Lifestyle

Spanish group RCR to design 73-storey mixed-use project in Dubai

Spanish group RCR Arquitectes has joined hands with Dubai-based Muraba to create the Muraba Veil - a contemporary sanctuary for modern times inspired by centuries old tradition. A 73-storey tower, Veil features 131 residential units along with a range of curated leisure amenities.
 
This is the fifth collaboration between the two within its 10-year partnership, thus bringing a shared aspiration to work in harmony with the natural environment, and allowing each location’s unique characteristics to guide the concept. 
 
A new development by Muraba and Pritzker Prize Laureates (2017) RCR Arquitectes introduces a contemporary style of architecture that draws upon vernacular heritage and tradition to its latest collaborative project, Muraba Veil. 
 
With Dubai’s culture and climate, Muraba and RCR present a new form of skyscraper (standing tall at 380m) for the region - an exercise in acclimatising architecture to place, working with nature rather than against it. 
 
Uniquely the entire building is the width of a single apartment at 22.5 metres, it stated. 
 
Approved and registered with RERA, the 73-storey tower will comprise 131 units, ranging between two- to five-bedroom Exclusive Residences, together with a range of curated leisure amenities including a wellness spa, restaurant, gallery, padel court, private meeting rooms and a private cinema. Prices start from AED1.8 million onwards.
 
The Spanish-Dubai JV has signed up leading engineering consulting firm WSP for the Muraba Veil project, with client advisory service from Arup.   
 
Situated in a prime canal-side location next to Dubai’s main transport artery, Sheikh Zayed Road, the slender profile of the residential tower belies its use of time-honoured techniques for ventilation and use of natural light, harnessing an architecture which is both inventive and reflective. 
 
Crafted for precision, performance and beauty, the architectural gem is a well-guarded work of art, with a by-appointment-only gallery tour dedicated to its unique features.    
 
Ibrahim Al Ghurair, Managing Director of Muraba, said: "This is more than a beautiful residence. What we set out to achieve is a life-enhancing work of architecture, which speaks to the heritage of the built environment of the UAE. We want Muraba Veil to be synonymous with exquisite serenity; with the same calm that you feel when you enter the courtyard of an Arabic house."  
 
According to him, the Muraba Veil is ultimately designed as a sanctuary for this place and this time, offering the opportunity to live a serene, private, perhaps meditative existence floating high above the city. 
 
It's as true of the deep, high, wide rooms and terraces of individual residences as it is of the Veil’s other world, the cavernous subterranean spa - a wellness club consisting of a series of experiential pools, treatment rooms and gym, as well as restaurant, lounges, ‘oasis’ and amphitheatre, hidden beneath a vast dune-like carapace at the foot of the tower, he added.
 
Rafael Aranda, the Founder of RCR Arquitectes, said: "We are passionate about ensuring our buildings are responsive to the place, that they belong to the site and the native landscape where they are situated. They must communicate with nature and be infused with the atmosphere of the local culture."  
 
Awe-inspiring yet understated, Muraba Veil rises from the dunes above the UAE’s most cosmopolitan and future-facing city, presenting a daring, stop-you-in-your tracks spectacle, even in Dubai’s supercharged architectural vista. 
"The building is revealed behind a series of layers, the first being the “Veil” itself - a bespoke stainless steel mesh, porous and responsive, reflecting the different shades of the sky, and dematerialising the architecture’s presence," he stated. 
 
"The structure, whose unusually narrow profile and appearance could only be achieved by the very latest design and engineering, is inspired by a domestic architecture that is centuries old, traditionally seeking to meet basic human needs for refuge, security, privacy and a close connection to nature," he added. 
 
Inside, the Veil takes its cue from the model of the Arabian house, which reveals itself through subsequent layers softened by shade and greenery before finally coming to the inner courtyard, the cool, communal and convivial centre of the dwelling, the representation of a paradise on earth, explained the top official. 
 
Each of the 131 Exclusive Residences occupies the entire width of the building. Screened by the Mashrabiya-inspired veil and bordered by generous outdoor spaces on both sides, the residences enjoy dual aspects and a gentle through breeze, reducing temperature by natural means - the Arab courtyard reimagined, he added.-TradeArabia News Service