Showing posts with label Amazing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Amazing. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

The Amazing Burj Al Arab Hotel located in Dubai City




According to Wikipedia, the Burj Al Arab is a luxury hotel in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.  The name is Arabic for "Tower of the Arabs".  The Burj is managed by the Jumeirah Group and built by Said Khalil.  It was designed by Tom Wright of WS Atkins PLC. At 321 metres (1,053 ft), it is the tallest building used exclusively as a hotel. 

However, the Rose Tower, also in Dubai, which has already topped Burj Al Arab's height, will take away this title upon its opening in April 2008.  The Burj Al Arab stands on an artificial island 280 metres (919 ft) out from Jumeirah beach, and is connected to the mainland by a private curving bridge.  The Burj is an iconic structure, designed to symbolize Dubai's urban transformation. 

The Burj has become the international symbol for Dubai.  As Tom Wright, the architect, stated, "
The client wanted a building that would become an iconic or symbolic statement for Dubai; this is very similar to Sydney with its Opera House, or Paris with the Eiffel Tower.  It needed to be a building that would become synonymous with the name of the country."
Construction of Burj Al Arab began in 1994.  It was built to resemble the sail of a dhow, a type of Arabian vessel. Two "wings" spread in a V to form a vast "mast", while the space between them is enclosed in a massive atrium.

The architect and engineering consultant for the project was Atkins, the UK's largest multidisciplinary consultancy. The hotel was built by South African construction contractor Murray & Roberts. The hotel cost $650 million to build.

The Burj is a m
ember of the Leading Hotels of the World
There are 202 suites, each with it's own concierge and butler assigned. Rates start at $2000 USD per night and go up to $7000+ per night!
The Burj Al Arab Hotel is located in Dubai, a major city in the United Arab Emirates near the Strait of Hormuz
- It costs $150 U.S. just to get in the gate to look at this place!
- The Burj is built on an island accessible only by bridge from the mainland.
- the cost of it, is estimated at over 80 million U.S.
- The entrance on mainland includes an elaborate water park.
- it took 18 months to build
- The Burj had the top 5 architects in Europe to design it.
- the hotel opened in June 2003 for tourists.
- take a good look at the design & detail, its unbelievable !!!
Accommodation:  Burj Al Arab does not have rooms; it has 202 suites, each one arranged over two floors. Ranging from a capacious 169 sq. mts to an astonishing 780 sq. mts in size, the floor to ceiling glass windows offer simply breathtaking views of the Arabian Gulf.

Decorated with lavish textures and exuberant colors, each suite features a sumptuous living and dining area, state of the art entertainment system and office facilities. Their sheer opulence in every tiny detail is underpinned with technology that does everything from controlling the 42 inch Plasma screen TV to closing the curtains.
Room Facilities:  In addition to a dining and living area, each suite has an office area complete with laptop, Internet access, private fax, printer and copier. Hidden network of advanced technology - lighting, curtains and air-conditioning at the touch of a button.

42-inch plasma screen, video on demand, DVD and a wide variety of cable channels.

Leisure Facilities: Surrounded by white beaches and the blue waters of the Arabian Gulf, you can choose from a variety of activities while staying at Burj Al Arab. Relax in the superb outdoor pool or soak up the rays on the private beach for your exclusive use. Alternatively, take time out in the spacious airy gymnasium boasting the very latest in equipment and with personal trainers on hand.

Explore new boundaries and enjoy unlimited complimentary access to Wild Wadi Water Park.

The park is designed around the story of Sinbad the Sailor's companion Juha. There are 24 interconnecting rides, ranging from calm to wild. Lifeguards are on duty at all the pool and ride areas.

The Assawan Spa & Health Club is situated on the 18th floor with magnificent views over the Gulf. Treatment rooms, hydrotherapy baths, oriental massage, stand-up solarium, sauna, steam rooms and jacuzzi, two swimming pools, squash court, two fully equipped fitness studios and an aerobics floor.
(Rick Archer's Note:  In August 2004 SSQQ Instructor Mona Nashed visited the Burj Al Arab.   Mona, who was born in Egypt, went back to Egypt to visit her mother. While she was in the area, she took a side trip to see her cousin who lives in Dubai.  Mona and her cousin spent the entire day at the water park across the water from the Burj.
-----Original Message-----
From: mona nashed
Sent: Sunday, September 19, 2004 9:44 PM
To: Rick Archer
Subject: Burj Al Arab

Rick, you asked about the building shaped like a staircase. The “Jumeira Hotel” is part of the water park across the water. You will need another tutoring lesson to help you pronounce it correctly!  The Jumeira is another very exquisite hotel, but not the same as the Burj
By the way, Mona brought back a puzzle for you.  Look at this picture and see if you can guess what the platform is used for in addition to helicopters.  Answer at the bottom of the page!

 



















The staircase building on the right is the Jumeira Hotel.
 


Hotel Lobby
So, What's Going on over at the Sheik's Helicopter Pad?

See if you can guess the story below.
That is Tiger Woods, the famous pro golfer, practicing his tee shot.  Think he can hit it all the way to the mainland??  That's a long shot, even for Tiger!
Apparently the helipad atop the Burj can be used for all sorts of things.

Wouldn't it be fun to be a guest of the rich and famous?

I think we will have to be content with admiring it from a distance. Mona said it was $150 just to visit the place.

She and her cousin decided to "pass".

(Editor's Note: The golf pictures were contributed by Judy Walsh.  The Tennis pictures were contributed by Gary Richardson).
In our next set of pictures, now we have two of the most famous tennis players in history playing on a tennis court laid atop the same helipad.

That's Andre Agassi and Roger Federer

My guess is that they don't chase the balls.  Too bad they probably can't afford to buy a mesh to enclose the court.  Maybe the tennis balls float and they fetch them from the water below.
Does anyone besides me feel it is vaguely decadent to keep wasting golf balls and tennis balls by plunking them into the Persian Gulf?

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Strandja’s Amazing Forests

Forests are among the most biodiverse habitats on the planet. But not all woodlands are the same. Most rich and important are old woodlands. Woodlands that have been there for a long time in the same place. And woodlands where humans have had very little or no influence.

Ancient tree in a beautiful autumn-yellow forest
Beautiful ancient Oak tree in Strandja woodland

Because of the natural state of these forests, they have a varied structure; young, old and ancient trees grow together. Very important is also the amount of dead and dying wood. Dead wood in forests supports an amazing amount of insect species. In turn, a large number of rare birds and bats feeds on these insects, and finds nesting and resting places in the hollows and cracks in the old ancient trees.

Strandja’s Forest: unique in Europe

Recently, the Biologically Important Forest Project has mapped the most important forests in Bulgaria. Their conclusion is that the forests in Bulgaria are among Europe’s richest and most diverse ecosystems. The Strandja area is one of the regions with the highest density of Biologically Important Forests.


Woodland covers more than 80% of the Strandja area. It is Europe’s largest continuous area of Oak woodland. Thirty percent of this woodland still consists of trees older than 100 years old. Moreover, completely natural areas of woodland have been preserved, where you can see Oaks and Beeches with a diameter of 1,5-2 metres that are more than 500 years old.

Rare species

These unique forests are the home of a number of special and rare species. An example is the black stork (Ciconia nigra). This is a very different bird from the more common white stork. It is a rare and shy bird that builds its nest high up in trees in old, open woodlands near rivers. We have regularly seen Black storks near the Veleka river valley in Strandja where they hunt for fishes and amphibians.
River valley in the Strandja mountains, Bulgaria
Black Stork habitat in the Veleka River valley in Strandja

There is also a very healthy wildcat (Felis sylvestris) population in Strandja. Over the years we have seen this impressive animal several times. It is extremely shy and inhabits forests where humans rarely come.
Drawing of Stag Beetle Lucanus cervus
We don’t have to go far to see the importance of Strandja’s old, diverse forests for insect diversity. The stag beetle (Lucanus cervus) that is in steep decline throughout Europe and now listed as globally threatened, is a common sight our back garden! This magnificent insect lays its eggs in decaying wood, while the adults live in holes in old trees and dead trunks. The males fight with their huge jaws, just like stags do with their antlers.
A very rare bird species living in Strandja’s forests is the Semi-collared Flycatcher Ficedula semitorquata, and not much is known about this secretive black and white bird. It is thought that Bulgaria is the home for 50% of the European population of this bird, and 10% of the world population. The Bulgarian Society for the Protection of Birds have asked schoolschildren from Sofia to give their artist impressions of this secretive little bird.
Semi-collared Flycatcher painting
Artist impression of Semi-collared Flycatcher by pupil from Sofia

When you visit Strandja, you will be able to walk through these beautiful, diverse woodlands and meet some age-old oaks that have stood here for centuries…

link to Biologically Important Forest Mapping project

Black Stork with chick near huge nest in tree
Black Stork with chick near its nest

World's Most Amazing Rainforests

Image: Erawan National Park, Thailand
Gary Dublanko  /  Alamy
Gibbons, rhesus monkeys, macaques, cobras and elephants are some of the animal kingdom heavy hitters in residence at Erawan National Park in Thailand’s Kanchanaburi Province. In the natural features department, the star attraction is the seven-tiered Erawan Falls, named for a three-headed white elephant in Hindu mythology.
Rain? Check.
Even the urban jungle’s most dedicated denizens, so caught up in asphalt and ambition, could do well to remember the green worlds beyond their horizon. What better way to start than a foray into the densest, most richly diverse wildernesses this world has to offer? Rainforests are the rock stars of Earth’s ecosystems, generating nearly a third of the planet’s oxygen turnover and hosting mind-boggling biodiversity. From soaring vines and canopies to majestic fauna sheltered in a huge canopy of green, they practically demand an audience.
Despite the stark facts that rainforests once covered 14 percent of the earth’s land surface and now cover only six percent, and that thousands of species continue to be lost each year to deforestation, the rain does not stop, and there is still plenty of luxuriant terrain to explore and discover.
So much, in fact, that it can be difficult to choose which rainforest to begin with: from reserves in Australia to Belize to British Columbia and beyond, opportunities for adventurous travelers abound. Depending on the destination, you can either incorporate a rainforest visit into a broader itinerary, such as in Australia or Hawaii, or make it the centerpiece of a trip—for instance, a week-long river cruise though the heart of the vast Amazon rainforest.
The planet’s major rainforests are found in the intertropical convergence zone, a region over the tropical oceans where the tradewinds from the northern and southern hemispheres converge, creating a continuous band of clouds. Most rainforests follow a four-part pattern: the dark forest floor, where only two percent of sunlight penetrates, forms the base of the understory layer where birds, snakes and jungle cats like jaguars live.
After that comes the extensive canopy layer, where the wild things really are: It’s home to exotic fruits and flowers and about half of all plant species on the planet, a varied fauna including parrots and monkeys, and a quarter of all insect species. Trees in the emergent fourth layer can exceed 260 feet—not too tall for eagles, blue and gold macaws, vampire bats and even some monkeys like the black-and-white colobus who prefer life at the top.
Though the word “rainforest” tends to conjure visions of steam heat, monkeys and toucans with DayGlo bills, temperate rainforests are remarkable, too. There’s Cathedral Grove on Vancouver Island’s MacMillan Provincial Park, with its 800-foot-tall Douglas Fir Trees, and the pristine Tarkine in Australia’s Tasmania, home of some of the planet’s purest rain and the feisty Tasmanian devil, too.
Japan has Yakushima Island, a lush escape from the country’s urban grind where the locals say it rains 35 days a month. It has plants from both subtropical and cold temperate zones, and is dense with ancient Yakusugicedar trees in a sylvan landscape that inspired the setting of the film "Princess Mononoke".

Image: Amazon Rainforest Treetops
Galen Rowell  /  CORBIS
Among rainforests, the Amazon reigns supreme: It comprises some 1.4 billion acres, predominantly in Brazil but including parts of eight other nations. A fifth of the world’s birds and a tenth of all species on the planet live in this steamy realm, where a single square mile can pack upwards of 75,000 different types of trees.
But isn’t splendor of this magnitude hard to get to? Not really: “You can fly from Tokyo’s Haneda airport to Kagoshima (100 minutes), then from Kagoshima to Yakushima Airport (40 minutes),” says Nori Akashi of the Japan National Tourism Organization. “Usually, you stay one night on the island to visit the rainforest—there are several accommodation facilities.”
Whether in Costa Rica’s Monte Verde Cloud Forest or the Hawaiian Islands (where beautiful rainforests in Maui and Kauai beckon) exploring a rainforest is not just a feast for the senses but can be good for the soul. It’s nature distilled to its essence, and however brief, the journey into a thousand shades of green is an intense one—those vibrant colors alone can create special effects.
According to Peri Enkin, a Hawaiian energy counselor and color therapist, "The moss green chakra relates to below the feet,” which she says could help you become grounded in your physical life. And because “emerald green relates to the heart,” according to her, getting your fill of that particular hue amidst the leaves and vines may ignite love and create compassion and care. Not a bad way to wind down a day in one of Planet Earth’s greenest, if rainiest, corners.
 

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