Thursday 19 January 2012

"AROUND THE BUILDING IN 15 DAYS..."



This Hotel has an unlikely story - as all its 30 floors were built in just 15 days...
Not a single worker was injured in construction of the Ark Hotel in the inland city of Changsha, China. Despite being built so quickly, the 183,000 square foot monster can withstand a magnitude 9 earthquake, according to construction firm Broad Group.

                          The five-star, prefabricated, T30 Hotel at Dongting Lake, was constructed by 200 builders over 15 days and opens on January 18. Zhang Yue, the Chinese air-conditioning tycoon behind the engineering feat, now intends to duplicate the model across the vast and heavily polluted nation.He said the speed with which his buildings go up reduces waste of materials and energy.The buildings, which feature quadruple-glazed windows and only use energy-saving lighting, are predicted to become his biggest business in 2013.

"We need to speed up our environmental thinking. We need buildings like this all over China," Mr Zhang said of the pre-fabs, which he claims are six times greener than most European buildings.


"In 2013 we will build 20 buildings a month and by 2014, we'll be up to 50 buildings a month. And that's just from one factory," he explained."China is 20-40 times more polluted than Europe and that's hurting our health and will offset the economic benefits of our growth," added Zhang, who won a UN Environment Programme Champions of the Earth award last year.
China's cities are among the world's most polluted, after three decades of rapid urbanisation.Mr Zhang founded Broad in 1988 with his brother, Zhang Jian, who studied thermo dynamics. Together they revived an old energy-saving technology for non-electric air conditioning, which they have now sold in 75 countries around the world.

The hotel's prefabricated parts were made at a factory owned by the Broad Group in Hunan that employs 10,000 people, using steel, glass and insulation sourced inside China, Mr Zhang said. The group has three such factories in China, and plans to expand that number to 40 to promote its patented Broad Sustainable Building model at home and abroad.



courtesy:www.news.com

No comments:

Post a Comment