Omniturm

Omniturm is a skyscraper in Frankfurt, Germany. It was built by the U.S. real estate company Tishman Speyer Properties from early 2016, and was completed in 2019. The building reaches a height of 190 metres, making it the 6th-tallest building in Frankfurt and in Germany upon completion. The name (from Latin omnis 'everyone') is an allusion to the usage of the building, including both residential and office space.

Omniturm
Omniturm under construction in September 2019
General information
StatusComplete
LocationGroße Gallusstraße 16-18, Frankfurt am Main, Germany
Construction started2017
Completed2019
Inaugurated2019
OwnerCommerz Real
Height189.9 m
Design and construction
Architecture firmBjarke Ingels Group
Structural engineerBollinger + Grohmann

Design

The tower was designed by Bjarke Ingels Group.[1]

The Omni Tower is notably characterized by a "swing" halfway up the building. The spiral axis shift from the center enables terraces for the living area, which is planned between the 16th and 22nd floors. In the largest shift, the so-called “residential” area is offset by a total of more than 5 meters from the baseline. The tower contains 43,850 square meters of rentable office space, 8,175 square meters of living space and 1,579 square meters of publicly accessible area.[2]

According to Designbloom, "the lower part of the building is organized as a slender and rational stack, before the floorplates start to slide outwards in a spiraling motion where the tower contains residential programming. in its uppermost portion, the structure returns to a simple tower block, rejoining the orientation of the floors below".[3]

Usage

Omniturm is a mixed-used tower. The building has a leasable area of more than 54,100 square meters, with around 44,200 square meters as. flexible office space. 147 premium-apartments account for a further 8,200 square meters.

Owner

The building was purchased by Commerz Real, an investment asset manager for Commerzbank in 2018.[4]

gollark: In the hypothetical scenario in which I had backdoors, I could theoretically just make it accept itself as valid if it was signed by potatOS keys and not your own.
gollark: It still can't verify itself.
gollark: In any case, I can neither confirm nor deny that there wouldn't be much stopping me from just sending backdoored copies into your signing process.
gollark: Well, the program can't usefully verify *itself*.
gollark: I see.

References

  1. "OMNITURM - The Skyscraper Center". www.skyscrapercenter.com. Retrieved 2020-06-30.
  2. "News-Details - Beton.org". www.beton.org. Retrieved 2020-06-30.
  3. "BIG's 'omniturm' tower with shifted floorplates takes shape in frankfurt". designboom | architecture & design magazine. 2018-08-21. Retrieved 2020-06-30.
  4. staff2018-09-14T14:51:00+01:00, I. P. E. "Commerz Real buys Omniturm tower in Frankfurt from Tishman Speyer". Real Assets. Retrieved 2020-06-30.
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