Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility

Japan’s newest tower uses anti-quake technology

Japan’s newest tower uses anti-quake technology

By: Associated Press//April 17, 2012//

Listen to this article

By Malcolm Foster
Associated Press

Tokyo — A Tokyo developer took visitors up the world’s tallest freestanding broadcast structure Tuesday, a 2,080-foot tower with special technology meant to withstand earthquakes that often strike .

The Tokyo Skytree is the world’s second-tallest structure behind the 2,717-foot Burj Khalifa in Dubai, said owner Tobu Tower Skytree Co.

The needle-like radio and television tower opens to the public May 22.

Journalists given a tour Tuesday saw sweeping if hazy views of the Tokyo skyline.

It took about 50 seconds in a high-speed elevator Tuesday to zip up to the lower observation deck at 1,148 feet, and another 30 seconds to reach the higher deck at 1,476 feet.

The Skytree has a restaurant and two cafés on the observation decks, a vertigo-inducing glass floor that allows visitors to look straight down, and an emergency staircase with 2,523 steps.

The tower was built with extremely strong steel tubes surrounding a central concrete column that structurally are separate from each other in the tower’s mid-section. In the event of an , the concrete core and steel frame are designed to offset each other to reduce the building’s overall motion.

The Skytree has been built to stand firm even if a magnitude 7 quake were to strike beneath the building, said Sho Toyoshima, a spokesman for Tobu Tower. He said the tower sustained no structural damage from the magnitude 9.0 quake that struck off Japan’s northeastern coast last March, even as it was being built.

The Skytree is expected to bolster television and radio transmissions in the capital region.

Polls

Do you expect your business to grow revenue in 2026 vs. 2025?

View Results

Loading ... Loading ...

Today’s News

See All Today's News

Project Profiles

See All Project Profiles