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View Full Version : ABU DHABI | Tameer Towers | 984 FT / 300 M | 73 FLOORS | ON HOLD


malec
Oct 10, 2009, 12:10 AM
This is developed by the same guys who are building princess tower and elite residence in dubai marina. This recently went on hold while they changed the main contractor. It seems to be starting back again though.



Construction in UAE shudders back to life

http://i37.tinypic.com/wtixch.jpg

02 October 2009

By Roxane McMeeken

Bottom of the market called as mega projects including £1.2bn Tameer Towers return to site

Contractors have restarted work on a string of huge projects in Abu Dhabi and Dubai, as evidence builds that the market in the UAE is recovering.

Tameer Towers, a 7bn dirham (£1.2bn) 9 million ft2 mixed-use project in the Shams development on Al Rheem island in Abu Dhabi, was put under review in March, but is now going ahead again.

A 400m dirham (£68m) project to build a headquarters for the municipal government of Abu Dhabi’s western region is also back on site, having been on hold for six months.

In addition, a residential project of up to 1 million ft2 by developer Bloom Properties in Abu Dhabi, has restarted.

Duncan Swinhoe, who leads Gensler’s Middle East operation, which is involved on all three schemes, said: “Things are starting to move in Dubai and Abu Dhabi again. There are a number of projects coming out, and some tenders from as far back as nine months ago that we’d almost given up on are back on the table.”

Regarding the Tameer Towers scheme, which had 300 men on site when work was put under review, he said: “They’re now pouring concrete and the new contract price is being thrashed out.”

Tameer has dropped the alliance of three contractors it was using on the scheme – two local firms Al Habtoor Engineering and Al Rajhi Projects, and Murray & Roberts (South African) in favour of one, Al Rajhi. It said in March it was “reviewing the construction programmes and associated costs” of the scheme.

Swinhoe added that some schemes that had not started on site, but on which “all decision-making had ground to a halt”, were live again.

Meanwhile, Davis Langdon is recruiting about 15 staff in the Middle East, including in the UAE.

Steve Coates, the consultant’s head of UAE, said: “We believe we’ve hit rock bottom and now an element of liquidity is slowly coming back to Dubai.”

He said the cash was coming mainly from the $20bn (£12.5bn) bond Dubai had secured from Abu Dhabi in March, the second $10bn of which is to be released imminently, according to reports. Commentators also say the UAE has been boosted by a rise in the price of oil, which is now at $60-70 a barrel, having hit a low of $32 in December.

The UAE building boom began to falter a year ago and 566 projects in the country are on hold, according to research firm Proleads. In August, Building reported that Dubai’s main arbitration body was facing a backlog of almost £3bn of disputes.

http://www.building.co.uk/story.asp?sectioncode=29&storycode=3150007&channel=284&c=3



Some more renders:

http://www.worldarchitecturenews.com/news_images/1777_1_1000%20Gensler%201.jpg

http://www.worldarchitecturenews.com/news_images/1777_2_1000%20Gensler%202.jpg

http://www.worldarchitecturenews.com/news_images/1777_3_1000%20Gensler%203.jpg



Construction update:

http://picasaweb.google.com/cranecountry/CraneCountryPhotoStream02?authkey=Gv1sRgCLyf2YLSk5eWDg#5388625266813201122
http://picasaweb.google.com/cranecountry/CraneCountryPhotoStream02?authkey=Gv1sRgCLyf2YLSk5eWDg#5388625282947626162

Aleks
Oct 10, 2009, 12:38 AM
Woah! I love it! I love that atrium at the bottom, I actually made a 3D model/drawing of a building with that feature once. Didn't think it was possible.

MapleLeaf
Oct 11, 2009, 8:14 AM
Wow! This looks really cool. I also like the base. :yes:

Jonovision
Oct 13, 2009, 3:57 PM
Wow! Amazing looking project

MolsonExport
Oct 13, 2009, 3:59 PM
wow, that is interesting! From a security perspective, is it wise to allow passage of watercraft under a skyscraper?

RKO36
Oct 13, 2009, 6:47 PM
That's really cool.

MapleLeaf
Oct 13, 2009, 7:42 PM
wow, that is interesting! From a security perspective, is it wise to allow passage of watercraft under a skyscraper?

Do you think they could put that much stuff on a boat to let the tower collapse? I doubt it. However, a good question.

colemonkee
Oct 13, 2009, 11:19 PM
It doesn't look like the water that flows underneath the tower will be navigable. If you look closely on the last render, there appears to be a small waterfall going into the marina area, which would indicate that boats would not be able to go into that channel. And the water area on the other side of the building looks too shallow for any major craft, as indicated by the fountains in the main pool. So I'm sure this was thought of and addressed in the design.

The North One
Oct 14, 2009, 2:07 AM
the facade looks ugly as hell

JDRCRASH
Oct 14, 2009, 5:05 PM
I like the gardens.

MapleLeaf
Oct 16, 2009, 2:56 PM
It doesn't look like the water that flows underneath the tower will be navigable. If you look closely on the last render, there appears to be a small waterfall going into the marina area, which would indicate that boats would not be able to go into that channel. And the water area on the other side of the building looks too shallow for any major craft, as indicated by the fountains in the main pool. So I'm sure this was thought of and addressed in the design.

You´re right. I didn't see this at first view.

malec
Nov 8, 2009, 10:28 AM
A little old, sorry

http://i34.tinypic.com/dheets.jpg
Tameer Towers is a mixed use project in Abu Dhabi

Tameer completes major concrete pour

by James Boley on Oct 13, 2009

Developer Tameer has announced it has completed a major concrete pour at a project in Abu Dhabi.

The company completed pouring 540 cubic metres of concrete at Tameer Towers as part of the construction of the tower basement raft.

"We are very pleased that the engineering and construction works are steadily progressing towards the delivery of Tameer Towers to our investors and clients,” said Tameer president Federico Tauber. “All efforts are aligned and focused to ensure that the delivery will occur according to the announced master program."

Tameer Towers is a ten-million square-feet, mix-use development offering residential, commercial and retail spaces.

John Zwets, chief development officer of Tameer commented, "We are dedicated to delivering projects of high quality and excellence. The new organisation structure in Abu Dhabi secures the expertise and knowhow needed to build this state-of-the art mega development. Our team is committed to the tight abidance of the milestones set in our construction schedule."

http://www.constructionweekonline.com/article-6634-tameer-completes-major-concrete-pour/

malec
Jan 3, 2010, 12:28 PM
Around 2 weeks ago from the developer

http://i50.tinypic.com/fxtd9c.jpg

malec
Apr 1, 2010, 11:18 PM
Update

This picture is taken from Tameer Towers website April 2010. I was told by Tameer that there are 300 workers onsite.

http://img522.imageshack.us/img522/302/0104201030032010008.jpg

Infernal_Elf
Apr 29, 2010, 12:28 PM
i love how these tower and especially the main tower blends so much into the sea.

and the base of the main tower is really impressive

Dr.House
May 11, 2010, 4:41 AM
It looksl like this intersting project is comming back on track now and all 4 towers will get build in one stage. Iconic tower in middel will not be build...now?

TANGELD_SLC
Jun 3, 2010, 9:45 AM
So does anyone have an idea of when we'll see some steel rising?

GO_UAE
Jun 3, 2010, 10:25 AM
at the moment, only the 4 small towers are going up , the taller one that stands alone will be kept on hold for a longer while still before it jump starts and catches up

malec
Sep 11, 2010, 10:32 PM
Updates...

August 8th

Tower A:

http://www.tameertowers.com/tameertowers/images/WebCam/10-08-2010Tower%20A%20-%208th%20August%202010_TT_website.jpg
www.tameertowers.com

Infernal_Elf
Nov 24, 2010, 6:55 PM
any updates on this wonderful project?

have they started with the main tower yet?

would so totally love seeing that start to rise

The bottom weight distribution and elevators must be a total hell to get working properly and make it efficent enough to move people around and such.

seems like Abu Dhabi wants to take hard and unique approaches to most of their projects design wise and such

R@ptor
Feb 12, 2011, 2:11 PM
http://www.tameertowers.com/tameertowers/images/WebCam/10-02-2011TT-webcam06022011-015.jpg
www.tameertowers.com

Crolo
May 19, 2011, 2:51 PM
That looks really modern and symetric!

C.Lan
May 19, 2011, 3:33 PM
It's been said that Abu Dhabi's oppressed political history contributes to that, the Abu Dhabi 2030 plan of supertalls happened relatively fast because of it; you get that any economic investment in these only happened because they only realized there was any oil wealth basically overnight. Right? Getting the main one up also has to do with any added revenue in diversifying their economy.

any updates on this wonderful project?

have they started with the main tower yet?

would so totally love seeing that start to rise

The bottom weight distribution and elevators must be a total hell to get working properly and make it efficent enough to move people around and such.

seems like Abu Dhabi wants to take hard and unique approaches to most of their projects design wise and such

RobertWalpole
May 29, 2011, 11:10 PM
Awesome!!!!

Ed007Toronto
May 11, 2012, 1:59 PM
Looks great!

cmrhm
Sep 17, 2012, 10:55 AM
I was told this project utilize some GRC panels. Does anyone know anything about it? Are they for exterior walls or interior?

Thanks.

ThatOneGuy
Sep 17, 2012, 8:48 PM
What a beautiful building!

njcco
Sep 17, 2012, 8:58 PM
any updates on this wonderful project?

have they started with the main tower yet?


http://www.tameertowers.com/newsdetail.asp?nIdArg=103

Tameer Towers Moving Forward

Tender Documents Issued to Contractors

Dubai – UAE, 26 February, 2012: TAMEER, a leading real estate developer in the Middle East, announced today that its prestigious project Tameer Towers in Abu Dhabi, Reem Island is moving ahead.

TAMEER advised that tender documents have been issued to reputed contractors early in February with an anticipated award due before the end of April 2012.

To date, 21% completion has been achieved with towers A and B having reached structural levels 13 and 4 respectively. The majority of the most complex structural elements have now been completed.

With the anticipated award to the new contractor in April and the commencement of works scheduled for May 2012, Phase A of the development is targeted for completion by the 4th quarter 2013.

TAMEER remains committed to the delivery of the project and confirms that the Tameer Towers development on Al Reem Island, Abu Dhabi remains an active and important focus for the group.

chris08876
Sep 20, 2015, 6:05 PM
From 2014; still stalled:

http://www.thenational.ae/storyimage/AB/20140306/ARTICLE/140309267/AR/0/&MaxW=640&imageVersion=default&AR-140309267.jpg
Credit: http://www.thenational.ae/uae/investor-wins-compensation-from-developer-over-stalled-abu-dhabi-project

Extra Renderings found here: http://www.gensler.com/projects/tameer-towers (Last 3 not included in this thread)

pawarsteve
Feb 26, 2016, 11:01 AM
This is developed by the same guys who are building princess tower and elite residence in dubai marina. This recently went on hold while they changed the main contractor. It seems to be starting back again though.



Construction in UAE shudders back to life

http://i37.tinypic.com/wtixch.jpg

02 October 2009

By Roxane McMeeken

Bottom of the market called as mega projects including £1.2bn Tameer Towers return to site

Contractors have restarted work on a string of huge projects in Abu Dhabi and Dubai, as evidence builds that the market in the UAE is recovering.

Tameer Towers, a 7bn dirham (£1.2bn) 9 million ft2 mixed-use project in the Shams development on Al Rheem island in Abu Dhabi, was put under review in March, but is now going ahead again.

A 400m dirham (£68m) project to build a headquarters for the municipal government of Abu Dhabi’s western region is also back on site, having been on hold for six months.

In addition, a residential project of up to 1 million ft2 by developer Bloom Properties in Abu Dhabi, has restarted.

Duncan Swinhoe, who leads Gensler’s Middle East operation, which is involved on all three schemes, said: “Things are starting to move in Dubai and Abu Dhabi again. There are a number of projects coming out, and some tenders from as far back as nine months ago that we’d almost given up on are back on the table.”

Regarding the Tameer Towers scheme, which had 300 men on site when work was put under review, he said: “They’re now pouring concrete and the new contract price is being thrashed out.”

Tameer has dropped the alliance of three contractors it was using on the scheme – two local firms Al Habtoor Engineering and Al Rajhi Projects, and Murray & Roberts (South African) in favour of one, Al Rajhi. It said in March it was “reviewing the construction programmes and associated costs” of the scheme.

Swinhoe added that some schemes that had not started on site, but on which “all decision-making had ground to a halt”, were live again.

Meanwhile, Davis Langdon is recruiting about 15 staff in the Middle East, including in the UAE.

Steve Coates, the consultant’s head of UAE, said: “We believe we’ve hit rock bottom and now an element of liquidity is slowly coming back to Dubai.”

He said the cash was coming mainly from the $20bn (£12.5bn) bond Dubai had secured from Abu Dhabi in March, the second $10bn of which is to be released imminently, according to reports. Commentators also say the UAE has been boosted by a rise in the price of oil, which is now at $60-70 a barrel, having hit a low of $32 in December.

The UAE building boom began to falter a year ago and 566 projects in the country are on hold, according to research firm Proleads. In August, Building reported that Dubai’s main arbitration body was facing a backlog of almost £3bn of disputes.

http://www.building.co.uk/story.asp?sectioncode=29&storycode=3150007&channel=284&c=3



Some more renders:

http://www.worldarchitecturenews.com/news_images/1777_1_1000%20Gensler%201.jpg

http://www.worldarchitecturenews.com/news_images/1777_2_1000%20Gensler%202.jpg

http://www.worldarchitecturenews.com/news_images/1777_3_1000%20Gensler%203.jpg



Construction update:

http://picasaweb.google.com/cranecountry/CraneCountryPhotoStream02?authkey=Gv1sRgCLyf2YLSk5eWDg#5388625266813201122
http://picasaweb.google.com/cranecountry/CraneCountryPhotoStream02?authkey=Gv1sRgCLyf2YLSk5eWDg#5388625282947626162

Beautiful design! I always feel their modern architecture is reminiscent of their traditional Arabic Islamic architecture. Modern buildings in Dubai, be it residential or commercial are always designed keeping aesthetics in mind. Like most of the modern buildings there are quite aesthetically pleasing and seem to lack the formality of the buildings in the west.

seoforbs
Jan 4, 2020, 10:54 AM
This is developed by the same guys who are building princess tower and elite residence in dubai marina. This recently went on hold while they changed the main contractor. It seems to be starting back again though.


Bottom of the market called as mega projects including £1.2bn Tameer Towers return to site

Contractors have restarted work on a string of huge projects in Abu Dhabi and Dubai, as evidence builds that the market in the UAE is recovering.

Tameer Towers, a 7bn dirham (£1.2bn) 9 million ft2 mixed-use project in the Shams development on Al Rheem island in Abu Dhabi, was put under review in March, but is now going ahead again.

A 400m dirham (£68m) project to build a headquarters for the municipal government of Abu Dhabi’s western region is also back on site, having been on hold for six months.

In addition, a residential project of up to 1 million ft2 by developer Bloom Properties in Abu Dhabi, has restarted.

Duncan Swinhoe, who leads Gensler’s Middle East operation, which is involved on all three schemes, said: “Things are starting to move in Dubai and Abu Dhabi again. There are a number of projects coming out, and some tenders from as far back as nine months ago that we’d almost given up on are back on the table.”

Regarding the Tameer Towers scheme, which had 300 men on site when work was put under review, he said: “They’re now pouring concrete and the new contract price is being thrashed out.”

Tameer has dropped the alliance of three contractors it was using on the scheme – two local firms Al Habtoor Engineering and Al Rajhi Projects, and Murray & Roberts (South African) in favour of one, Al Rajhi. It said in March it was “reviewing the construction programmes and associated costs” of the scheme.

Swinhoe added that some schemes that had not started on site, but on which “all decision-making had ground to a halt”, were live again.

Meanwhile, Davis Langdon is recruiting about 15 staff in the Middle East, including in the UAE.

Steve Coates, the consultant’s head of UAE, said: “We believe we’ve hit rock bottom and now an element of liquidity is slowly coming back to Dubai.”

He said the cash was coming mainly from the $20bn (£12.5bn) bond Dubai had secured from Abu Dhabi in March, the second $10bn of which is to be released imminently, according to reports. Commentators also say the UAE has been boosted by a rise in the price of oil, which is now at $60-70 a barrel, having hit a low of $32 in December.

The UAE building boom began to falter a year ago and 566 projects in the country are on hold, according to research firm Proleads. In August, Building reported that Dubai’s main arbitration body was facing a backlog of almost £3bn of disputes.

http://www.building.co.uk/story.asp?...hannel=284&c=3


Construction update:

http://picasaweb.google.com/cranecou...25266813201122
http://picasaweb.google.com/cranecou...25282947626162

Tool Used in Calculation
Concalculator (https://concalculator.com/loam-calculator/)

Zerton
Jan 6, 2020, 4:14 PM
Looks like a cool project. I like how it's pedestrian focused.

The Best Forumer
Jan 6, 2020, 4:56 PM
links not working. :(

pianowizard
Jan 6, 2020, 7:07 PM
Building just tall enough so that the building can be called "supertall", smart! We need more developers in the US who think like this, especially in Chicago where we've recently had too many 800+ to 970 footers that could have become supertalls had their developers been a tad more ambitious.

aquablue
Jan 28, 2020, 4:13 AM
Building just tall enough so that the building can be called "supertall", smart! We need more developers in the US who think like this, especially in Chicago where we've recently had too many 800+ to 970 footers that could have become supertalls had their developers been a tad more ambitious.

Design is more important than height. You could put up a 5000 foot McSam or something and would anybody be happy? NO.

What I M O Chicago needs, is a more interesting design vocabulary first, height can be worried about later.. know this is SSC but I mean, come on... design is KING. Nobody cares about a forest of boxes 5000 feet tall that leave them cold when walking by.