Dexia Tower

Dexia Tower
Dexia Tower

The Dexia Tower seen from the north
General information
Type Office
Location Rogier Square, Brussels, Belgium
Coordinates 50°51′23″N 4°21′33″E / 50.85639°N 4.35917°E / 50.85639; 4.35917Coordinates: 50°51′23″N 4°21′33″E / 50.85639°N 4.35917°E / 50.85639; 4.35917
Construction started 2002
Completed 2006
Opening November 21, 2006[1]
Height
Roof 137 metres (449 ft)[2][3]
Technical details
Floor count 38[2][1]
Floor area 111,903 square metres (1,204,510 sq ft)[3]
Design and construction
Architect Philippe Samyn and Partners, M. & J.M. Jaspers - J. Eyers & Partners
References
[4]

The Dexia Tower (French: tour Dexia, Dutch: Dexia-toren) is a skyscraper located in the Northern Quarter central business district of Saint-Josse-ten-Noode, Brussels, Belgium. It owes its name to its current tenant, the bank Dexia. It is the third tallest building in Belgium.

It is built on the site of the Rogier International Centre (French: Centre International Rogier), also called the Martini Tower, which was formerly the tallest building in Belgium, but was demolished in 2001.[3] Constructed between 2002 and 2006, the Dexia Tower is 137 m tall. It was originally planned to be 179 m tall, but the proposal was rejected because the height was thought to be excessive.[3] The Dexia Tower is also one of the few towers in Brussels whose roof is not horizontal, instead being made up of three inclined sections. It is also one of the only towers in the world to have a fully glass roof. Dexia claims that the opposite sloping of the roofs are reminiscent of the stylized letter X in the Dexia logo.[1]

Lighting

The Dexia Tower from the south during a light show

The building has 6000 windows, and 4200 of these are equipped with an average of 12 lightbulbs, each having a red, green and blue LED, allowing a broad palette of colours to be formed. These are lit up to form colourful displays, with each window acting as a pixel. To minimize power consumption, the LEDs only illuminate the outside of the closed blinds, and the reflection off the blinds illuminates the window.[1] Usually the display is just abstract patterns or the temperature, but on special occasions and major holidays, customized displays are shown. Due to the late-2000s recession, the lighting has been greatly reduced, and the displays are now on for only 10 minutes an hour.[1]

See also

References


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