Dubai’s skyline already features the world’s tallest building and a five-star hotel located on its own island, but the city is set to get yet another distinctive structure in 2020: the world’s first ...
The future is coming, and it's all about those 360-degree views. Dubai plans to take your 360-degree experience far beyond video by building the world's first ever rotating skyscraper by 2020. SEE ...
Dubai’s 360-degree rotating skyscraper: an algorithm too far? Have you seen the BBC report on Dubai’s first ‘rotating skyscraper’ this afternoon? There’s some French architect saying how much he’d ...
The modern world is full of unique, eye-catching buildings – but an upcoming Dubai skyscraper is about to put a new spin on the field of architecture. We’ve reported before on Israeli-Italian ...
Thanks to one ambitious architect, hotel guests may soon have the ability to adjust the view from their hotel room with only their voice. According to the Mirror, Dubai is set to begin construction on ...
Every Saturday morning when I was of a certain age, I was glued to the television as the black-and-white science-fiction TV show Fireball XL5 appeared. The opening credits involved launching the ...
Waking up to a view in the Persian Gulf is usually enough to take your breath away. But in Dubai, waking up to the same view every day just isn't enough. So a group of architects is working to fix ...
NEW YORK (Reuters) - After taking in an expansive view of Manhattan from a friend's apartment, architect David Fisher came up with a way to make the most of a good location -- a rotating building.
Italian "architect" Dr. David Fisher is planning to build an 80-story building in Dubai with rotating floors that would give it an ever-changing shape. He also wants to build similar towers in Russia ...
A new shape-shifting skyscraper to be built in Dubai will offer its residents the ability to do something apartment dwellers have never been able to do: change the view out the window on command. Each ...
Remember the rotating house we wrote about back in October? Imagine a whole lot of them stacked up on top of each other, completing one full rotation every seven days and powered solely by the sun.
Waking up to a view in the Persian Gulf is usually enough to take your breath away. But in Dubai, waking up to the same view every day just isn't enough. So a group of architects is working to fix ...