Q1 (building)

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This page refers to Q1, a residential tower on the Gold Coast, Australia. For other uses of Q1, please go to Q1 (disambiguation)
Q1
The Q1 building.
Completed
Begun 2002
Completed November 2005
Structure Reinforced concrete
Location
Locale Surfers Paradise, Gold Coast
Address Clifford Street
Height
Roof 275 m (902 ft)
Spire 323 m (1,058 ft)
Floors 80
Companies
Sunland Group (Arch.)
Observation Deck
2 stories, levels 77 and 78.
Opened 2005

Q1 (meaning Queensland Number One) is a skyscraper located in Surfers Paradise, the tourism hub of the Gold Coast, Australia.

Contents

[edit] World's tallest residential building

At 323 metres (1059 feet), it is the world's tallest all-residential building. However, the John Hancock Center, a 344 meter skyscraper in Chicago, contains the highest residences in the world. Q1 ties with the Auckland Sky Tower as the tallest skyscraper in the Southern Hemisphere when measured to the spire. In comparison, the Eiffel Tower is 300 metres (984 feet) when its 24 m (79 ft) antenna is excluded. Q1 overtook the 21st Century Tower in Dubai, United Arab Emirates as the world's tallest residential tower. It is the 20th tallest building in the world, dwarfing the Gold Coast skyline until the 240 m (787 ft) Soul and 220 m (722 ft) Circle on Cavill are built. It will be the world's tallest residential building until sometime in 2008, when the 395 metre (1296 ft) 23 Marina is completed.

[edit] Controversy

There is a rivalry between Q1, and the Eureka Tower in Melbourne, over claims to be the tallest building in Australia. According to the ranking system developed by the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat, Q1 qualifies as the taller building in two of the four categories in which heights are ranked, namely Pinnacle Height and Architectural Top, while the Eureka Tower is taller in the other two categories, Roof Height and Highest Occupied Floor. For comparison, the Q1 building has its top floor at a height of 235m, some 62 metres lower than Eureka's roof.

[edit] Design and construction

Q1 was designed by Atelier SDG, and its form was inspired by the Sydney 2000 Olympic torch and the Sydney Opera House. The name was given in honour of members of Australia’s Olympic sculling team of the 1920s – Q1.

It was developed by The Sunland Group and built by Sunland Constructions. The building was the Silver Award winner of the 2005 Emporis Skyscraper Award, coming in second to Turning Torso in Sweden.

[edit] Observation deck

The observation deck at levels 77 and 78 is the world's only beachside observation deck, and has room for 400 people.

[edit] Facts

The top of Q1 viewed from the rear.
Enlarge
The top of Q1 viewed from the rear.
  • Including its spire, Q1 is only 1m shorter than the Eiffel Tower (which stands at 324 m, including its antenna).
  • The penthouse was the most expensive apartment ever sold in Queensland.
  • Sixty floors up is a 10 storey high mini-rainforest sky garden, which is illuminated at night.
  • The building is supported by 22 piles, two metres in diameter, that extend 40 metres into the ground then up to four metres into solid rock.
  • Warwick Capper owns and occupies the penthouse.

[edit] References

[edit] See also

List of tallest buildings in Australia

[edit] External links