Chicago-based firm Adrian Smith +  Gordon Gill (AS+GG) has officially  been announced as the design  architects for the Kingdom Tower that is to  be built in Jeddah, Saudi  Arabia. Initially planned to stand one mile  (1.6 km) high and be called  the Mile-High Tower, the building was scaled  down after soil testing  in the area in 2008 cast doubt over whether the  location could support a  building of that height. Now the building will  stand over 0.62 miles  (one kilometer) tall, which will still allow it  to overshadow the 2,717  ft. (828 m) Burj Khalifa to claim the title of the world's tallest building.

The Kingdom Tower will be the  centerpiece and first construction  phase of Kingdom City, a 57 million  square foot (5.3 million m2)  development located along the Red Sea  north of Jeddah, which is known as  the traditional gateway to the holy  city of Mecca. The entire  development has been budgeted at US$20  billion, with the Kingdom Tower  alone costing approximately $1.2  billion to construct and covering an  area of 5.7 million square feet  (530,000 m2).
The  building will contain 59 elevators, including 54 single-deck and  five  double-deck elevators, as well as 12 escalators. The elevators  serving  the observatory will travel at 22 mph (36 km/h) in both  directions. At  level 157, a sky terrace roughly 98 feet (30 m) in  diameter intended as  an outdoor amenity for use by the penthouse floor  extends from the  side of the building.

The  exterior wall system is designed to minimize energy consumption  by  reducing thermal loads, while a series of notches on the building's   three sides create pockets of shadow that shield areas of the building   from direct sunlight and provide outdoor terraces.
The  three-sided tower rises from a three-petal footprint design with   aerodynamic tapering wings that help reduce structural loading due to   wind vortex shedding. Gill says the tower's sleek, streamlined form was   inspired by the folded fronds of young desert plant growth.
"With  its slender, subtly asymmetrical massing, the tower evokes a  bundle of  leaves shooting up from the ground - a burst of new life that  heralds  more growth all around it," added Smith.
While  the building's exact height isn't yet known, when completed  AS+GG  claim it will be at least 568 feet (173 m) taller than the Burj   Khalifa, which was also designed by Adrian Smith when he was at   architectural firm Skidmore, Owings & Merrill (SOM). At SOM, Smith   also worked on the design for the Pearl River Tower, while AS+GG also recently won an international competition to design China's Wuhan Greenland Center.
AS+GG says  design development of the Kingdom Tower is underway, the  foundation  drawings are already complete and construction is set to  begin  'imminently."
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