Rotating Solar-Powered Skyscraper
PieEye writes "Wired is pointing out a recent Gear Factor blog entry that highlights a new skyscraper in the works which will be solar-powered, and what's more will rotate with the sun. From the article: 'The completed tower will offer 200 expensive apartments for people who want to spend lots of money to screw up their circadian rhythm. Singh said they want to build many more such towers, with one for every time zone.'"
So now I can get home from work an hour early and can catch my neighbour's wife having an affair.
But seriously: How exactly is a rotating building meant to mess up one's circadian rhythm? Does the blogger think this building is rigged up to do a lap of the Earth each day? It's spinning on the spot!
Finally, why link to a crappy blog entry complete with typos and irrelevant BS, when you could link directly to the article?
Give me an apartment in perpetual shadow. No more glare on the TV!
I suspect that people working in this building day after day may find their sense of direction diminished in local surroundings. I once lived in a trailer that had to be moved. The 90 degree change in orientation grossly affected my navigation sense for months.
Letter To Iran
I get the feeling that you are going to be the first of a long line of people missing the point, so I thought I'd jump in here... As I understand it, the tower doesn't rotate in order to get more sunlight; it rotates because rotating a building is a cool thing to do. Constantly changing views and all that...
The solar power part is a way to do this without condeming the tennants to a lifetime of mad energy bills.
Come on, this is Slashdot. You're the only one who's even read the article.
I had like 50 of those in Sim City 2000, /yawn.
My script don't crash! She crashes, you crashed her!
Whoever wrote the blurb, didn't bother to read the original article. This doesn't rotate to keep certain apartments in the sun, it rotates to allow all apartments to have the same view, albeit on different days.
For all the people who care about which way their heads, feet, et al face during sleep, will they now be in a spiritual predicament? In other words, will they also need to get rotating beds that would counteract the rotation of the building?
I have to stop and think how things such as TV, Telephone, power, water and sewer are 'plumbed' into each suite. That would have to be an interesting problem to solve.
I hope it rotates only 180 degrees (or less) then rotates back. Rigging plumbing, sewage, power, cable, phone, etc for full 360 degree rotation will be tricky.
When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
I guess directional antennas will have to rotate in the opposite direction.
As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
Suite Vollard was the first rotating tower of the world, however it's not solar powered. Here's some facts (excerpts from the link):
- This building is the only one of its kind in the world, as each of the 11 apartments can rotate 360.- Each apartment can spin individually in any direction. One rotation takes a full hour.
- The facades are composed of double sheets of glass, in different colors (blue, gold, and silver) on different floors. This gives a spectacular effect as the floors turn in different directions.
- The apartment rings rotate around a static core used for building services, utilities, and all areas which require plumbing.
- Suite Vollard was a case study for more than 30 companies in Brazil and one from Germany.
- Each apartment was sold for approximately R$ 400,000.00 ($US 300,000.00).
- The first two floors of the building are an Executive Center.
If you can read this, thank an english teacher.
Eh. This wouldn't be entirely necessary, as the elite classes of the world are already under the impression that the earth revolves around them.
-- If you try to fail and succeed, which have you done? - Uli's moose
I could see devout Muslims having difficulty orienting themselves correctly at prayer time, particularly given that the times change each day, so it's not in a constant direction relative to your apartment at each appointed period.