A group of terrified tourists have told how they were trapped in a lift for almost an hour 124 floors above the ground in the world's tallest building. Visitors on the observation deck half-mile-high Burj Khalifa heard a loud boom, then saw dust that looked like smoke seeping through a crack in a lift door.
The 15 people inside were trapped for 45 frightening minutes until rescuers managed to pry open the doors. One of those trapped in the elevator said that the lights went off and the car began to fall before the brakes kicked in.
Because the elevator was apparently stuck between floors, workers had to drop a ladder into the shaft so those inside could crawl out. On the observation deck, about 60 more people were stranded and some began to panic.
Shortly after the drama unfolded on Saturday evening, the tower that was supposed to be one of Dubai's proudest achievements shut down to the public just a month after its grandiose opening. It is the latest embarrassment for the once-booming Gulf city-state that is now mired in a deep financial crisis.
Witnesses who were on the observation deck at the time and a Dubai rescue officialrelived their terrifying experience this morning. Emaar Properties, the state-linked company that owns Burj Khalifa, has said little about the incident and nothing about an lift malfunction.
It remains unclear what caused the elevator to the observation deck - the only part of the building that was open - to fail. Michael Timms, 31, an American telecommunications engineer who lives in Dubai, was on the deck with his cousin Michele Moscato when the ordeal began.
'It almost sounded like a small explosion. It was a really loud bang,' Timms said.
It would take another 45 minutes for rescue crews to arrive and pry open the elevator door, he said. From what he saw, the elevator's roof looked to be about where the floor should have been, so rescuers hoisted a ladder into the shaft to help those trapped inside crawl out. Some were clearly shaken.
'One lady I saw ... she didn't say a word,' Timms said.
'She just looked shocked and dazed, then walked directly to the wall and sat down on the floor.'
Abu Naseer, a spokesman for Dubai's civil defence department, said the call for help came in around 6.20pm on Saturday. Emergency crews used another lift to reach the observation deck and were able to rescue all 15 people in the broken elevator unharmed, he said.
The incident was the latest to tarnish the international reputation of Dubai, one of seven small sheikdoms that make up the United Arab Emirates. In recent years, Dubai boomed on borrowed wealth that went into extravagant real estate projects such as islands shaped like palm trees and rows of striking new skyscrapers.
Then the financial crisis hit and real estate prices plunged to half their value in a year. The government and many state-run companies struggled to pay their bills - debts that surpassed $80 billion.
Abu Dhabi, the UAE capital and Dubai's oil-rich neighbor, pumped $20 billion in bailout funds to rescue Dubai. In a nod to the bailout patron, the tower originally known as Burj Dubai was renamed Burj Khalifa for the emir of Abu Dhabi and UAE president Sheik Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan.
The surprise renaming was announced at the lavish opening ceremony on January 4. Emaar, which owns the 2,717-foot building, has not responded to specific questions about the incident that led to the shutdown or made anyone available to speak.
Local newspapers reported the shutdown on Monday but it was still not clear exactly when the building was closed. Emaar issued a brief statement in response to questions on Monday saying the viewing platform was temporarily shut for 'maintenance and upgrade' because of 'unexpected high traffic'.
It also hinted at electrical problems, saying 'technical issues with the power supply are being worked on by the main and subcontractors'.
Emaar has made no mention of problems with the elevators, angering some of those involved in the incident.
'What just kind of shocks me is that they were going to brush this under the rug to save face. If it broke, at least tell people it broke,' Timms said.
Witnesses say Emaar provided little information to visitors stuck on the 124th floor observation deck as rescue crews worked. That lack of information caused panic among some visitors.
'I was really starting to get upset, getting really nervous,' said Moscato, 29, a nurse visiting from Columbia, South Carolina. 'I started crying.'
She said she and Timms - along with other visitors, some in raised voices - asked to use the stairs because they felt uncomfortable taking the elevator back down, but were told that was not allowed. Visitors were eventually taken down in a freight elevator not normally used by the public, they said.
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