Architecture

MVRDV's rugged Valley hailed as 2022's best skyscraper

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The Valley, by MVRDV, has been named the winner of 2022's Emporis Skyscraper Award
Marcel Steinbach
The Valley, by MVRDV, has been named the winner of 2022's Emporis Skyscraper Award
Marcel Steinbach
Valley's unusual jagged stone facade was created using a specialist parametric tool developed in collaboration with engineering expert Arup
Marcel Steinbach
111 West 57th Street was designed by SHoP Architects and reaches a height of 435 m (1,427 ft) in New York City
David Sundberg
111 West 57th Street is NYC's third-tallest skyscraper and is also considered the world's thinnest skyscraper, with a width-to-height ratio of just 1:24
David Sundberg
NV Tower was designed by A&A Architects and reaches a height of 106 m (347 ft) in Sofia, Bulgaria
Assen Emilov
NV Tower's overall design is inspired by natural crystals
Assen Emilov
Antares Tower was designed by Studio Odile DECQ architectes urbanistes and reaches a height of 104 m (341 ft) in Barcelona, Spain. The skyscraper came fourth place in the 2022 Emporis Skyscraper Award
David Guija
Antares Tower is the tallest luxury residential building in Barcelona
David Guija
Bundang Doosan Tower was designed by Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates and Gansam Architects and Associates and reaches a height of 100 m (328 ft) in Seongnam, South Korea. The skyscraper came fifth place in the 2022 Emporis Skyscraper Award
Dongwook Jung
Structurally, Bundang Doosan Tower consists of two towers connected by a skybridge
Time of Blue
Warsaw Unit was designed by Projekt Polsko Belgijska Pracownia Architektury and reaches a height of in 203 m (666 ft) in Warsaw, Poland. The skyscraper came sixth place in the 2022 Emporis Skyscraper Award
Ghelamco Poland
Warsaw Unit has a "kinetic facade" that's meant to react to every gust of wind and form images on the building
Ghelamco Poland
Premier Tower was designed by Elenberg Fraser and reaches a height of 246 m (807 ft) in Melbourne, Australia. The skyscraper came seventh place in the 2022 Emporis Skyscraper Award
Peter Clarke
Premier Tower's overall design is a homage to one of Beyoncé’s music videos called “Ghost"
Peter Clarke
Sven was designed by Handel Architects and reaches a height of 230 m (754 ft) in New York City, USA. The skyscraper came eighth place in the 2022 Emporis Skyscraper Award
Lester Ali
Sven gives residents control over illuminating the top of the tower using an app
Lester Ali
One Park Drive was designed by Herzog & de Meuron and Adamson Associates and reaches a height of 205 m (672 ft) in London, UK. The skyscraper came ninth place in the 2022 Emporis Skyscraper Award
Altan Akbiyik
One Park Drive is one of only a few residential towers in the London Canary Wharf business district
Altan Akbiyik
CIBIC Square South Tower was designed by WilkinsonEyre and Adamson Associates and reaches a height of 241 m (790 ft) in Toronto, Canada. The skyscraper came 10th place in the 2022 Emporis Skyscraper Award
James Brittain
CIBIC Square South Tower's exterior is covered with diamond-shaped blue glass that reflects sunlight in different colors
James Brittain
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Information specialist Emporis has revealed the winner of this year's Skyscraper Award. The prestigious event is always a good opportunity to see the world's best new skyscrapers, and this year is no different. The number one spot has gone to MVRDV's mountainous Valley in Amsterdam, plus there are nine impressive runners-up ranging from a tower inspired by Beyonce to another with a "kinetic" facade.

Located in Amsterdam's business center, Valley is a mixed-use project that includes offices, apartments, retail space, and cultural areas. Structurally, it actually consists of three connected towers that reach a maximum height of 100 m (328 ft).

The project's unusual jagged stone facade was created using a specialist parametric tool developed in collaboration with engineering expert Arup. In addition to lending the towers a unique appearance, this tool has allowed the firms to wield fine control over the exterior, taking into account the amount of daylight inside, structural limitations, and privacy concerns for residents.

"When choosing Valley as their winner, the jury was particularly impressed by the skyscraper's extraordinary and innovative architectural design," explained Emporis. "The building's three peaks seamlessly switch between a sheer glass facade and protruding stone-clad windows and balconies resembling a rocky mountain surface, while the center holds a publicly accessible terraced valley, from which the building owes its name. The building's craggy look and jutting elements also ensure that no two apartments are the same, creating a variety of completely unique housing units. The 75,000 sq m [almost 810,000 sq ft] project scored further points with the jury for using a plethora of environmentally friendly technologies and the rugged edges of the building will be planted with 13,000 different plants and trees. Over the next few years, Valley will gradually become greener and reach its final appearance."

111 West 57th Street was designed by SHoP Architects and reaches a height of 435 m (1,427 ft) in New York City
David Sundberg

Second place goes to the 435-m (1,427-ft)-tall 111 West 57th Street. Designed by SHoP Architects, the incredibly narrow tower – officially the thinnest in the world with a width-to-height ratio of just 1:24 – rises over New York City like a needle.

It features a facade made up of terracotta panels with 22 different sets of contours, which contrast with bronze detailing and a glass curtain wall. Its interior, meanwhile, is made up of housing for the ultra-wealthy – its apartments can cost over US$57 million. Whatever this says about the current state of housing in NYC, the building itself is a genuine engineering marvel.

NV Tower was designed by A&A Architects and reaches a height of 106 m (347 ft) in Sofia, Bulgaria
Assen Emilov

Third place goes to perhaps the oddest-looking skyscraper out of the entire selection this year, the NV Tower, by A&A Architects. Located in Sofia, Bulgaria, the 106-m (347-ft)-tall building's design is partly inspired by natural crystals. To reinforce the crystal theme, each floor of the building's interior is named after its own crystal and designed to match that crystal's respective colors.

Head to the gallery to see the remaining seven runners-up for this year's Emporis Skyscraper Award.

Source: Emporis

View gallery - 20 images
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4 comments
aksdad
The Valley by MVRDV looks like buildings after a missile attack or truck bomb. If "aftermath of bombing" is the look you're after then this one is definitely for you.
GregVoevodsky
"Second place goes to the 435-m (1,427-ft)-tall 111 West 57th Street." - WHAAAAAT? The building is a disaster. It's tilting, leaking, poorly built with tons of lawsuits flying. So much for architecture and quality execution. https://therealdeal.com/2020/12/15/jds-sues-111-west-57th-contractor-insurer-over-shoddy-work-and-blunderbuss-requests/
ljaques
@aksdad +1 there. At first glance, it's a frame out of the very first Planet of the Apes movie, where Heston stumbles out of the jungle into New York.
Which of those stick figures in the pic won second place?
Third place looks very much like something I made with my Gilbert ERECTOR set when I was seven.
I'm sure that "architects" are happy there is no real competition when crap like this wins awards.
Ligfietser
On a almost daily basis I pass by under the looming ragged towers by MVRDV. Built for the well-to-do, the very-well-to-do and the extremely well-to-do as far as housing is concerned. The Netherlands has a huge housing crisis. Houses have become extremely expensive to buy, rents are soaring. We’re about 300.00 houses short and this number will soar in years to come.

Why I write this?
I really wonder if Winy Maas can design a housing complex that is high quality AND permit an affordable rent in the social housing sector in my country. Or is he becoming like REM Koolhaas just a caterer to the capitalist 0,01%