Burj Khalifa | The Secrets of its incredibly Strong Foundation

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  • Опубликовано: 22 дек 2022
  • How such a massive building able to stand strong on loose Dubai soil? Let's explore all the secrets of Burj Khalifa's foundation in this video. We are in a financial trouble. Your support on Patreon is much appreciated.
    / lesics
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    Voice over artist : www.fiverr.com/flfalcon

Комментарии • 2,1 тыс.

  • @Lesics
    @Lesics  Год назад +202

    If you are impressed with this video, please support us on Patreon - www.patreon.com/Lesics .It will be a great help for us.

    • @malamzubairumasud2124
      @malamzubairumasud2124 Год назад +4

      Thanks so much ,sir please can you make a video about voyager 1 (the space probe that travel s for more than 40 years) thanks.

    • @victor4091
      @victor4091 Год назад +5

      is this re-upload?

    • @roshan2940
      @roshan2940 Год назад +3

      Sir,Which software are you using to make such beautiful animation❤

    • @rexanguis214
      @rexanguis214 Год назад +2

      When the oil stops flowing a decade from now that building is going to crumble down

    • @zesanurrahman6778
      @zesanurrahman6778 Год назад +2

      lesics please help i became homeless cause inflation

  • @sankang9425
    @sankang9425 Год назад +3703

    Man Dubai is such a meme. Land doesn't want skyscrapers.. But money can solve anything I guess.

    • @TiburonBlanco521
      @TiburonBlanco521 Год назад +186

      Without money, you will not pay for your treatment and you will live less than you could. The land does not tolerate anything.

    • @nofeah89
      @nofeah89 Год назад +103

      God bless the Emirates

    • @-abhi
      @-abhi Год назад +69

      Dubai is basically city within highways
      😂

    • @trutharrow5311
      @trutharrow5311 Год назад +97

      @@-abhi india is a country of slams

    • @ahmodsharif
      @ahmodsharif Год назад +153

      Not money... Engineering brain can solve anything

  • @SagaEf
    @SagaEf Год назад +953

    Thanks to the people at Lesics for reconstructing the entire building for this video!

    • @LuisSierra42
      @LuisSierra42 Год назад +18

      That's commitment

    • @MrLuc420
      @MrLuc420 Год назад +32

      Not to mention destroying it several times.

    • @johnmandiram
      @johnmandiram Год назад +9

      I fear all the time when the building is portrayed as "Falling".............

    • @austinsapp5867
      @austinsapp5867 Год назад +3

      construction reconstruction

    • @elliotjohn8484
      @elliotjohn8484 Год назад

      😂

  • @TodaysBestDeals
    @TodaysBestDeals Год назад +252

    2 years for constructing a foundation and studying its situation explains why and how important a perfect foundation is for skyscrapers nice video 👍😃

    • @hari00J98
      @hari00J98 Год назад +9

      ​@danny supersell so what bro... Everything has an end...

    • @bradsanders407
      @bradsanders407 Год назад +2

      Crazy to think the entire Empire State building was built in about half the time the Burj Khalifas foundation took.

    • @bradsanders407
      @bradsanders407 Год назад

      ​@danny supersell will it fall or will it be dismantled?

    • @mkl4705
      @mkl4705 11 месяцев назад

      @danny supersell wind?

    • @msawyer110
      @msawyer110 11 месяцев назад +1

      lol it has no actual sewer you know that right? I would think that disqualifies it as being perfect lolz

  • @manthanpanchal3279
    @manthanpanchal3279 Год назад +180

    I work on ships as an electrical officer and this exact method is used to reduce corrosion of hull, it is called impressed current cathodic protection.
    Older ships used sacrifical anodes( zinc anodes placed at location on hulls ). Intrigued to know that its also used in the world tallest builiding.

    • @TheJapio1000
      @TheJapio1000 Год назад +10

      We also use it on bridges to protect rebar after repairs to the concrete

    • @mohammadrayyan7851
      @mohammadrayyan7851 Год назад +3

      How would it be replaced in such a tower?

    • @momentum680
      @momentum680 Год назад +5

      How did you end up doing this career? Always interesting when people do unique stuff like this

    • @ZouUuu
      @ZouUuu 11 месяцев назад +4

      hahaha, You fixed the misconception I had since I was a kid. I spent my whole childhood in my father's shops, selling fishing and boat equipment. We sell these zinc anodes, and I didn't have a clue what they are used for. When I asked my father, he said something like "Maintenance stuff, shut up and get me those ..... " he wasn't mean, just busy working. One client said to me, " to put under the boat ... " I imagined that it might be something to be "consumed" and the take brunt of the force instead of more precious equipment (like the propeller's axis .... ) I Never thought it would oppose corrosion. I feel stupid for thinking that all these years.

    • @manthanpanchal3279
      @manthanpanchal3279 11 месяцев назад +4

      @@momentum680 I did my engineering in electronics, found out that the industry is very small and there are no jobs for me, thought of moving to a different country but had no money, so was searching for jobs online so i found out about this, i did various STCW courses and ETO course i scored well in the courses (obviously i did want to be unemployed) got selected for a company and now i am here sailing the oceans on a tanker vessel.

  • @Ernescme
    @Ernescme Год назад +490

    I love the use of standardized measurement units for easy understanding of scale - thickness of two human beings, depth of 10 story building, depth of 10 Burj Khalifa floors.. I was disappointed when the settlement was measured as 5 cm (approximately one small kiwi).

    • @Seldomheardabout
      @Seldomheardabout Год назад

      Science does not use measuring techniques like "a football throw" or a "small kiwi" because wtf size is small to you? Its really nice to use cutarounds when dealing with non scientific people I guess. The rest of the world just uses metric. But sticks of butter is good to I guess.

    • @TheOmegaDMM
      @TheOmegaDMM Год назад

    • @akibjabed4712
      @akibjabed4712 Год назад +11

      😂😂

    • @user-xo7hb6ts7j
      @user-xo7hb6ts7j Год назад +17

      I no understand! Small bird or small fruit?

    • @thepenguin9
      @thepenguin9 Год назад +32

      @@akibjabed4712 or a small new Zealander??

  • @FlyingRagilein
    @FlyingRagilein Год назад +366

    They brought "building on sand" to a whole new dimension.

    • @hanapepe91
      @hanapepe91 Год назад +2

      Haha he made as if this guy discovered & burj Khalifa is the 1st using piling & cathodic protection. And the electricity for cathodic protection is not giving any strength

    • @AlexMkd1984
      @AlexMkd1984 Год назад

      @@hanapepe91 stupid human pretending expert 😂😂😂😂😂

    • @monsignore11
      @monsignore11 Год назад +2

      i hope that building will collapse as soon as possible.

    • @danishsiddique5734
      @danishsiddique5734 Год назад +11

      @@monsignore11 Why the hell would you want that?

    • @OCDlosp
      @OCDlosp Год назад +3

      @@danishsiddique5734 itd be funny

  • @Fitrecc
    @Fitrecc Год назад +25

    love that there's not really a intro to the video, just straight up to the point, no clickbait. love it

  • @2teethPogZa
    @2teethPogZa Год назад +197

    I think another design to overcome the wind striking the Burj Khalifa is actually the shape of the building itself the engineers called it somewhere in the lines of "Fooling the wind" and the design is a sort of "3 leaf clover" and as it goes up higher each petal gets smaller and smaller in a rotational order this design basically prevents vortices from forming on the sides of the building...
    that was quite a rough explanation of what I know about the tower design so I hope you understood at least a little bit

    • @LallyAdrian
      @LallyAdrian Год назад +2

      Led me to think

    • @hystericalwolf
      @hystericalwolf Год назад +4

      Aye. Same with the One World Trade Centre.

    • @icekick1173
      @icekick1173 10 месяцев назад +3

      Same as the sears tower really just not as organic cause it's only half the height

  • @Hacking-NASSA-with-HTML
    @Hacking-NASSA-with-HTML Год назад +124

    Kudos to all the Animation Software Designers and people who worked on that video 👍 Amazing job ✨♥️

  • @nannesoar
    @nannesoar Год назад +18

    I absolutely love how you make a 3d model of the creator and use it for the demonstrations, so awesome.

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    @bilyaminusalisu1746 10 месяцев назад +18

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  • @Rondo2ooo
    @Rondo2ooo Год назад +263

    "Ok guys, it's time to connect the building to the sewage system..."

  • @aimanfatima6292
    @aimanfatima6292 Год назад +17

    Thank you sir for the wonderful explaination.... I'm astonished by the amount of work and effort but that explains how this marvellous structure has been standing this long .

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    @bendickson9414 Год назад +674

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      @jaybruno3571 Год назад +2

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  • @user-yh4qt6ep2m
    @user-yh4qt6ep2m 8 месяцев назад +6

    A marvel of engineering design with some very patient intelligent and hard working labor force behind the construction of some of man-kinds most incredible building structures. The "everything" that goes into making these tall buildings stand up into the clouds is unbelievable for a majority of those who are not familiar in the construction field. Thanks to the people who put together these videos and for those that have the pleasure to watch them, its great that you have described the details of such in layman's terms(simple and easy to understand). Otherwise there would be a lot of questions that I'm sure would be overwhelming itself, let alone the questions that arose before they began the construction process on such an enormous achievement. Incredible.

  • @Random_4400
    @Random_4400 Год назад +11

    amazing how much work and effort has been put into this building!

  • @TheDoonst
    @TheDoonst Год назад +293

    I counted 3 times when Burj Khalifa dropped to the ground and shattered to pieces. That was nice to watch.

    • @SuperSky9
      @SuperSky9 Год назад

      @@StellarSurge built by slave labour.

    • @arielvaldman
      @arielvaldman Год назад +60

      @@StellarSurge some people just want to see the world burn

    • @Samuel-7418
      @Samuel-7418 Год назад +2

      @@arielvaldman 😢

    • @angeljoy5234
      @angeljoy5234 Год назад +8

      lesics goofy ah animation

    • @alm5992
      @alm5992 Год назад +6

      @@StellarSurge You have to ask people nowadays "why?" Hatred, obviously.

  • @ajthomas770
    @ajthomas770 Год назад +8

    I have so much love for engineers & technicians who made this happen...

  • @12nakedtruth
    @12nakedtruth 6 месяцев назад +1

    Wow, my standing ovation to the hardworking minds of the engineers

  • @virtual2152
    @virtual2152 Год назад +63

    Interesting steps they took to offset the concrete temperature rise while it cured (Ice & night pouring). Many of the "rebar" at Boulder Dam were pipes. After a section was poured, they pumped cooling water thru them so the heat could be rejected using external cooling towers. When finished, they filled the pipes with concrete. Impossible to do a single pour for Boulder Dam - too big. Instead, they made each section a complex shape that interlocked with the next sections.
    It's called a "sacrificial anode"; all boaters know about them. We use zinc sacrificial anodes to keep our propellers from going away. Use of titanium is very interesting.

    • @lii1Il
      @lii1Il Год назад +7

      Was wondering how do they determine the right amount of volts and amps to use for Cathodic protection for any given project?

    • @frequentlycynical642
      @frequentlycynical642 Год назад +6

      I immediately thought of Boulder/Hoover dam when they mentioned the sectional pouring. Thanks for that explanation.

    • @raylee5030
      @raylee5030 Год назад +6

      All the large Asian dams I studied used ice to cool concrete to dissipate heat of reaction as the concrete set. Even in the middle of winter, pouring concrete for railway piers on permafrost need ice, again to dissipate heat so as not to damage the permafrost.

    • @fireballxl-5748
      @fireballxl-5748 Год назад +1

      @@lii1Il Good thinking. It seems the balance is delicate and time will tell us the exact amount, when the building collapses.

    • @blueocean2510
      @blueocean2510 Год назад

      Zinc or aluminium anodes are used in salt water, magnesium anodes are used in fresh water. The anodes must always run parallel to the length of hull. Zineti, S.A.

  • @peuu-peuuu
    @peuu-peuuu Год назад +5

    His thumbnail is my childhood imagination, thanks for completing it 😌

  • @abd4704
    @abd4704 11 месяцев назад +2

    Thanks lesics , Now I can make my own burj khalifa myself DIY. I had the same problem with soil but when i searched on youtube this video cane up . Once again thanks

  • @anon2414
    @anon2414 Год назад +4

    If we didn't have smart people like this. Humanity would be no where. Phones, internet, cars, etc. Just crazy to think about

  • @eddiedeloyjr3135
    @eddiedeloyjr3135 Год назад +6

    Awesome video... I could watch those kind of videos all day... So as long as you keep producing.. I'll keep watching...

  • @InspiredScience
    @InspiredScience Год назад

    Possibly the best overview video on deep mat foundations that I've seen.
    One question - why wouldn't they use a composite rebar to avoid the issues with corrosion? In theory it would be much less complicated, lower maint, and less expensive.

  • @truemedia4964
    @truemedia4964 Год назад +1

    Wow. This is highly impressive can't still wrap my head around it

  • @johnmcdaniel2338
    @johnmcdaniel2338 Год назад +6

    Cathodic protection also used on underground fuel lines at airports.
    Awesome video. Great animations and well explained!

  • @alhdlakhfdqw
    @alhdlakhfdqw Год назад +4

    thank you very much for all your amazing informative videos! :)

  • @DuyTran-pt1bw
    @DuyTran-pt1bw 3 месяца назад

    Thanks to this video, I realized how vulnerable the building is.

  • @user-vm7ls1zf2x
    @user-vm7ls1zf2x 7 месяцев назад

    I am definitely sharing this with my friends when I get back

  • @YeTenuousUmbrae
    @YeTenuousUmbrae Год назад +15

    I work in engineering and work on piles, concrete and reo. I think this video provides a very good basic overview. The geotech side iften gets over looked but is essential.

  • @iyadkamhiyeh527
    @iyadkamhiyeh527 Год назад +3

    This is an incredible engineering!

  • @MakeAmericaPlumpAgain
    @MakeAmericaPlumpAgain Год назад +1

    You have to appreciate the amount of work and thinking that Went into that building

  • @hdfjg
    @hdfjg Год назад +1

    Amazing truly. Looks like basic foundation but crazy how they must account for the salt water. That’s some big brains on the job

  • @somyaranjanbehera
    @somyaranjanbehera Год назад +31

    Your 3D animations are amazing and quite easy for me to understand things. Loved it❤ one request, can you make how petrol pump nozzle auto cutoff works in 3D? Please😊

    • @tempota7792
      @tempota7792 Год назад

      That would be neat. And if you haven't yet, pls check out Steve Mould's vid on that subject. That illusrated for me what happens in that pump that I've been using for years.

    • @rockwonders8074
      @rockwonders8074 Год назад

      Yes I can

  • @cashprinter5000
    @cashprinter5000 Год назад +55

    Interesting....never knew it's foundation needs to carry electricity to prevent seeping sea water from corroding it

    • @fidelcatsro6948
      @fidelcatsro6948 Год назад +8

      same here.
      i would have surrounded the rebars in a pool of crude oil instead🐱👍🏿

    • @manjelos
      @manjelos Год назад +6

      I guess is risky and expensive solution that almost nobody would do it. This building is there just because prestige, noting else

    • @animehair05silently88
      @animehair05silently88 Год назад

      Boats also do the sacrificial anode thing! And i think some docks too

  • @Reyfacunla
    @Reyfacunla 8 месяцев назад

    Kudos to the engineers and workers

  • @MrWinotu
    @MrWinotu 10 месяцев назад +1

    Amazing enginnering hidden in tallest building in the World. People are incredible. We overcome hardest demands.

  • @mazocco
    @mazocco Год назад +469

    The piles will be corroded anyway with time, wont it? I mean, given maybe a few centuries, they almost certainly will be. Is there a plan to rebuild them slowly in the future or something? I caught myself watching videos from the past century or two and it seems we dont ever stop and think about the future of our buildings like that, but they will be around.

    • @akay4086
      @akay4086 Год назад +247

      Every building made out of concrete has a lifespan. The buildings are torn down and new buildings are made in their place when that time comes. The foundation just has to hold it there for that much time, nothing more nothing less.

    • @mazocco
      @mazocco Год назад +83

      @@akay4086 good point. But I dont think recycling the Burj Khalifa will be worth the effort. There are many buildings from the last many centuries that are still around, way past their lifespan as it is way better to maintain them instead of recycling them. That's how we come to today's town centers of almost any city. I think we should be considering that instead of counting on dismantling those enormous buildings in 80 years or so

    • @YounesLayachi
      @YounesLayachi Год назад +60

      A few centuries is very generous for the lifespan of a skyscraper.
      Even if it lasts just 50 years this burj will be great advertisement

    • @akay4086
      @akay4086 Год назад +64

      @@mazocco It just cant last for centuries.Concrete has its own limitations, repairs can only make sure it reaches its lifespan. A building on such a scale has to remain in very good condition to remain standing and once the concrete starts to reach its limit it will just become a disaster waiting to happen if its not torn down.
      The concrete buildings cant be compared to the older stone building in terms of their life expectancy.A stone can last for so much longer than a slab of concrete. Its just that modern concrete make structure like this possible whereas stones cannot.

    • @sealand000
      @sealand000 Год назад +34

      I'm curious as to how they will replace the titanium mesh anode.

  • @ychodneker
    @ychodneker Год назад +18

    Really appreciate the efforts to explain a concept with animation.
    Is Blender used to make such beautiful animations ?

  • @DailyDamage
    @DailyDamage 7 дней назад

    That was downright excellent and clarified one of the many holes in my ever growing knowledge gaps 😂
    Top notch work. Clear, concise and amplified all points of interest with surprising clarity 😊

  • @daffyduck4195
    @daffyduck4195 Год назад

    This video has excellent clear explanations that drew my curiosity despite not being a civil engineer.

  • @eza6940
    @eza6940 Год назад +3

    New “Subbie” I love how he explained it clearly👍👍👍
    Indeed, there’s nothing impossible if you have so much money to spend.😀😀

  • @megamaser
    @megamaser Год назад +88

    They put so much careful planning and smart design into this building, yet there are still no guarantees. The universe is constantly drumming up new chaos. Only time will tell if they took sufficient precautions.

    • @viasevenvai
      @viasevenvai Год назад +6

      that’s with everything. Science is the testing of a predicted outcome. For it to evolve into a theory it has to work 3.5 million times successful for every 1 failure (sigma 5). Usually the mistakes in engineering were human error, not an unknown force.

    • @TheSpatialTheory
      @TheSpatialTheory Год назад +5

      Careful planning and smart design: there is no sewage system, every day a fleet of poop trucks has to do the job of a sewage system

    • @r-gart
      @r-gart Год назад +2

      @@TheSpatialTheory isn't that a problem of the city and not the building?

    • @TheSpatialTheory
      @TheSpatialTheory Год назад +4

      @@r-gart the building was/is hooked up to the municipal sewage system but the amount of sewage generated by such a building was not taken into account iirc

    • @Nitrxgen
      @Nitrxgen Год назад +3

      let's be honest, it's not a great idea to build a skycraper in a desert with no hard stratum, frankly the design/engineers brought this on themselves, just like when americans build their cardboard houses next to fast moving rivers and complain when the land erodes and their house gets sucked into it and complain about the forces of nature, just don't build there?

  • @MissesWitch
    @MissesWitch Год назад +2

    This channel really educates me about so many things I was curious about , This is what I was looking for!

  • @mansleifsson8277
    @mansleifsson8277 Год назад +2

    Great to see Mr. Bill Baker hosting this episode!

  • @albertpaul1094
    @albertpaul1094 Год назад +69

    The tower may have been a product of oil-rich ambitions, but you can't deny that it is an engineering marvel.

    • @Suiseisexy
      @Suiseisexy Год назад +5

      It has a septic tank

    • @SpiderF27
      @SpiderF27 Год назад +1

      Engineering marvel for the fact that all ingineers working in Dubai are not Arabs.

    • @StefClaessen
      @StefClaessen Год назад +7

      how is it a marvel when theres shit tons of trucks moving feces everyday, theres no proper plumbing

    • @yondubai2192
      @yondubai2192 Год назад +2

      @@StefClaessen Yes if you spent your life learning about the world from youtube 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @yondubai2192
      @yondubai2192 Год назад

      Yes .. But Dubai is Oil poor !!!!!

  • @Kurdi-kobani
    @Kurdi-kobani Год назад +5

    Теперь все понятно! Я думал как так можно в пустыне так строить ! Молодцы!

  • @mitchelcline9759
    @mitchelcline9759 Год назад +2

    Great explanation, really interesting. Funding the maintenance will be what breaks this building.

  • @Sam-nb1rm
    @Sam-nb1rm Год назад +1

    Very well explained. Thanks so much!

  • @luisferpardo
    @luisferpardo Год назад +15

    This is a great video. A couple of suggested clarifications:
    1. This is impossible to drill with auger excavator, it would have to be with drill rig.
    2. Polymer slurry is same density as water, but has a Marsh Funnel Viscosity at that is 3-5X that of water hence the polymer doesn’t seep into the soil and doesn’t allow water to enter, provided the water head inside the shaft is higher than outside. They likely only had a small temporary casing to work around the shaft and keep up the slurry head.
    3. In theory, steel is inert in alkaline medium like concrete, so provided the concrete cover is met, it shouldn’t rust - this also depends on the concrete exposure type to resist things like salt. In some cases they use galvanized rebar for extra protection or fiber reinforced polymer rebar which has higher tensile strength but brittle, so mostly used for things like TBM head walls. Having said that I had never heard of this system. Thanks for sharing

    • @jonathanlee8162
      @jonathanlee8162 Год назад +5

      For 3. Concrete is also porous. So even with concrete cover, or even hydrophobic concrete the reinforcement bars are still going to corrode over time. Cathodic action is commonly used in offshore structures.

    • @WalkDK
      @WalkDK 4 месяца назад

      @@jonathanlee8162 They could have just used adamantium. Problem solved.

    • @jonathanlee8162
      @jonathanlee8162 4 месяца назад

      @@WalkDK I would think adamantium is much more expensive than steel.
      they would rather just add on a cathodic action system and it would still be cheaper.

    • @WalkDK
      @WalkDK 4 месяца назад

      @@jonathanlee8162 well, you are probably right about that.

  • @no15minutecities
    @no15minutecities Год назад +3

    It will topple over one day.

  • @Mohammed_
    @Mohammed_ Год назад +1

    شكرا على المعلومات 👍🏻💯

  • @sandsofhistory-6295
    @sandsofhistory-6295 3 месяца назад

    Amazing engineering and problem solving

  • @AlexMkd1984
    @AlexMkd1984 Месяц назад +1

    The tower was constructed by Samsung C&T from South Korea, which also did work on the Petronas Twin Towers and Taipei 101. Samsung C&T built the tower in a joint venture with BESIX from Belgium and Arabtec from the UAE. Turner was the project manager on the main construction contract

  • @viniciuscarneiro650
    @viniciuscarneiro650 Год назад +4

    Awesome video! Thanks for using the metric system 😊

  • @Carlos-qz7ul
    @Carlos-qz7ul 11 месяцев назад +3

    Most of those solutions are very innovative and sophisticated, but to build a forest of piles below a new construction is been applied extensively in Venice since its foundation to counter the downwards push on its silty underwater ground. The Santa Maria della Salute bassilica is thus built upon a forest of about one million of wooden piles that prevent its enormous mass to sink into the lagoon ✋

  • @mercuryelite
    @mercuryelite Год назад +2

    As a geotechnical engineer, this is an excellent description of a typical caisson/raft system of foundations.

  • @notmyrealname5306
    @notmyrealname5306 Год назад

    thanks for sharing this information for future aspiring villains.

  • @TranVietPhuongDong
    @TranVietPhuongDong Год назад +4

    So good :) thoughtful design + accurate animation

  • @sameerkumar1064
    @sameerkumar1064 Год назад +3

    It is so satisfying when you are from same field and you know all the terms and thing here talking about

  • @okhera1
    @okhera1 10 месяцев назад

    The message is clear as the morning sets the night & raise at first light!

  • @danelen
    @danelen Год назад +1

    Fascinating!

  • @maxwellduncan6150
    @maxwellduncan6150 Год назад +3

    I would have thought the ice cubes in the concrete would act similarly as air bubbles, thus the concrete would be compromised.
    On reflection: the curing (concrete)would be slowed by melting the ice, while vibrating of the foundations (during pour) would work the water (ice) throughout the concrete.
    I also believe that electricity from the atmosphere would also be drawn through the building to ground.
    Oops: was I thinking too loud?🤔

  • @EternityForest
    @EternityForest Год назад +4

    I thought it was gonna be some kind of dynamic actuators that compensate for wind and make it all crash down if it loses power. This is much more reasonable!

  • @tazkiah8904
    @tazkiah8904 8 месяцев назад

    thank you for nice video 😊

  • @devondicker3516
    @devondicker3516 Год назад

    Projects like this show the brilliance of the human mind

  • @stevenjuan259
    @stevenjuan259 Год назад +5

    Trading with Mr Jackson Williams was never a regret to me. All thanks to him, he is the best I have ever seen.

  • @LawpickingLocksmith
    @LawpickingLocksmith Год назад +22

    Very interesting! The principle used here is the very same as in every hot water tank. Sacrificial anode. Out of sight, out of mind. Every building has a final life. This will eventually open up to new minds on how to renovate or re-certify say after 40 years or so. Surfside Florida will be long forgotten when this one comes down. Btw: this building is not connected to a sewage system. Re-finance options were all exhausted well before. The Eiffel Tower is still standing because its footprint vs height does not violate the laws of physics. Standing by for the ultimate news from this region on the day to come.

  • @yosefzentino2268
    @yosefzentino2268 Год назад

    Thanks for sharing 👍

  • @axxl_24
    @axxl_24 11 месяцев назад

    Thanks for this very well explained and informative video. An enjoyment to watch.

  • @Bobrogers99
    @Bobrogers99 Год назад +6

    There are other buildings that have relied on friction piles (I believe SF's MiIlennium Tower is one), but perhaps not deep enough, and they failed to provide the anticipated support.

    • @suebruce493
      @suebruce493 8 месяцев назад

      The engineers called for over 30 pilings under the Millennium and some cheap ass cut it down to 18. Insane incompetent and corrupt.

  • @xenialxerous2441
    @xenialxerous2441 Год назад +3

    Extraordinary engineering, insanely inspiring!!

  • @mohmoudfarah1897
    @mohmoudfarah1897 Год назад +1

    I was not planning to visit that building anytime soon, and now after watching this clip, even less.

  • @lafielanarchy
    @lafielanarchy Год назад +2

    Thanks for a well put video with education.

  • @thedownwardmachine
    @thedownwardmachine Год назад +3

    They also used friction piles for the Millenium Tower in San Francisco.
    Good luck!

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur Год назад +4

      Friction piles are fine but you have to design them correctly. In San Francisco they are too close together so the soil in between piles just gets captured and doesn’t exert enough friction, plus the building is overweight for the foundation - it was designed for a steel building, but it ended up being heavier concrete.

  • @erfanrad9630
    @erfanrad9630 Год назад +23

    As a geotechnical engineer, I find Burj Khalifa really fascinating

  • @Johnnbrothers
    @Johnnbrothers 9 месяцев назад

    It's amizing design

  • @mumtazahmed5288
    @mumtazahmed5288 Год назад

    Very well explained. Thank you very much.

  • @ferdaushossain5586
    @ferdaushossain5586 Год назад +5

    Good explanation sir.
    Watching from Bangladesh 🇧🇩

  • @Ruclitherfford31
    @Ruclitherfford31 Год назад +14

    Thanks 🙏 for making my day with engineering vids😌

  • @flavius2193
    @flavius2193 Год назад

    How great must be these engineers to do this kind of stuff

  • @MrMessy1986
    @MrMessy1986 Год назад +3

    Let's design a foundation system that if we do not constantly feed electricity to it, it collapse. Such a brilliant idea.

  • @realtalk5626
    @realtalk5626 Год назад +11

    always wondered how thats possible to build such a city on basicly sand.... very good explained :) but im very curious if this rly will hold up for the next 100 years

    • @malithaw
      @malithaw Год назад +3

      It probably will not stand the test of time.

    • @lqlaliut897
      @lqlaliut897 Год назад +5

      Given that the system needs 24x7 electricity to withstand the corrosion resistance, I dont think it is a very sustainable structure. Not only that, but even with electircal corrosion resistance, if small corrosion happens, it is still susceptible to failure and it is going to be tough to reinforce the foundations. They can probably generate the electricity needed from solar farm reserves but still as an ongoing system it is not looking good.

    • @eventusvantos1905
      @eventusvantos1905 Год назад

      @@malithaw it will

    • @eventusvantos1905
      @eventusvantos1905 Год назад +1

      @@lqlaliut897 it's not the most sustainable but it doesn't have to be
      No its not. That's extremely rare to happen let alone for that to cause failure
      It's looking good so far

  • @JJs_playground
    @JJs_playground Год назад +1

    What an unbelievable feat of engineering.

  • @MrRight-xc5nw
    @MrRight-xc5nw Год назад +24

    I am supposing this method has been done many times in the building of bridges. Some bridges are built over the sea that has salt water from the ocean. Pretty sure their foundation could be on sand or weak soil. However a bridge probably doesn’t have as much weight pushing down or as too heavy as this structure. To me it would have made more sense to build it outward rather than upward. That way the mass of the building is spread out making it easier to balance. I think for the tallest building record would be better built in a mountain with solid rock. 😝

    • @excelsior8682
      @excelsior8682 Год назад +5

      Yet somehow against all odds, that building is still standing lol

    • @LawpickingLocksmith
      @LawpickingLocksmith Год назад +2

      Congratulations! An outward foundation would go a long way towards longevity. Ships have a practical limit of 400m. Buildings sort of 100 floors to stay within proven experiences. Anybody can bend the law of physics as long as they can run or hide.

    • @Michael467012
      @Michael467012 Год назад

      It makes no sense for Dubai to build such tall building simply because they have plenty of space. But they can't go for the biggest dick award if they just build out.

    • @fidelcatsro6948
      @fidelcatsro6948 Год назад

      naaaaah we could just throw a few million rocks underneath and poured concrete to make our own bedrock

    • @youtbe999
      @youtbe999 Год назад +1

      @@excelsior8682 Too soon to tell.

  • @stevennghim7597
    @stevennghim7597 Год назад

    Great technology and safety design

  • @panachedesignarchitects
    @panachedesignarchitects 7 месяцев назад

    Amazing that they designed this skyscraper almost 20 years ago!

  • @JJ-fr2ki
    @JJ-fr2ki Год назад +4

    Does this mean that hydrogen gas bubbles up from the cathode, and what about reactive corrosive sodium?

  • @joen4088
    @joen4088 Год назад +14

    You know what they say about foundations built on sand. It's inevitable. Needing electricity to keep it standing is absurd and it should've never been built.

    • @trutharrow5311
      @trutharrow5311 Год назад +16

      Those engineers were paid millions. They know way more than your sorry little a§ my friend. Thanks for your salty comment tho

    • @henripan9584
      @henripan9584 Год назад

      @@trutharrow5311 even copper that carries the electricity rusts. It turns green. Nothing is 100%. Time were corrode away the foundation. That salt water will corrode the electrical wires that is supposed to protect the foundation. But you are right. The engineers were paid millions, and those dumb Arabs were suckers for it.

    • @henripan9584
      @henripan9584 Год назад

      @@trutharrow5311 And one more thing to add to my earlier comment that the Arabs were suckers. Those engineers might have been paid millions, but they forgot to install a sewer system in the building. The building's poop has to be hauled away by trucks everyday. So much for your engineers.

    • @trutharrow5311
      @trutharrow5311 Год назад

      @@henripan9584 jealous much? You should do something else other than worrying about these rich af arabs. Maybe find a job at McDonald's?

    • @zzzzzzzzz7494
      @zzzzzzzzz7494 Год назад

      Wach Tom scott's vidéo about some river flood prévention system in London, they apply the same technique to prevent corrosion, and it's a more vital infrastructure than a skyscraper that must never fail.

  • @afghanlatest4103
    @afghanlatest4103 Год назад

    Very informative and i like the fact that you correctly said persian sea.

  • @ivigyang
    @ivigyang Год назад

    Wow it's really, awesome engineering , Thank you lesics!

  • @joshuaashioya9821
    @joshuaashioya9821 Год назад +18

    Okay but why isn't the Burj Khalifa connected to the sewer system?🤔

    • @arigatosev3n880
      @arigatosev3n880 Год назад +5

      To save costs initially during the 2008 recession era. Besides, dubai is building 6 billion usd swerage system to be ready by 2025 under its sustainable city plans.

    • @eventusvantos1905
      @eventusvantos1905 Год назад

      It is

    • @jay-em
      @jay-em Год назад +4

      It is... Via truck :)
      It makes you question priorities, doesn't it?

    • @ktxed
      @ktxed Год назад +1

      because, overall, that country is still in the middle ages

    • @forgongaming8574
      @forgongaming8574 Год назад +1

      Dubai already has a sewer system, that's old news u are telling

  • @kellymoses8566
    @kellymoses8566 Год назад +3

    It would have made more sense to use stainless steel rebar

    • @Mixter81
      @Mixter81 Год назад +1

      That is what I thought. More expensive but worth it. Why not?
      With stainless steel rebar, the structure could last 500 years or more if the ground holds up well.

    • @ooooneeee
      @ooooneeee Год назад +1

      That would have been way too sensible for the dictator that was compensating for something with the height of the Burj.

    • @kellymoses8566
      @kellymoses8566 Год назад +1

      @@Mixter81 A lot of bridges that failed due to rebar corrosion have been replaced with bridges using stainless steel rebar and should last at least twice as long.

  • @Sami.Akbr00
    @Sami.Akbr00 Год назад +1

    Very strong video, thanks!

  • @korantengde-graft
    @korantengde-graft Год назад

    Awesome demonstration of science

  • @meowmeowbobo
    @meowmeowbobo Год назад +14

    All I learned is that it is a horrible idea to build a tall tower next to the beach.

  • @custos3249
    @custos3249 Год назад +5

    So you mean to tell me the world's tallest skyscraper is just nailed down to the earth

    • @lawerancelanham
      @lawerancelanham Год назад

      Haha, they all are technically 🤣

    • @sirmalus5153
      @sirmalus5153 Год назад +1

      So are most oil rigs, My mate used to do that for a living.

  • @jeremycrochtiere6317
    @jeremycrochtiere6317 Год назад

    Fascinating engineering concepts