Russia Tower: World’s Largest Naturally Ventilated Building
‘Continuing themes first explored in the Tokyo Millennium Tower, this project by Foster + Partners extends the practice’s investigation into the nature of the tall building, taking structural, functional, environmental and urban logic to a new level. At 600 metres high, with 118 occupied floors, it will be the tallest naturally ventilated tower in the world and one of the greenest new buildings in Europe.
Located in Moscow City, 5.5km from Red Square, Russia Tower will be a mixed-use, super-dense vertical city for 25,000 people, with offices, a hotel, shopping and apartments with private gardens. At 600 metres high, with 118 occupied floors, it will be the tallest naturally ventilated tower in the world and one of the greenest new buildings in Europe. Continuing themes first explored in the Tokyo Millennium Tower, the project extends the practice’s investigation into the nature of the tall building, taking structural, functional, environmental and urban logic to a new level.
Based on a highly efficient geometry derived from a triangular plan with an open ‘green’ spine, the building’s primary structure comprises three ‘arms’ that taper as they rise. They create a slender pyramidal form that achieves the maximum stability with the minimum structure and allows the most effective distribution of space. The higher floors containing residential and hotel accommodation are designed as a series of modular units that can be configured individually. Apartments benefit from fresh air, natural light, double- or triple-height volumes and access to sky gardens. At the summit, a public viewing deck with cafes and bars creates a magnetic new attraction for visitors and residents, while an ice-rink and shops add vitality to life at street level.
The environmental strategy harnesses a range of passive techniques and controls. Strategically, mixed-use offers a strong starting point, allowing energy balance throughout the day as people move between office and home. Structurally, the tower’s slender profile creates shallow floorplates that maximise daylight penetration and increase the potential for natural ventilation. The triple-glazed, high-performance facade reduces heat loss; photovoltaics supply the building’s energy needs and feed electricity back into the city grid; energy recycling reduces heating demand by 20 per cent; and snow and rain water harvesting is expected to cut fresh water consumption for toilets by a third. Socially and environmentally, Russia Tower offers a sustainable new solution to contemporary living.’
When this colossal tower is completed in 2012, it will be the tallest building in Europe at 2,009 ft tall (612.2 meters), and one of the tallest in the world, just behind Taipei 101 and Burj Dubai.
For more pictures visit: www.fosterandpartners.com.
Related posts:





I am currently studying for the Leed V2.0 exam and I am having trouble wrapping my mind around a passive ventalated building. Is there heat/cool at all or do you just use all natural materials to source your cooling and heating needs. I live in alabama, so during the summer I can not phatom not being able to turn the AC unit on. Let me know and by the way this building above is amazing. I would enjoy learning more about the odds and ends to it.
The building of this “Russian Tower” is definitely absolutely amazing. However, one thing is to see it on “paper” and to be able to “handle it live”. I would enjoy a lot to be able to visit Russia and take a closer look at it.