The world's tallest building is set to open on January 4. The world's tallest building is set to open on January 4.

Burj Dubai, the world’s tallest building, set to be inaugurated on January 4, is setting new world records in elevator and escalator installation and operation.

In what is described as the ‘intelligent elevator installation,’ Burj Dubai will have 57 elevators and eight escalators.

These elevators also mark the highest installation in any building.

“Burj Dubai is envisaged as a work-live-play environment - a vertical city for all practical purposes, with homes, offices, corporate suites, a luxury hotel, retail outlets and fitness facilities. The advanced elevator technologies used in Burj Dubai are designed for seamless performance with a focus on safety, efficiency and the convenience of users,” said Emaar Properties Dubai Project Management executive director Abdulla Lahej.

The mixed-use Burj Dubai features 1044 residential apartments including 144 Armani Residences and 160 ultra-luxury hotel rooms of Armani Hotel Dubai. The Corporate Suites comprise 49 floors.

Designed to make movement easy within the tower, the elevators have been placed in different zones.

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Each elevator zone serves different audiences – from visitors to office workers, to hotel guests, to residents – attempting to maximise efficiency by the use of a sky lobby system.

The sky lobby is an intermediate floor where residents, guests, office staff will change from an express elevator to a local elevator, which stops at every floor within a certain segment of the building. Burj Dubai’s sky lobbies are located on level 43, 76 and 123 and will include a lounge area, a kiosk, amongst other amenities.

The main service elevator, positioned in the central core of Burj Dubai, has the world’s highest elevator rise at 504 metres (1,654 ft) – more than the height of Taipei 101 in Taiwan (448 metres) and almost one-and-a-half times as high as Empire State Building in New York (381 metres).

It travels at nine metres per second, and also has the world’s longest travelling distance for an elevator. Another service lift in the spire, has the world’s highest landing at 636.9 metres.

Double-deck elevators with built-in light and entertainment features including LCD displays will exclusively serve visitors to At The Top, Burj Dubai, the world’s highest outdoor observation deck situated on level 124 of the tower as well as office users transferring at the sky lobby at level 123.

These double-deck units – used for the first time in the Middle East – are the highest rising double-deck elevators in the world and will travel at the speed of 10 metres per second.

They have a capacity of 12 to 14 people per cab. Another highlight is the circular observation elevator that serves three floors in the Armani Hotel restaurant area.

Passengers enter their chosen floor using keypads or interactive touch screens before entering the elevator. The system, after assessing the passenger requests, automatically assigns the passengers travelling to the same or nearby floors, reducing waiting time and travel time.

Since the inception of project until June 2009, more than 75,000 professionals and skilled workers have been involved in the installation of elevators and escalators at Burj Dubai.

Work on the elevators started in May 2006.

Burj Dubai is currently more than 800 metres high with more than 160 floors, and is located in the centre of Downtown Burj Dubai.