View Full Version : Jinling Fuguang Tower
ld876
August 24th, 2006, 03:05 AM
Just saw this when I was looking at Burj Dubai pics:
"Another approved supertall, this time for Nanjing, China: Jinling Fuguang, 110 floors, 508m tall:" http://www.burjdubaiskyscraper.com
http://www.burjdubaiskyscraper.com/2006/Jinling-fuguang-tower.jpg
ryeler
September 10th, 2006, 05:00 PM
crazy
ld876
September 10th, 2006, 09:24 PM
If the tapering at the bottom were straightened out and the ancillary buildings removed, this could look great in NYC.
As it is though, I think its a rather cool, unique building. And tall, yum.
lofter1
September 10th, 2006, 09:55 PM
... this could look great in NYC.
Or on a mantel ...
BkBound718
October 30th, 2006, 02:04 AM
bring that to nyc we need some new skyscapers
antinimby
October 30th, 2006, 03:24 PM
Well...they try but New Yorkers (at least the vocal ones) keep rejecting them because they say that they're non-contextual.
ablarc
October 30th, 2006, 08:04 PM
In New York, the word "too" is understood to be part and parcel of the word "tall."
Xemu
November 7th, 2006, 05:55 PM
Looks like a big, elongated hand... meh...
lofter1
November 7th, 2006, 07:10 PM
You got that ^^^ right ...
Nanjing China Plans Unique Super Tall
http://www.skyscrapernews.com/news.php?ref=742
2006-10-06
It's not often you see a unique skyscraper design these days, what with gherkins and turning torsos becoming ten-a-penny around the world but this design for the Chinese city of Nanjing might just pull it off.
Called Jinling Fuguang, or the "Hand of Peace", if you don't speak Chinese, this huge project will have 108 floors above ground and be 518 metres tall. Accommodating a mixture of hotel, office and residential, as indeed most super towers do, it has been designed by architect Yu Zhu Zongshi.
The scheme is effect a huge hand rising out of a slimmer wrist that will be clad in blue glass and tower above a large central podium. A shorter curving stepped building that shares this podium will be erected adjacent to it.
There are hints of Chinese feng shu in the design although these have been scotched by the architect more as coincidence. For example feng shu experts would say that "the Jinling luck light" has been employed to the office-space but the architect denies that Chinese folk beliefs are referenced so deeply in the design claiming these are more coincidence than deliberate - a classic case of the audience giving architecture their own meaning.
For Zhu, the scheme is more a case of a hand praying for an end to war saying that "the idea is to represent peace especially as Nanjing has suffered such injuries in war."
If they do build this then what next for other Chinese cities? Perhaps Shanghai can do a Monty Python and erect a giant foot and ankle, stamped into the city centre in reply.
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