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Current Article
Design for Despots
Page 1 of 1
Posted April 2008
Tour a few of the most ambitious and audacious designs breaking ground in some of the world’s least free countries.

Foster & Partners

Khan Shatyry Entertainment Center
Astana, Kazakhstan

Designed by: London-based Foster & Partners

Completion date: summer 2008

Cost: “confidential”

Specs: The transparent, tent-like exterior of this 500-foot-high structure is meant to absorb sunlight and create summer-like conditions for an “indoor city” within the capital, where residents can gather to swim, golf, and shop during the bitterly cold Kazakh winters.

Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP

Burj Dubai
Dubai, United Arab Emirates

Designed by: Chicago-based Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP

Completion date: 2009

Cost: at least $1 billion

Specs: Burj Dubai is already the world’s tallest building, though its exact height remains a secret to delay rivals’ plans to top it. As of mid-April, 164 floors have been finished. The world’s fastest elevators—clocking in at 40 mph—will eventually whiz guests to a height that one architect compared to Chicago’s John Hancock Center sitting atop the Sears Tower.

RMJM Hillier

Okhta Center (Gazprom headquarters)
St. Petersburg, Russia

Designed by: Edinburgh-based RMJM

Completion date: 2012

Cost: $2.4 billion

Specs: At 1,300 feet (just taller than the Empire State Building), the new headquarters for Russian gas conglomerate Gazprom will dominate the St. Petersburg skyline, and its design has infuriated the city’s preservationists. It isn’t as though Gazprom needs the space: The company plans to occupy just 16 percent of the complex and rent the rest out for public functions and to businesses. The building’s twisting pentagram shape is inspired by a 17th-century Swedish fort that once occupied the site.

OMA

Waterfront City
Dubai, United Arab Emirates

Designed by: Rem Koolhaas’s Rotterdam-based OMA

Completion date: 2018

Cost: billions

Specs: Dubai’s largest project to date, Waterfront will create an entirely new, 35,000-acre urban district on the city’s western edge that includes an artificial island. Waterfront City, the development’s centerpiece, will be a hybrid of nearly 150 generic skyscrapers and whimsical structures, such as the Death Star-like sphere balanced on the waterfront, the district will eventually house 90,000 residents.

Courtesy Photo/Reuters

Heydar Aliyev Cultural Centre
Baku, Azerbaijan

Designed by: London-based Zaha Hadid Architects

Completion date: still in design phase

Cost: unknown

Specs: Named for the former KGB honcho who ran Azerbaijan as his personal fiefdom for more than 30 years, the Heydar Aliyev Cultural Centre is to be the crown jewel in Baku’s bid for the 2016 Olympic Games. It’s little wonder Aliyev would receive such an honor: He handed the presidency to his son, Ilham, in 2003. The center will house a large conference hall, museum, and cultural library.

Foster & Partners

Beijing Capital International Airport, Terminal 3
Beijing, China

Designed by: London-based Foster & Partners

Completion date: February 2008

Cost: $3.6 billion

Specs: At more than 2 miles long, Beijing’s new Terminal 3, the world’s largest building, boasts strategically placed skylights to give it the appearance of a dragon from the air.

AFP/Getty Images

The enormous interior, designed to accommodate 50 million passengers annually by 2020, is 17 percent bigger than all five terminals at London’s Heathrow Airport combined.

Zaha Hadid Architects

Abu Dhabi Performing Arts Centre
Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates

Designed by: London-based Zaha Hadid Architects

Completion date: to be announced

Cost: unknown

Specs: Hadid’s arts center, with five theater halls for concerts and plays, will be just one of four bold architectural statements in Abu Dhabi’s new Saadiyat Island Cultural District. Just down the waterfront will be the Frank Gehry-designed Guggenheim outpost, the Louvre Abu Dhabi by recent Pritzker winner Jean Nouvel, and a maritime museum by Tadao Ando.


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