The Edge of Eureka Tower

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View of Eureka Tower from the Flinders Street side of the Southgate footbridge

Continuing the theme of tourism in my home town, my father and I visited Eureka Tower, tallest building in Melbourne, Australia, and the world's tallest residential building (if you disregard spires). This building is 91-stories high, at 297.3 metres, and officially opened on October 11, 2006.

Eureka Skydeck sign

The top ten floors of this place are so fancy that they're glazed with 24-carat gold plated windows, and yet are sold unfinished for more than AUD$7m. On the 88th floor is an observation deck, known as the Eureka Skydeck.

Skydeck/Edge tickets

The Skydeck also features an attraction called The Edge, which is a completely glass cube (including glass floor and ceiling) that is extended three metres out of the building with people inside it. This attraction is unique in the world, until it gets enlarged and copied in North America. Naturally, I had to have a look at this!

Serendipity Table

Before you enter the elevator, there's a waiting room area called the Touch Discovery, which includes a giant poorly designed copy of Microsoft Surface which they call the Serendipity Table. Images are projected onto the table from above and the entire six-metre long table is touch sensitive. Whoever designed this apparently failed to comprehend how unique the interface of touch can be, and everything is designed as buttons: You cannot move or scroll things around, only click on things.

Touch Discovery area

Small cubes of information float around on the table above some red digital goo (which you can splash, albeit very slowly). If you touch a cube, it unrolls itself at the edge of the table and presents some photos and information to the visitor. Despite the painfully unresponsive and slow interface and the other technical short-comings, the table does a good job at presenting Melbourne's historical sights and prepares you for the view above.

Elevator buttons: there's a few missing!

Once you're ready, you can take the elevator up to the Skydeck. As usual with these buildings, you're treated like an idiot and escorted into the elevator where the button is pressed on your behalf. The elevator whisks you up at 9-metres per second (32.4km/h) and you arrive before you know it.

Scrolling LED signs on the floor

The Skydeck is a fairly relaxed area with an over-priced coffee shop, with adequate seating and stunning views. The décor is filled will subtle lighting and heaps of crossing LED scrolling signs detailing the sights and history of Melbourne in the direction it's scrolling. The Skydeck has a few mounted binoculars, but also has several fixed tubes which you can look through to see sights of particular importance.

Fashionable overshoes?

The Edge is an additional experience you can visit for an additional cost which is a completely glass cube extended three metres out of the building. To enter The Edge, you must first don some amazingly fashionable protective overshoes to help protect the glass floor of the cube from dirt and scratches. You enter the glass cube while it is within the building.

The Edge, viewed from the Skydeck Terrace
The Edge, viewed from the Skydeck Terrace
The Edge, viewed from the Skydeck Terrace
The Edge, viewed from the Skydeck Terrace

The Edge is glazed with Polymer Dispersed Liquid Crystal (PDLC) glass, which can be set to have a white and cloudy appearance, or to be mostly clear (although still slightly cloudy). While the ride is idle, and while it is extending out of the building, the glass remains cloudy.

As you are extended out of the building, you cannot see out of the cube, and they play sound effects to make it sound like the cube is suffering from mechanical problems. Several loud bangs and rumbles are played and finally the cube stops moving and, synchronised with some sharp problematic sound effects, the glass immediately clears on all five glazed sizes of the cube.

Since photography is not allowed within the cube, the theatricals are paused briefly while groups of people are able to line up at the far end of The Edge to have a digital photo taken of them with Melbourne's skyline in the background. Everyone else within the cube must bunch up at the rear of the cube to avoid being in someone else's picture.

The glass floor of The Edge
The glass floor of The Edge

Following the photography, there's a few minutes to appreciate the view before the ride continues with its dramatic presentation of a broken machine, with the windows flashing between cloudy and clear and dramatic sound effects possibly representing steam valves opening rapidly, high voltage electrical short circuits, and other various buzzing and clicking noises.

People looking at The Edge from The Terrace

Eventually the glass is clouded completely, with each face of the cube being cleared separately for a few moments each, and finally after fading the glass between clear and cloudy a few times the cube retracts back into the building.

At the end of the day, the best thing was actually spending some time with my Dad. After visiting the Skydeck, we went out for a few beers on Southbank.

The Edge, extended, clearThe Edge, extended, cloudyGiant golden bugs on the side of Eureka Tower
Port MelbourneJeff's Shed (New exhibition building), Docklands areaMelbourne CBD
The Edge extending, as viewed from the queueYarra RiverEureka Tower, looking up from the base
The MCG and the Arts Centre spireThe Rialto Towers look small!Federation Square, Flinders Street
Southbank area, Flinders Street stationCollins Street towersMelbourne Cricket Ground (MCG)
King's Domain, Sidney Myer Music Bowl, Shrine of RemembranceSt. Kilda Road/Albert Park areaAlbert Park area


Categories Australia, Tourism

Comments

  1. oooh very nice... I see however, that you did not respect the "no photography policy" while in cube. Naughty naughty :) And the footwear is a great look on you Simon, definitely an idea for those wet cycling days! ... bit worried about the suspicious unattended brown paper bag left on the floor near the queue line.
  2. _The top ten floors of this place are so fancy that they're glazed with 24-carat gold plated windows, and yet are sold unfinished for more than AUD$7._ Afraid I can't make sense of that. !http://www.gosmiley.com/sad/face114.gif(Aww)! The Skycube looks neat. I imagine the photo prohibition is enforced only when the cube is opaque, no?
  3. (Author)

    Why are you worried? Are you scared at how much someone spent in the gift shop? If so, then: yes, be scared; It's a complete rip-off. As planned with my father, if they had complained about me taking photos, I would have ranted at them in (my limited) French and pretended to be an ignorant tourist.
  4. (Author)

    There was an 'm' missing (now fixed), but the price tag was still well above AUD$7 (by say around seven million), so I wasn't _really_ lying with that typo! The prohibition on photography is said to be because of people dropping things on the glass floor. I imagine PDLC "smart glass" that thick costs a bundle and since everything else in the building is built on the cheap they probably want to save their money (check out the cheap carpet job). They didn't let someone carry on a paper bag! Given the fact that around ten people were in _The Edge_ when we "rode" it, I imagine small items would run the risk of having people trip over and so forth. They're becoming quite anal about regulating people's stupidity in this country as they've done in the UK, and there's probably some insurance reason behind it too. Ultimately though, if you think about it, they wouldn't want people taking photos when there's a photo _they_ can sell to you "exclusively" for a ridiculous amount of money. As far as I'm concerned, the photo they were taking didn't look anything like how I wanted _my_ photos to look, since they look like they could have been taken at any window at the top of the building. I didn't check the price of the photos, nor if they had the option to print it on t-shirts and mugs, but I wouldn't be surprised; Their system of several monitors with little numbers on every photo reminded me of countless amusement parks...

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