Sears Tower in Chicago, USA. Bruce Graham (SOM), Architect.
Location: Chicago, Illinois, USA
Architect: Bruce Graham, Skidmore, Owings and Merrill (SOM)
Year: 1973
Height: 442 meters / 1,450 feet
Stories: 110
About the Sears Tower
To provide stability against high winds, architect Bruce Graham used a new form of tubular construction for Sears Tower. Two hundred sets of bundled tubes were laid into the bedrock. Then, 76,000 tons of prefabricated steel in 15-foot by 25-foot sections were put into place. Four derrick cranes moved higher with each floor to lift these steel "Christmas Trees" into position.
Facts about the Sears Tower:
- The Sears Tower covers two city blocks and has 101 acres (4.4 million square feet) of office and commercial space.
- The roof rises a quarter of a mile -- 1, 454 feet (442 meters).
- Its highest occupied floor is 1,431 feet above the ground.
- The foundation and the floor slabs have some 2 million cubic feet of concrete -- enough to build an eight-lane highway five miles long.
- The Tower has more than 16,000 bronze-tinted windows and 28 acres of black duranodic aluminum skin.
- The 222,500-ton building is supported by 114 rock caissons. Each is securely socketed into the bedrock.
- A 106-cab elevator system (including 16 double decker elevators) divides the Tower into three separate zones, with skylobbies in between.
- Two domed entrances, one with skylights, were added in 1984 and 1985.
Architect Bruce Graham talks about Sears Tower:
"The stepback geometry of the 110-story tower was developed in response to the interior space requirements of Sears, Roebuck and Company. The configuration incorporates the unusually large office floors necessary to Sears' operation along with a variety of smaller floors. The building plan consists of nine 75 x 75 foot column-free squares at the base. Floor sizes are then reduced by eliminating 75 x 75 foot increments at varying levels as the tower rises. A system of double-deck express elevators provides effective vertical transportation, carrying passengers to either of two skylobbies where transfer to single local elevators serving individual floors occurs."
-from Bruce Graham, SOM, by Stanley Tigerman.
Source About.com
-from Bruce Graham, SOM, by Stanley Tigerman.
Source About.com
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