Saturday, July 31, 2010

Tallest tent in the world opens in Kazakhstan


Khan Shatyr Entertainment Centre in the Astana, Kazakhstan







Not a peg or guy rope in sight - inside are shops, cinemas and even a beach

The world's tallest tent has opened to the public in the Central Asian nation of Kazakhstan.

Designed by the British architects Foster & Partners, the Khan Shatyr Entertainment Centre in the capital Astana is 150m (490ft) high.

It opens on the day the city celebrates 13 years as the capital and President Nursultan Nazarbayev his 70th birthday.

The centre has a huge indoor leisure park, designed to be protected from the region's harsh climate.

Khan Shatyr: A 'world within'

  • The tent is made from three layers of ETFE, a special see-through plastic that allows daylight to wash the interiors while sheltering them from weather extremes
  • Air is pumped in between the layers inflating them into enormous pillows, giving the tent covering the appearance of a large quilt
  • The aim is to provide the city with a range of civic, cultural and social amenities sheltered all year round, whatever the weather
  • In winter, a key challenge is to prevent the formation of ice on the inside of the tent using temperature control and directing warm air currents up the inner fabric surface
  • The government of Kazakhstan decided to move the capital north to Astana from Almaty in the country's southeast corner because of Almaty's susceptibility to earthquakes and its proximity to the Chinese border

Standing on a 200m concrete base, Khan Shatyr is the city's highest structure and the world's tallest tent.

Inside, visitors will find shops, restaurants and cinemas - even an artificial beach and a running track.

Astana experiences extreme changes in temperature, from 30C in the summer to -30C in the winter.

The giant tent, which took four years to build, is designed to withstand harsh weather and maintain a comfortable temperature inside.

It is made from three layers of ETFE; a special see-through plastic that allows daylight to wash the interiors while sheltering them from weather extremes.

It is the latest in an extraordinary building programme that has transformed Astana since it became the Kazakh capital 13 years ago.

bbc news 6/7/2010

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