Walkie Talkie building reflecting light
Walkie Talkie building is melting BICYCLES: Dazzling light reflected from giant London skyscraper scorches bike seats (and you can even fry an egg)
Business owners and motorists today hit out at developers of a new skyscraper which they blame for starting fires and causing damage by reflecting the sun's rays.
Business owners and motorists today hit out at developers of a new skyscraper which they blame for starting fires and causing damage by reflecting the sun's rays.
The
half-finished 37-storey tower in central London has been dubbed the
‘Walkie Scorchie’ due to its distinctive shape and apparent ability to
bounce heat from the sun onto buildings in the next street.
Angry
business owners in Eastcheap say the £200 million project has blistered
paintwork, caused tiles to smash and singe fabric. A motorist has also
said the intense heat melted part of his Jaguar.
One
shopkeeper said the glare caused his doormat to start smoking and
damaged a lemon, another said it blistered paint - and one journalist
even managed to fry an egg with the startlingly bright rays.
An egg is fried in intense sunlight reflected from the Walkie-Talkie building, in Eastcheap in the City of London, where sun light reflected from the building melted part of a Jaguar car |
The seat of a bicycle parked near the building was also allegedly singed by the blinding light |
How does it happen? This graphic shows how the concave shape of the skyscraper means a large amount of sunlight is reflected into a small area |
Men stand in the doorway of a barbers shop, which has a burn mark on the carpet in London. It was reported that the carpet was set alight from sunlight reflected by the Walkie Talkie tower |
A damaged lemon is seen in the window of a barbers shop in the City of London |
A general view of the Walkie Talkie building, taken from Eastcheap in the City of London |
Developers called the problem with the building at 20 Fenchurch Street ‘a phenomenon’ and said they are ‘looking into the matter as a priority’. Cyclists have also reported scorched bicycle seats.
Ali Akay, of Re Style barber's, said the position of the sun at a certain time of the day caused a searing bolt of sunlight to start a small fire and burn a hole in his company doormat.
He said: ‘We were working and just saw the smoke coming out of the carpet. We tried to cut the fire down, there were customers in at the time and they were obviously not happy.
‘Customers are not going to come in if there is a fire in the front of the door.’
The phenomenon takes place in the afternoon on bright days in the City of London |
A camera man films broken slates outside a cafe in London. It was reported the tiles had shattered from sunlight reflected by the Walkie Talkie tower |
Due to it's concave design, sunlight is reflected into a very localised point in the early afternoon |
Mr Akay, 22, said they had spoken to the managers of 20 Fenchurch Street to find a solution.
'Customers are not going to come in if there is a fire in the front of the door'
Ali Akay, Re Style barber's
Ali Akay, Re Style barber's
He said: ‘It is getting really serious. This is a health and safety issue. They should have looked into this before they built it.’
Colleague Ayca Juma, 29, said: ‘It's the Walkie Scorchie. That's what caused this.’
Next door at the Viet Cafe, Diana Pham, 25, said they had suffered similar problems.
Sun rays and heat reflected from the Walkie Talkie building caused extreme heat on Eastcheap |
'Boris Bikes' are lined up on the left of this photograph, taken near the Walkie Talkie building |
‘Yesterday
it was very hot so there was a concentration of light here,' she said. 'We thought
something was burning in the restaurant but it wasn't, we searched
everywhere.
'Every
bit of plastic on the left hand side and everything on the dashboard
has melted, including a bottle of Lucozade that looks like it has been
baked'
Eddie Cannon, van driver
Eddie Cannon, van driver
‘Then a customer came in and showed us. A tile suddenly broke, the paint has bobbled too. This is a problem...it can be dangerous for people. But I don't know what they (the developers) can do about it.’
Motorists have reported problems, too. Local businessman Martin Lindsay told City A.M. his high-spec Jaguar XJ, parked on Eastcheap on Thursday afternoon, had warped panels along one side.
The building developers are investigating the bizarre phenomenon |
The car was said to have been in the ray for just an hour but the panels were buckled |
The wing mirror and badge had also melted from the heat of the reflection, he claimed.
'The phenomenon is caused by the current elevation of the sun in the sky'
Land Securities and Canary Wharf
Land Securities and Canary Wharf
Van driver Eddie Cannon, a heating and air conditioning engineer, told the newspaper: ‘The van looks a total mess.
'Every bit of plastic on the left hand side and everything on the dashboard has melted, including a bottle of Lucozade that looks like it has been baked.’
A joint statement from developers Land Securities and Canary Wharf said: ‘The phenomenon is caused by the current elevation of the sun in the sky.
A bicycle seat was left with what appeared to be a hole caused by glare from the Walkie Talkie |
City workers walking on Eastcheap feel the heat from the Walkie Talkie building |
A runner jogs past a patch of intense light on Cheapside |
The Walkie Talkie building, is seen reflected in sunglasses in Eastcheap in the City of London |
‘It currently lasts for approximately two hours per day, with initial modelling suggesting that it will be present for approximately two-to-three weeks.
‘As responsible developers we are making every effort to keep local businesses informed and we have communicated with them regularly since the issue first appeared.
‘While we investigate the situation further we have liaised with the City of London to suspend three parking bays in the area which may be affected.
‘In addition, we are consulting with local businesses and the City to address the issue in the short-term, while also evaluating longer-term solutions to ensure the issue cannot recur in future.’
Source: Telegraph