By LAWRENCE TAN
Before the world saw the visual interpretation of the
Dark Tower (otherwise known as Barad-dûr) in the Peter Jackson
movie The Lord of the Rings based on J. R. R. Tolkien’s epic trilogy in 2001,
Italian master architect Renzo Piano had already drawn up a sketch of his
vision a year earlier in what will later become known as The Shard of Glass project for the city of London.
However, it took years of fund raising by UK developer The
Sellar Property Group, backed by a consortium of four Qatari banks, to raise
the GBP 2 billion capital required to build the 306-m tall tower, which when
completed in 2012, will briefly hold boasting rights to Western Europe’s
tallest building, and the new icon of London.
Construction began early this year on the 72-storey
mixed-used development, which will house premium office space, luxury
residences, upscale restaurants, serviced luxury residences, and a 15-storey
spire.
But Piano wasn’t inspired by The Lord of the Rings though –
the Shard of Glass was Piano’s vision of a ‘City in the Sky’. Piano took cues
from the spires of London’s churches and top sails of ships that used to moor
on the Thames.
And there won’t be a fire-breathing monstrous eye at the top
of the spire. Instead, a viewing platform, which is open to the public,
occupies the top five floors of the Shard, and at twice the height of the
London Eye, offers a breathtaking panorama of the city.
Beneath the viewing platforms, luxury residences, serviced
by the Shangri-La Hotel & Resorts Group, occupy floors 53-65, while the
hotel will also operate its first 5-star property in the UK from floors 34-52
with 195 rooms and suites.
Incidentally, the Shard will be the new home of the
Transport for London, and stands above a major transport interchange, which
includes a bus interchange, two main underground lines, and of course, London
Bridge Station, one of London’s busiest railway stations.
When completed, the Shard at London Bridge Quarter will not
only become a prestigious commercial and residential address, and key transport
hub, it will also be the pride and joy of London.
The Shard London Bridge
via Dezeen