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. Hong Kong-based
Far East Aluminium combined to provide the exterior cladding for Burj Khalifa. The contractor and the engineer of record was
Hyder Consulting. Under UAE law, the contractor and the engineer of record is
jointly and severally liable for the performance of Burj Khalifa. The primary structure is reinforced concrete.
Putzmeister created a new, super high-pressure trailer
concrete pump, the BSA 14000 SHP-D, for this project. The remaining structure above was constructed of lighter steel. In 2003, 33 test holes were drilled to study the strength of the
bedrock underlying the structure. Samples were taken from test holes drilled to a depth of 140 metres, finding weak to very weak rock all the way. A
cathodic protection system is under the concrete to neutralise the sulphate and chloride-rich groundwater and prevent corrosion. Special mixes of concrete were made to withstand the extreme pressures of the massive building weight; as is typical with reinforced concrete construction, each batch of concrete was tested to ensure it could withstand certain pressures.
CTLGroup, working for Skidmore, Owings and Merrill, conducted the creep and shrinkage
testing critical for the structural analysis of the building. The consistency of the concrete used in the project was essential. It was difficult to create a concrete that could withstand both the thousands of tonnes bearing down on it and
Persian Gulf temperatures that can reach . To combat this problem, the concrete was not poured during the day. Instead, during the summer months, ice was added to the mixture and it was poured at night when the air was cooler and the humidity was higher. Cooler concrete cures more evenly and is, therefore, less likely to set too quickly and crack. Any significant cracks could have put the entire project in jeopardy.
Milestones • January 2004: Excavation commences. • February 2004: Piling starts. • March 2005: Structure of Burj Khalifa starts rising. • 21 July 2007: Surpasses Taipei 101, whose height of made it the world's tallest building, and level 141 reached. • 12 August 2007: Surpasses the Sears Tower antenna, which stands . • 12 September 2007: At , becomes the world's tallest freestanding structure, surpassing the
CN Tower in Toronto, and level 150 reached. • 7 April 2008: At , surpasses the
KVLY-TV Mast to become the tallest human-made structure, level 160 reached. • 17 June 2008: Emaar announces that Burj Khalifa's height is over and that its final height will not be given until it is completed in September 2009. • 1 September 2008: Height tops , making it the tallest human-made structure ever built, surpassing the previous record-holder, the
Warsaw Radio Mast in
Konstantynów, Poland. • 17 January 2009:
Topped out at . • 1 October 2009: Emaar announces that the exterior of the building is completed. • 4 January 2010: Burj Khalifa's official launch ceremony is held and Burj Khalifa is opened. Burj Dubai was renamed Burj Khalifa in honour of the President of the UAE and ruler of Abu Dhabi,
Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed al Nahyan.
Real estate values In March 2009,
Mohamed Ali Alabbar, chairman of the project's developer,
Emaar Properties, said office space pricing at Burj Khalifa reached US$4,000 per sq ft (over US$43,000 per m2) and the
Armani Residences, also in Burj Khalifa, sold for US$3,500 per sq ft (over US$37,500 per m2). He estimated the total cost for the project to be about US$1.5 billion. With Dubai mired in debt from its huge ambitions, the government was forced to seek multibillion-dollar bailouts from its oil-rich neighbour
Abu Dhabi. Subsequently, in a surprise move at its opening ceremony, the tower was renamed Burj Khalifa, said to honour the UAE President
Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan for his crucial support. Because of the
slumping demand in Dubai's property market, the rents in the Burj Khalifa plummeted 40% some ten months after its opening. Out of 900 apartments in the tower, 825 were still empty at that time. Over the next 30 months, overseas investors steadily bought up available apartments and office space. By October 2012, Emaar reported that around 80% of the apartments were occupied.
Official launch ceremony The ceremony was broadcast live on a giant screen on
Burj Park Island and on smaller screens elsewhere. Hundreds of media outlets from around the world reported live from the scene. The opening was held on 4 January 2010. The ceremony featured a display of 10,000 fireworks, light beams projected on and around the tower, and further sound, light and water effects. The celebratory lighting was designed by UK lighting designers
Speirs and Major Associates. Using the 868 powerful
stroboscope lights that are integrated into the façade and spire of the tower, different lighting sequences were choreographed, together with more than 50 different combinations of other effects. == Controversies ==