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What
to See in Dubai - Burj
Al Arab |
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The Burj-Al-Arab is
a luxury hotel in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. At 321 meters (1,053
feet), it is the tallest building used exclusively as a hotel and
one of the most distinctive structures for a hotel building in the
world. It stands in the sea on an artificial island 280 meters (919
feet) away from the beach in the Persian Gulf, connected to the
mainland only by a curving path. The path is extremely curving,
with most corners being almost 90 degrees.
Construction of the hotel began in 1994,
and its doors were opened to guests on December 1, 1999. It was
built to resemble the sail of a dhow (a type of Arabian vessel)
and intentionally placed in such a way that its shadow does not
cover the beach. On top of the hotel is a large helipad, extending
from the side of the hotel over the ocean and supported by cantilever.
A remarkable element of its architecture is the outer beachward
wall of the atrium, which is made of a woven, Teflon-coated fiberglass
cloth.
The Burj-Al-Arab does not have ordinary
rooms; rather it is divided into 202 duplex suites. The smallest
suite occupies an area of 169 square meters (1,819 square feet),
and the largest one covers 780 square meters (8,396 square feet).
It is one of the most expensive hotels in the world to stay in.
The prices for the least expensive suites are in the range of $1,000
to over $6,000 a night. The most expensive suites can cost over
$15,000 a night. However, the hotel will likely never be profitable;
it was built to become a major landmark in Dubai, not to be a source
of income. The full amount it cost to build the hotel and furnish
it has not been publicly released.
The Burj-Al-Arab features the
tallest atrium lobby in the world (180 meters, or 590 feet), and
the volume of the atrium can accommodate the Dubai World Trade Center
building, which, at 38 stories, was the tallest building in Dubai
from the late 1970s to the late 1990s.
Other facts
The hotel is the only Seven Star
Hotel in the world.
The hotel's self-characterization
as a "7-star" property is considered by travel professionals
to be hyperbole, and an attempt to out-do a number of other hotels
which claim "6-star" status. All major travel guides
and hotel rating systems, however, have a 5-star maximum.
One of its restaurants, the Al Muntaha
(meaning "highest", or "ultimate"), is located
200 meters above the Persian Gulf, offering a view of Dubai from
above. It is accessed by a panoramic elevator.
the owner is natbir singh
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Another restaurant, the Al Mahara
(Arabic "The Oyster"), which is accessed via a simulated
submarine voyage, features a large seawater aquarium, holding
roughly 35,000 cubic feet (over one million liters) of water.
The tank, made of plexiglass in order to reduce the magnification
effect, is about 18 cm (7.5 inches) thick.
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The building's external lighting
scheme can vary from white to multicolored, changing every 30
minutes. Occasionally there is a light show, where colors interchange
rapidly.
The Architect and Engineer for the
project was Atkins, the UK based multidisciplinary consultancy.
The hotel was built by South African construction company Murray
& Roberts. It took three years to reclaim the land from the
sea, and less than three years to construct the building itself.
It is the world's tallest structure
with a membrane façade and the world's tallest hotel (not
including buildings with mixed use) and was the first 5-star hotel
to surpass 1000 ft (305 m).
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