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The genius
who made today's skyscrapers possible
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In 1931, New York's Empire State Building became the tallest building in the world and a
symbol of America's place on the world stage after World War II.
Few expected, however, that at 381 metres (1,250 feet) high, it would remain the world's tallest
for more than four decades. After it was completed, the Great Depression hit, followed by World
War II and postwar austerity.
Skyscrapers, for all their bombast, were seen as massively inefficient, and anything bigger taller
than the Empire State Building was inherently dangerous: the sheer amount of steel required to
keep it upright was hardly worth the investment.
Fazlur Rahman Khan
That was before Fazlur Rahman Khan came along. A Bangladeshi-born engineer who moved to
America, Khan's "tube" design opened the door for a new generation of skyscrapers that could be
built safely and efficiently. His designs have been behind the world's tallest buildings since the
World Trade Center in 1972.
On Monday April 3, Google has commemorated what would have been Khan's 88th birthday
with a Doodle showing Chicago's famous John Hancock Center, one of his most famous designs.
Khan's life
Fazlur Rahman Khan was born in 1929 in what is now Dhaka in central Bangladesh, but was
then British India. After studying Civil Engineering he won a scholarship to travel to the United
States in 1952, where he studied at the University of Illinois in Chicago.
It would be a fortuitous destination, for Chicago is now known for two of Khan's famous
buildings. While he was working at an architectural firm in the city, there was growing concern
about where people would live amid urbanisation and a population explosion, but skyscraper
designs like the Empire Trade Building, which required huge steel reinforcements to keep them
stable, were seen as inefficient.
'Tube' design
Khan's breakthrough was a new design in which a building was not held up by central supports
of steel, but by the exterior frame of the building. A series of vertical tubes make up the frame,
which creates a suprising rigidity that protects against high wind speeds and earthquakes. It also
allows more space inside the building.
The first of Khan's designs to use the idea was the DeWitt-Chestnut building in Chicago, then
Chicago's famous John Hancock Center in 1968. At the time it was the world's second tallest
building after the Empire State, and was much more efficient to build, using 145kg of steel per
square metre compared to the Empire State Building's 206kg. The tube structure is neatly
demonstrated by the John Hancock Center's visible exterior frame.
Although it wasn't Khan's design, the tube structure was used in the World Trade Center, which
broke the Empire State Building's 41-year streak as the world's tallest building when it was
completed in 1972.
Legendary buildings
The World Trade Center only stood as the world's tallest building for two years before Chicago's
Sears Tower, one of Khan's designs, overtook it. At 442 metres (1,450 feet) tall, and 108 storeys,
it was the world's tallest building for 24 years.
It remained the tallest structure in the United States until One World Trade Center in 2014,
although it was renamed the Willis Tower in 2009.
Khan died in 1982 but his tube structure is still used when making skyscrapers, including those
that replaced the Sears Tower as the world's biggest.
Kuala Lumpur's Petronas Towers, Taipei's Taipei 101 and Dubai's Burj Khalifa all use a version
of the tube structure.
Legacy
That Khan's skyscraper designs are still used today make him one of the most influential
architects and engineers in history. He was also a pioneer in using computer-aided design
(CAD), as well as providing humanitarian aid during Bangladesh's war of independence.
When the Burj Khalifa was completed in 2010, The Telegraph called it "the ultimate expression
of his audacious, lightweight design philosophy" and said he had "changed both the economics
and the morphology of supertall buildings".
He was inspired by the belief that his work had a positive impact and he encouraged other
engineers not to lose track of the purpose of their profession. When he was named Construction’s
Man of the Year, he reflected, 'The technical man must not be lost in his own technology. He
must be able to appreciate life, and life is art, drama, music and, most importantly, people.'