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30. 11. 2012 Druckversion | Artikel versenden| Kontakt

838 Meter – China baut neuen Mega-Wolkenkratzer

Schlagwörter: China Wolkenkratzer Sky City Changsha

Grounds for concern over world's 'next tallest building'

Urban planners have slammed proposals to build the world's tallest skyscraper in China, saying it would be a death trap in emergencies.

Sky City, if built, will be 220 stories tall and stand more than 838 meters, higher than the 828-meter-tall Burj Khalifa in Dubai, the world's tallest building.

Property developer Broad Group paid 390 million yuan ($62.6 million) this month for about 67,300 square meters of land in Changsha, capital of Hunan province.

According to the company's website, the tower will house 4,000 families in apartments between the 16th and 180th floor, and has offices, a hotel, a school, a hospital, shops and stores, a gym and restaurants.

But architects claim the residents would be vulnerable if fires broke out.

"With so many people living and working in the building, there will be risks everywhere," said Li Xun, vice-president of the China Academy of Urban Planning and Design. "What if there is a fire, or an elderly man has a heart attack?"

Generally, ladders used by fire rescue crews can reach a maximum height of 100 meters.

Wang Youwei, vice-president of the China Academy of Building Research, also estimated that an elevator in the skyscraper would take some time to travel from the ground to the top floor.

"These minutes could be crucial in some situations," he said. "A sick person might die."

On Monday, Broad Group spokesman Zhu Linfang declined to comment on the criticism that has been aimed at the project.

"The design team is professional and has taken all safety factors into consideration," she said, adding only that the company had "bought the land, handed our plans to the authorities and are waiting for the result of an assessment".

However, an official in Changsha's urban-rural planning bureau said his office had received no paperwork from Broad Group.

Information posted on the company's website said the tower will be built in nine months. Zhou Xiangjiang, who is responsible for Broad Group's building technology, told China Daily in July that the building can be built in such a short period of time because some parts will be prefabricated and assembled onsite.

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Quelle: german.china.org.cn

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