99% Invisible - 209- Supertall 101
Episode Date: April 20, 2016Starting in the late 1990s, the government of Taipei began looking into how they could turn global attention to their city, the capital of the small island of Taiwan. The initial idea was to create tw...o 66-story office towers, which … Continue reading →
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This is 99% invisible. I'm Roman Mars.
Off the southeastern coast of China is the small, sweet potato-shaped island of Taiwan.
Yes, I assure you, it is sweet potato-shaped, not regular potato-shaped.
Taiwan is not recognized by the UN as a sovereign nation, though many people who live there would like it to be.
Depending on who you dare ask, Taiwan could be considered a part of China or a land apart.
Before I traveled to Taiwan, I'm embarrassed to admit I wasn't entirely sure where it was.
Producer Avery Truffleman just back from Taipei, the capital of Taiwan.
And a lot of people in Taiwan know this. That people like me aren't really sure where exactly they are or if they're a country.
And this is part of why, in 1997, a city of Taipei set out to do something they hope would put
them on the map. They set out to build a very, very tall building. Taiwan really need to let the
world see it. You know, Taiwan is such a beautiful island.
This is Michael Liu.
He's a representative of Taiwan's tallest building, Taipei 101.
And he says the city of Taipei started with a plan
for a 66-story office building,
with a high-class mall and food court.
And 66 stories was enough to make it
among the tallest in the country.
So then the city government said, oh, you know,
we should let the world see it. So we the city government said, oh, you know, we should let the world see us
or we should have a bigger and more aggressive plan.
So the city of Taipei decided to change the plans,
raising the building to 88 stories,
which would make it the same height
as the patronus towers in Malaysia,
which were then the tallest buildings in the world.
And it was not satisfied.
So then one of the developers saying,
we should go for more than one hundred.
And so they decided to make it 101 stories.
Hence the name Taipei 101.
In Chinese, Velazvi, 100 is a perfection.
We're not satisfied with the perfection.
Taipei 101 rises 1,667 feet up in the air, which is about 508 meters.
It is bonkers high.
It sticks so far above the rest of Taipei that it looks a bit surreal.
You can see it from almost anywhere in the city, even from neighboring towns, like a benevolent
eye of Sauron.
Building something of this size is never easy, but Taipei had extra obstacles.
In a city prone to earthquakes and typhoons, they had a design of building that could withstand
these conditions, and they had to convince the public that this freakishly tall new building
was safe.
And for a while at least, Taipei 101 would hold the coveted title of tallest building
in the world. I think it's fair to say that a large part of the story and history of tall buildings
is really wrapped up with ego and competition, perhaps more so than any other building type.
This is Anthony Wood, executive director of the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat.
They are the organization that gives out that official title of
tallest building in the world.
Yeah, we have a very big ruler and we send someone on site. No, it's it is all based on
drawings on submitted drawings and it's important to have a fair and official measurement process because a tall tall building
always represents something larger than itself.
Historically, a tall building was the embodiment of corporate power.
And you could see that in the titles of the project, hence,
Chrysler Building or Chicago Tribune Tower or Seas Tower.
But in the last couple of decades, the agenda has shifted.
The motivation is the same in terms of getting attention and getting branding,
but it's now more likely to be for a city, a people, an economy, a country.
Which is why projects are now more likely to be named for places like Shanghai Tower, Doha
Convention Center, Dubai One, Signature Tower Jakarta, Mecca Royal Clock Tower, and Taipei 101. A tall tower is a way to show the world we have arrived.
The question I typically get asked is how high can we go?
Most people think that the limits on high are technological, and I can tell you that they're
not.
Really, the height of a tower is the product of its base, and as long as you've got
a big enough area at the base of the base, and as long as you've got a big enough area
at the base of the tower, it's just down to structural engineering. You can go as high
as you, you know, as necessary or as high as motivated.
Which means the only real limits are resources and will.
The main limit is financial. That's the only limit on tall buildings really is who the hell is gonna pay for it and
Should it be done in the first place
In Taipei securing funding for their new building was a huge endeavor as Taipei 101 representative Michael Lu says
This was a public private partnership where a handful of local financial institutions signed on as shareholders
where a handful of local financial institutions signed on as shareholders. Including Taiwan Stock Exchange and a lot of local banks in some telephone company, but local.
And getting the rest of the city on board with this plan meant taking a lot of different considerations into account,
like commercial flight patterns.
When we proposed this, it's a big, big challenge for a deviation department.
Type of his airport is right in the middle of the city.
So we went through a very, very difficult time to talk to them and not only the city,
but also the country recognized that we need this to really go for the tallest in the
world.
And then, so the end, the fly detour.
Oh, they threw me out of it all the time.
Yeah, a lot.
Because of us.
The land was set.
The air was cleared.
The city of Taipei was ready to create a building
that would be the tallest in the world.
Now they had to make it look good.
The important thing is that you have to design building
to be really iconic, otherwise you cannot
become a landmark.
That is CY Lee and he is a bona fide star-cutette.
He had already designed big buildings in other cities in Taiwan and all around China when
he started planning this project back in the late 90s.
And he wanted this new building to be iconic and to look different from skyscrapers in the
West. We're in the city like a mochi Chinese pagoda.
So it's more like a high-rise pagoda.
A super elongated multi-tiered pagoda
covered in sea green glass.
We pick a little bit light green.
It looks very good.
And this pagoda is divided into eight segments
because eight in Chinese sounds like the word for
wealth.
Because that building is a financial building.
And for even more luck in wealth, there are giant gold coins on all four sides of the
base of the building.
And for extra, extra good luck, the corners of the tower are accented with representations
of clouds and dragons.
The corner will have so many kind of a small thing that's expressed to the dragon.
The dragons are symbolic protectors of the building and Taipei 101 needs all the protection it can get.
It is in what I like to call a tough neighborhood.
That's Leonard Joseph of the firm Thornton Tomasetti. They provided the structural engineering services on Taipei 101. You have both typhoons that are significantly more severe than the hurricanes we see in the eastern US, and it is an active seismic zone.
The tough thing about having both harsh winds and seismically active ground is that in an earthquake you want a flexible building.
So you would really like a nice limber structure structure in earthquake zone kind of roll with the flow.
But when the wind blows, that limber structure sways too much and people get seasick in it.
One of the ways to lessen that sway is with a tuned mass damper.
A wind damper or a tuned mass damper is basically a counterweight to winds.
Tuned mass damperers appear in many forms.
These can be weights on rollers, blocks of concrete suspended in pools of water or oil,
or in the case of Taipei 101, a gigantic pendulum.
By having a Tune Mass damper having this big pendulum, as the building sues and this
pendulum is designed to sway at about the same rate. The pendulum
will kind of lay behind. The building moves and the pendulum comes out and goes, oh wait
a minute, I got to follow. The damper just slows the sway of the building. The tower would
still stand without it, but the people inside might feel seasick or they might just feel
unearved by the fact that their building is swaying. The damper is typically intended just to improve occupant comfort.
Having a tuned mass damper is not unique. There are lots of buildings that have one.
What's unique about Taipei 101 is the way they've turned it into an asset.
Usually the damper gets treated like another piece of machinery.
The developer looks at it and says,
well, if I have to, I'll put it in. I don't want to, but if I got it, all right. piece of machinery.
And so if there's a damper at all, it's usually hidden away near the top of the building in
some sort of machine room or attic space.
But in Type A 101, the wind damper isn't just visible.
It's the main attraction. So of course,
Avery went to see it. This is like the 91st floor. Oh my god, my ears are packed. Okay, now we are walking
in through the tunnel where it says giant wind damper. Avery was there with her friend Spike.
It is a massive, massive pendulum.
An orb made of 41 stacks of solid steel, weighing 728 tons.
According to an informational video, it weighs as much as 132 elephants.
It's suspended by four bundles of tech cables and all of it has been painted
gold.
It's really surreal looking. It's like, it feels kind of dystopian. Like you're coming
to this gigantic golden orb to pay your respects.
And the damper is on display because seeing the engineering at work makes people feel
safe, even in Taipei's volatile climate.
You don't need to worry about the Tai phone, even with a lot in Taiwan in the summer,
but you don't need to worry.
And to promote their awesome damper, Taipei 101 went even a step further.
We hired a Sandio company.
The Japanese company that designed Hello Kitty.
So they created these damper babies.
Hi! Chinese company that designed Hello Kitty. So they created these damper babies.
The damper babies are little cartoon figures that have a body like the orb of the damper,
with a big head and little arms and legs.
They come in black, red, yellow, silver, and green.
Next to the damper itself you can watch a little video where the damper babies explain red, yellow, silver, and green. So then you get to this corner.
Next to the damper itself, you can watch a little video
where the damper babies explain how the damper works.
With a damper like this, the tower wants to weigh in a strong wind.
By the way, the damper babies aren't speaking Chinese.
Or Taiwanese, or Japanese.
They speak their own made up cutesy language.
But the video is subtitled with all the information about the damper.
In the damper babies decorate the hallways leading to and from the damper itself.
It's a whole wall of glowing damper babies.
This music kind of rules.
And on different floors of Taipei 101 gift shops sell all all kinds of damper babies who've been years.
And we have a lot of different kind of products.
We have bugs, we have cops, we have mocks,
we have hats.
I totally bought some damper baby stuff.
And a lot of other tourists did,
which is so funny to me that this huge crowd
was geeking out about a tuned mass damper.
The fact that it's been taken a stage further and used as a tourist object is just smart,
really.
Antony Wood of the Council on Tall Buildings in Urban Habitat says the damper helped keep
Taipei 101 on the global stage long after it lost its title as the world's tallest building,
a position it held from 2004 to 2010.
And yes, the world has largely moved on.
We now have an 828 meets a building in the Brij Khalifa Dubai.
The Brij Khalifa in Dubai took the title of tallest building in the world in 2010.
And as we record this, it is still the tallest building in the world.
It's over a thousand feet taller than Taipei 101. At 163
stories, it is staggeringly tall.
The US may have once led the race for the tallest buildings, but now most of the contenders
are in East Asia and the Middle East. According to the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban
Habitat, Taipei 101 is currently the fifth tallest building in the world, but at the rate
that Super Tall Buildings are being erected, that ranking won't last very long.
The council defines buildings that are taller than 300 meters, or 984 feet, as Super Tall
Buildings.
Right now, there are 100 Super Tall Buildings in the world.
In fact, if we go back five years, there were only 50 Super Tall buildings complete
in the world, and that took 80 odd years to come to fruition, and the next 50 Super Tall
buildings were completed in five years, which shows the absolute massive boom that Tall
buildings have been going through in the last decade or so.
So Super Tall buildings can't just depend on their height anymore for notoriety, and
this is why Taipei 101 tried to rack up all the superlatives it could, including
biggest wind damper in the world, fastest elevators in the world, and tallest lead certified
green building in the world.
Which is a little bit of a marketing thing, but it shows this commitment, you know, it
shows this commitment to progressing that building beyond just,
hey, we're going to build the world's tallest.
After all, the title of world's tallest building is earned slowly and lost quickly.
A lot of things pull together for building the world.
It's a contest that architects CY Lee isn't planning on throwing his hat into again.
Do you think you'd ever do it again?
No. No. No. That was quick. Why? Wily isn't planning on throwing his hat into again. Do you think you'd ever do it again when you design-
No.
No.
That was quick, why?
I-I think the one you see now, yeah.
I'm looking too high down. 99% Invisible Was produced this week by Avery Truffle, with Katie Mingle, St. Green
Span, Delaney Hall, Shreefew, Sep Kurt Colstead, and me Roman Moors.
Special thanks to Carol Willis and the skyscraper museum in New York. And to Spike D'Ordie.
We are a production of 91.7K ALW in San Francisco and produced out of the offices of Arxine, in architecture and interiors for her. In beautiful, downtown, Oakland, California.
years for. In beautiful, downtown, Oakland, California.
You can find this show and like the show on Facebook.
You can follow each member of the production team on Twitter and Instagram, but the best
way to explore the 99% invisible activity that shapes the design of our world is to spend
as much time as possible at 99pi.org.
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From PRX.