area: 21,935m²

Total Gross Area: 520,800m²

General Building Data

Height to top of building: 600m
Height to top occupied floor: 500m
Width of floor plates: 21m
Typical floor to floor height: 4.25m
Number of lifts: 101
Number of car parking spaces: 3680
Number of floors above ground: 118 floors

Structural System

Composite steel and concrete ‘fan’ column superstructure
Reinforced concrete core
21m clear span steel trusses with concrete on steel deck for office floors
Steel beams with intermediate columns with concrete on steel deck for the hotel, serviced apartments and residential floors

Sustainability

Tallest naturally ventilated tower in the world
Shallow 21m floor plates to maximise daylight and natural ventilation potential
Triple glazed high performance low energy façade
High-end comfort levels throughout
Photovoltaic cells feed electricity back into city grid, equivalent to lighting office space all year
Energy recycling within the vertical city reduces heating demand by 20%
Potential for thermopiles and river water cooling
Rain water and snow harvesting reduces fresh water demand for toilets by 30%
Waste recycling










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  #2  
Old March 17th, 2006, 08:59 AM
NYguy NYguy is offline
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Breathtaking!
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Old March 17th, 2006, 11:37 AM
ablarc ablarc is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Foster
...vertical city...
Vertical suburb.
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  #4  
Old March 17th, 2006, 11:54 AM
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BrooklynRider BrooklynRider is offline
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Wowsa! Can I state for the record that I would rather have THAT than FT at the WTC. Also, from the renderings, it looks like Moscow will get its first trees as part of this development. (I never see trees in pictures of Moscow.)
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  #5  
Old March 17th, 2006, 04:42 PM
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Fabrizio Fabrizio is offline
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Yes, agreed! imagine this as the new WTC.

Last edited by Fabrizio; March 17th, 2006 at 04:48 PM.
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Old March 17th, 2006, 06:50 PM
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I'm metrically challenged how does the height translate to feet? I guess I'm also a lazy-ass who does want to look it up...
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Old March 18th, 2006, 09:53 AM
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Statement on the site:

Foster and Partners’ Moscow City Tower - taller than any other building in Europe - is a striking new addition to the dynamic high-rise skyline of Moscow City. With its unique form, this new landmark will be visible from the heart of Moscow. The building continues the practice’s investigation into the nature of the tower, taking structural, functional, environmental and urban logic to a new dimension. The mixed-use project - incorporating apartments, hotel, office and leisure space - will have an ‘energy cycle’ that will pioneer sustainable architecture and reinforce the economic and social vitality of Moscow City.

Based on a highly efficient geometry derived from the triangular plan, the vertical city is a powerful triumvirate of three ‘arms’ that meet at a central green spine running the full height of the tower. Wider at the base and tapering towards the top, the pyramidal form is elegant and slender in profile, and benefits from a highly efficient composition to achieve the maximum stability with the minimum structure, as well as the most effective distribution of space. The tower is aided in resisting wind loads by a series of sloped fan columns extending diagonally upwards to the spine from the broad, triangular base. Overlaid by columns set at a reverse angle, this unusual oblique lattice carries the building’s load while also giving it its’ distinctive geometric façade.

At ground level, the dramatic and vibrant gateway into the site slopes downward into an inverted pyramid that houses an extensive retail space and a public ice-rink. The site is well-connected to Moscow’s world renowned underground transport system, and there is also underground parking provided. With retail and offices generating higher density use towards the base - residential, hotel and serviced apartments are located in the higher smaller floorplates. Mixed-use presents a strong case for energy balance, dependent on the residential components using energy at different times to office and retail.

By harnessing the heat created by the offices in winter and the cooling properties of the ground in summer, the energy cycle is a hot water circuit that runs through the building, distributing the energy to regulate the temperature and heat water throughout the day and the year.

The triangular volume of the tower is carved out on three sides to create independent arms with thin floorplates. This distinct diagram maximises daylight penetration and views, providing large, double-aspect, flexible, column-free offices. At ground level, there are three separate addresses, for office, hotel and residential, and rising up the centre of the building, there are a series of green skygardens that draw in natural ventilation and provide key circulation and social space.

The higher floors containing residential and hotel accommodation are designed as a series of modular units that can be individually configured. Apartments benefit from fresh air, natural light, double or triple height volumes and access to skygardens, creating a unique lifestyle in the heart of Moscow - an opportunity to escape the city within minutes, while benefiting from a diverse choice of amenities and access to a vibrant community. At the summit, a publicly accessible viewing deck with cafes and bars creates a magnetic new attraction for both visitors and residents of Moscow.

www.fosterandpartners.com
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Old March 18th, 2006, 12:14 PM
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lofter1 lofter1 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by BrooklynRider
I would rather have THAT than FT at the WTC.
It seems that the footprint on the ground of this one would require about 1/3 of the entire WTC site:

Moscow City Site Area: 21,935 m²

1 acre = 4,046.85642 m²

WTC @ 16 acres = ~ 64,750 m²

However, it could be a good fit in one particular area of the site ...

Memorial Quadrant @ 6 acres = ~ 24,281 m²
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  #9  
Old March 18th, 2006, 12:42 PM
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That is gorgeous. This is proof that we are getting at ground zero is crap.
Look at the shape. It tapers like the FT, except this is stunning and FT is a bore. Not to mention the pathetic height.
The detailing and care that went into this design make the latest FT look like it was designed overnight. Oh, wait a minute, it practically was.

We suck.
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Old March 18th, 2006, 01:16 PM
lesterp4 lesterp4 is online now
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Default metric conversion

600m = 1968.5 ft. wow!!!!
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  #11  
Old March 20th, 2006, 09:14 AM
larven larven is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MidtownGuy
That is gorgeous. This is proof that we are getting at ground zero is crap.
Look at the shape. It tapers like the FT, except this is stunning and FT is a bore. Not to mention the pathetic height.
The detailing and care that went into this design make the latest FT look like it was designed overnight. Oh, wait a minute, it practically was.

We suck.
I couldn't agree more, this is what you could have had if you'd let some of the worlds great architects loose at ground zero which in all fairness is what the site deserved. Instead you get some watered down David Childs crap, hes not really a bad architect but his buildings are hardly inspiring and he shouldn't have been the choice to design the Freedom Tower. I still can't believe nothings happening down there after 5 years, its embarrassing really from an outsiders point of view. I'm looking forward to the Foster designed tower 2 which no doubt will put Childs tower in the shade...unless he's been instructed to design something which doesn't detract from the Freedom Tower and show it for the inferior design it is.
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Old March 20th, 2006, 10:26 AM
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Just remember who is designing 2wtc!
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  #13  
Old March 20th, 2006, 12:15 PM
MrSpice MrSpice is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by BrooklynRider
Wowsa! Can I state for the record that I would rather have THAT than FT at the WTC. Also, from the renderings, it looks like Moscow will get its first trees as part of this development. (I never see trees in pictures of Moscow.)
Moscow has lots of trees. As far as I remember (visited Moscow last time 11.5 years ago), it had more trees than New York. In fact, I have never seen as few trees as I saw in many Brooklyn neighborhood. Some trees have no trees/plants at all - nothing but ugly brick buildings with fire escapes. Maybe the reason why you don't see many trees on the pictures of Moscow is because you can see most trees there only from April to October. Although, there lots of pine trees there as well that don't lose leaves in the winter.
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Old March 23rd, 2006, 02:15 AM
czsz czsz is offline
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Watch out, P'yongyang!
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  #15  
Old March 23rd, 2006, 03:53 AM
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antinimby antinimby is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MidtownGuy
That is gorgeous. This is proof that we are getting at ground zero is crap.
Look at the shape. It tapers like the FT, except this is stunning and FT is a bore. Not to mention the pathetic height.
The detailing and care that went into this design make the latest FT look like it was designed overnight. Oh, wait a minute, it practically was.
We suck.
What I've been saying all along about NY losing it's edge and tumbling down quick. If this was proposed in the city, opponents would all come out of the woodwork and cry that it's too big, too radical-looking, too out-of-scale, out-of-context and that NY will lose it's charm and all that other bs.


Quote:
Originally Posted by alonzo-ny
Just remember who is designing 2wtc!
I doubt he'll give us something creative there. We might just a get a glorified box.
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