Burj Dubai

Burj Dubai

A zine about the Burj Dubai, the tallest building in the world. The Burj Dubai is a skyscraper currently under construction, since April 15, 2005, in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. It will soon be the tallest tower in the world... [more]

A zine about the Burj Dubai, the tallest building in the world.

The Burj Dubai is a skyscraper currently under construction, since April 15, 2005, in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. It will soon be the tallest tower in the world.

The lead architect for the Burj Dubai is Adrian Smith of the Chicago office of Skidmore, Owings and Merrill.

Its final height is officially being kept a secret due to competition ; however, figures released by a contractor on the project have suggested a height of around 808 meters!

The total number of floors is expected to be around 160.

A more recent article by building subcontractor Persian Gulf Extrusions and dated September 20, 2006, states a final height "over 940 metres" or at least 3084 feet, but this has not yet been confirmed by Emaar.

As of December 12, 2006, the Burj Dubai was at 94 stories tall, and is now the second tallest building in Dubai, and the seventeenth tallest building in the world.

Burj Al Arab Hotel

Dubai's 7-star hotel escapes crisis discounting



by AFP|28 May 2009

Florianpolis, Brazil — Dubai's Burj Al Arab Hotel - billed as the first seven-star hotel in the world -- has escaped a room-discounting move by owner the Jumeirah Group to shore up demand during the global downturn.

As a result, occupancy in the imposing 321-meter (1,053-foot) high building is "less than last year but within our expectations," Jumeirah chief executive Gerald Lawless told AFP Saturday on the sidelines of a world tourism conference in Brazil.

He declined to give occupancy rates.

But he said for the rest of Jumeirah's properties, steep price cuts were being offered to maintain demand.

"At the end of November, bookings were slowing down, so we started offering healthy discounts up to 30 percent for our source markets in the UK, Germany and Russia to stimulate demand," he said.

Despite the crisis, the group was maintaining client numbers from those three key markets, he said, though he noted that reservations were increasingly coming later in a bid to secure cheaper prices.

He said: "The luxury sector is certainly resilient to the crisis but this is also motivated by promotions and prices."

Two of the group's properties in Dubai, the Jumeirah Beach Hotel and the Madinat Jumeirah, are keeping occupancy high, with 90 to 95 percent of the rooms filled between February and April at an average price of 570 dollars per night, Lawless said.

The group, which owns 11 hotels, in Dubai, Britain and the United States, plans to forge on with ambitious expansion plans that will see it running 60 properties by 2012.

"Despite the global economic downturn we maintain our objectives," Lawless said.

Jumeirah, part of Dubai Holdings owned by the ruling family of the Gulf emirate, intends to open its first Asian hotel in Shanghai this year, and has just signed a contract to open a hotel in Frankfurt, Germany.

Lawless would not give company forecasts for 2009, but said there was "close to double digit growth in 2008."

Several other international hotel groups have suspended their projects in Dubai after seeing its economy stall over recent months.

The real estate market has imploded but tourists -- for now -- appear to still be going, with hotels recording a five percent increase in check-ins in the first three months of this year.

Source: plushasia.com
Sponsors
Comments
Be the first to leave a comment!
Add a Comment:
Already a member? Log In
Sponsors
About the Author

10 Kudos
Top Travel Articles
Rich People on Yachts: Kate Moss in the French Riveria
Stars are attracted to yachts like moths to bug zappers.
Visiting a Nude Beach
Before you you strip down to your birthday suit, read our nekkid beach guide.
Katie Price Goes Topless In Spain
She was only trying to fit in.
More From Zimbio
Copyright © 2009 - Zimbio, Inc. Some rights reserved.