Lotte World Tower


Lotte World Tower is a, 123-story skyscraper located in Seoul, South Korea. It opened to the public on April 11, 2017, and is currently the tallest building in South Korea and the fifth tallest in the world.

History

After 13 years of planning and site preparation, the tower gained final approval to start construction by the government in November 2010 and the first groundbreaking activities of piling and frame assembly were observed at the construction site in March.
On New Year 2016, the LED-pixels of the facade displayed the number "2016".
On April 2nd, 2017, Lotte shot off fireworks to celebrate the tower's official opening.
On January 1st, 2018, Lotte shot off fireworks with a LED laser show for 7 minutes to celebrate New Year's Day and the 2018 PyeongChang Winter Olympics.

Building

Design

The first design was made in the year 1990, and changed further in 1994, 1995 and 1997. Following the revision of the bird's eye view from 2004 to 2006, the bird's eye view was changed seven times in 2008 and the design was changed in 2009 and the Lotte World Tower began to break ground.
The Shard of England is said to be similar in design. The building, designed by renowned Italian architect Renzo Piano, was launched in 2008, completed in 2012 and opened in 2013.

Height

On March 17th, 2016, before the final phase of external construction, the Diagrid lantern-shaped roof structure was completed. The roof structure was constructed with steel counterparts that are each 12 meters and weigh 20 tons. The counterparts were made up of bent metal panels that are 6 cm thick. The structure itself is 120 meters high, and covers floors 107–123. Approximately 3,000 tons of steel parts, a high-precision 64t tower crane and GPS alignment systems, as well as highly skilled welding technicians were used in the construction of the roof. The roof structure is engineered to withstand its weight without reinforcing pillars, endure earthquakes up to a magnitude of 9 under the Richter magnitude scale and winds up to 80 m/s.

Characteristics

Landmark
Lotte World Tower is a landmark in Seoul. It is the first 100-story building in Korea. When it was completed, it was the fourth-highest tower in the world and the highest in the OECD countries. The conceptual design calls for a slender cone with convex, gently curved sides. An exterior of pale-coloured glass draws inspiration from Korean ceramics and features accents of metal filigree.

Floor plans

Main facilities

Seoul Sky is located on the 117th - 123rd floors. The 117th floor is the entrance floor and the view floor; the 118th floor has the Sky Friendly Cafe and Sky Terrace. The Photozone is located on the 119th floor, Seoul Sky Cafe on the 122nd floor, and the 123 lounge, a premium lounge bar, on the 123rd floor. There are four media stands on the 117th and 118th floors. The view floor has prominent views of the city, as well as a glass floor and a telescope. The sky skylight of Seoul Sky was the highest glass floor observatory as of the tower's completion. Lotte Tower and One World Trade Center have concluded an operation and technical service agreement.
FloorsUse
117th~123rd floorObservation deck
105th~114th floorPrivate office
76th~101st floorLotte Hotel
42nd~71st floorResidence
14th~38th floorPrime office
5th~12th floorPodium
1st~2nd floorLobby
B1~B2Observation entrance
B3~B6Parking lot

Incidents and Accidents

Safety issues

In 2013 and 2014, 3 construction workers died during the construction of the tower, and an executive director of Lotte's construction arm was given a suspended sentence of 8 months in prison in 2016 for his role in neglecting safety measures at the site. In December 2014, the Seoul city government ordered the mall and cinema complex at the base of the tower, which opened before completion of the tower, to be closed for 5 months after water was found leaking from an internal aquarium. Independent engineers who assessed the building found that these issues bore little relation to the overall structural integrity of the building and the mall and cinema complex reopened in 2015.

Urban exploration

In 2016, two Russian and Ukrainian urban explorers, Vadim Makhorov and Vitaly Raskalov from Ontheroofs, illegally climbed the under-construction Lotte World Tower through stairs and Vitaly Raskalov then free-climbed up the crane on the tower's top.
The video was viewed over 3 million times as of September 2016 and received worldwide media attention.
Following the climb, Lotte World Tower released posters with the photos of Vitaly Raskalov and Vadim Makhorov and banned them from the building.

Gallery