Worldβs tallest tower opens amid fireworks β and predictions that it could be half-empty for a year
The worldβs tallest tower opened in Dubai this week under a sky filled with fireworks β and amid deepening gloom about its commercial prospects.
Although Emaar, the towerβs developer, says it has sold 90% of the available space, property professionals say the building could be half empty for a year as Dubaiβs financial downturn continues.
Jess Downs, director of research and advisory services at property agent Landmark Advisory, Dubai, said: βI wouldnβt expect occupancy to go above 50% in the first six to 12 months.β
Others sniped at the decision to change the towerβs name on the day it opened, from Burj Dubai to Burj Khalifa. The change honours Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed bin Sultan al-Nahyan, the ruler of Abu Dhabi. The assumption was that this was a humiliation concession extracted from Dubai in exchange for a $25bn loan from Abu Dhabi.
Others disagreed. Tom Barry, chief executive of Arabtec, which was one of the three main contractors on the tower, said: βThis is no humiliation for Dubai. It is about Emaar honouring the ruler of the UAE, who also happens to be the ruler of Abu Dhabi.β
Those at the ceremony agreed it was spectacular. Bill Baker, a structural engineer on the project and a partner in American architect Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, said: βAs a structural engineer, to see fire coming out of your building is pretty shocking.β
Not everyone was so impressed with the building itself. Ian Simpson, the architect the UKβs own tallest residential scheme, the Beetham Tower in Manchester, criticised the design for its βblandnessβ.
The Burj in numbers
Cost: $1.5bn (Β£930m)
Height: 828m
5 years to complete project
57 lifts
90% of the building is sold, according to Emaar
1,044 apartments
12,000 workers on site at peak
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