Did You know these lesser known facts about the World’s Tallest Building - Burj Khalifa?
We've been to places like the world's largest pumpkin festival, the world's northernmost city, and the world's largest wine barrel, to name a few. So it should come as no surprise that visiting the Burj Khalifa's observation deck was also on our bucket list. The Burj Khalifa is not just the world's tallest structure, but it also holds several other world records. Here are 28 lesser-known facts about the Burj Khalifa, the world's tallest man-made marvel. Just remember to reserve your Burj Khalifa tickets in advance.
- The Dubai Tour is
incomplete without a Burj Khalifa
tour - visiting the world's tallest building, standing at over 828
metres. It's three times the height of the Eiffel Tower and twice the
height of New York's Empire State Building!
- On top of that, it is
the world's tallest freestanding structure. The CN Tower previously held
this record.
- The Burj Khalifa also
holds the record for having the most floors in the world, at 160.
- If you enjoy heights,
your Burj
Khalifa tour will make you happy to learn that the Burj Khalifa
has the highest residential flat in the world, at 385 metres!
- How about dining with a
view? On level 122 of the Burj Khalifa, you may dine while looking out
over the city skyline from a height of 441 metres at At.mosphere, the
world's tallest restaurant. Naturally, the menu features high-end fare
like as wagyu beef, oysters, and caviar.
- You wouldn't want to
take the stairs all the way up, would you? Fortunately, the Burj Khalifa
also includes the world's tallest elevator, which can climb 504 metres in
a single trip at a speed of 60 kilometres per hour.
- Let's come to the real
reason of booking a Burj Khalifa
tour: the world's highest outdoor observation deck, located on level
148, from where you can see Dubai from a height of 555 metres!
- As a
world-record-breaking structure, it's no wonder that the Burj Khalifa has
been the site of numerous world-record-breaking feats! Let's start with
the biggest building climb, which was completed by Alain Robert aka French
Spiderman on the Dubai gigantic tower in just over 6 hours — he did it
alone, with no help!
- What about the highest
building base jump? It could only happen on the world's tallest building!
Professional French jumpers named Vince Reffet and Fred Fugen performed it
on April 21, 2014. They jumped from the pinnacle at 828 metres, the
highest point of the Burj Khalifa.
- Construction began in
2004 and continued until 2010.
- The structure required
330,000 cubic metres of concrete, the equivalent of 100,000 elephants.
- If you calculate the
amount of aluminium required to build the Burj Khalifa it will come almost
equivalent to the combined weight of 5 Airbus A380 planes together.
- During construction, a
plethora of reinforced steel bars were utilised that if all of it were
laid out side by side, it would stretch one fifth of the way around the
world.
- While on Burj
Khalifa tour, you might be pleased to see the Burj Khalifa's
façade is made up of 26,000 glass panels that were completely hand-cut.
- Sustainability was
prioritised during construction: the outer cladding was silver coated to
improve insulation, and solar panels were installed to heat up to 140,000
gallons of water each day. The air conditioning system's condensation is
used to water the plants.
- The Burj Khalifa's
design was inspired by traditional Islamic architecture as well as the
spider lily, a prominent desert flower in the UAE. If you look at the
tower from above, you can notice the similarity!
- The Burj
Khalifa ticket includes the access to world's second Armani Hotel,
following the one in Milan. Giorgio wanted guests to feel as if they were
entering his home, hence the hotel has no reception.
- The building is filled
of particularly commissioned paintings, which art aficionados will
appreciate. Two examples include the shifting oval forms sculpture by
Egyptian-born artist Karim Rashid near the corporate entryway and the
'World Voices' piece in the resident's lobby. The latter was created by
Catalan artist Jaume Plensa and comprises suspended cymbals that make
noise when they are struck by water drops.
- In Mission: Impossible –
Ghost Protocol, Tom Cruise scaled the Burj.
- The building's original
name was Burj Dubai, but it was renamed to Burj Khalifa to honour Dubai's
ruler, Sheikh Khalifa.
- The Dubai Fountain,
which is spread in the area covering two football fields, is located near
the Burj Khalifa building.
- Dubai tour
packages includes traditional abra boats that are used to sail around the
Dubai Fountain.
- The popular light and
sound show was developed by the same designers who built the Bellagio
Hotel Lake's fountains. The Dubai Fountain is acclaimed to have the
largest in-built dancing fountain show in the world!
- The temperature at the
top of the Burj Khalifa is around 15°C cooler than that of the ground
level.
- It takes 3 months time
for the cleaning guys to clean the windows from top to bottom, after
completing the first round it's time to repeat the process throughout the
year!
- On clear days, the Burj
Khalifa's pinnacle may be seen from up to 95 kilometres distant!
- The Burj Khalifa
launched around 10,000 fireworks to commemorate its opening in 2010.
- The Burj Khalifa will
most likely lose its title of "highest skyscraper in the world"
in the near future. The Kingdom Tower in Jeddah is scheduled to open in
2021 and will be over 1000 metres tall!
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