:thankyou:
im here as the comic relief lol
Its nothing like those.
Those have one or a few floors rotating with a full base structure beneath… not ALL the floors where the only support is the core.
This building is not cylindrical so there is no outer “ring”. The building is “Y” shaped. Even if there was a stationary core it would be very small in comparison to the rotating part. Either way you are talking about supporting huge loads with a proportionally small and weak core.
Still a MAJOR engineering challenge and not like current buildings with a massive core and where the outer part of a few floors rotates.
lol…i dont know why i just thought that was so damn funny…:lol:
they explained how it “works” on that show i was watching…i dont really remember how it works exactly and even if i did im too lazy to type all of it…
As awful as that is, I lol’ed. :lol:
:fail: You guys are a couple of straight shooters with upper management written all over you.
i’d like to see the core connections to the rotating areas. probably some pretty cool utility fittings.
It is clearly obvious that this structure is, and can only be, the work of Chuck Norris
Probably one or two days work at most.
Only because he stops ever 15 minutes to bang a bitch.
anyone know the answer to this?
from the way the article read, I think it just rotates a certain distance back and forth. Not in a full 360 rotation. Or at least thats the way I interpreted it. :gotme:
and for some reason cnn.com isnt loading for me right now
i believe each section can rotate freely 360degrees from what i saw on TV about it yesterday… I could be wrong, though
either way, if they manage to pull off the construction, sweet… all utilities, sewage etc… even better… fill it with families of all sizes and weights, and still keep 100% functionality… mission accomplished. But I think it may just about go without saying, that theres quite a lot that can go wrong in the process.
edit: wait… josh (onyx) was this that super fucking pimp city in the UAE you were always telling me about?
I can not imagine the amount of extra maintenance involved, along with the millions of gallons of lube it will continually need.