onstruction work on the Tokyo Sky Tree in the Sumida City, Tokyo of the Japanese capital is moving forward rapidly. The Sky Tree is a digital terrestrial broadcast tower being built to reduce interference to signals from the high-rise buildings. The structure is already 398 meters high; when it opens to the public in spring 2012 the Sky Tree will be the tallest free-standing broadcast tower in the world, at a height of 634 meters. (One Japanese reading of the numbers 6-3-4 is similar to the pronunciation of Musashi Province, the old name for the area in which the tower is being built.) The antiseismic technologies used in the tower represent a groundbreaking fusion of traditional techniques and the very latest modern technology. The tower is a two-part structure, comprising an outer steel frame and a cylindrical inner shaft made of reinforced concrete. The idea is that the two elements are independent of one another: if the two pieces were joined together, this would amplify the sway of an earthquake. Because the outer frame and the inner shaft move separately, their seismic energies cancel each other out, reducing the amount of energy brought to bear on the tower by as much as 40%. ![new-tokyo-sky-tree-tower[1]](http://5magazine.files.wordpress.com/2010/07/new-tokyo-sky-tree-tower1.jpg)

![superdry[1]](http://5magazine.files.wordpress.com/2010/07/superdry1.jpg)
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