Walkie Talkie architect also designed Las Vegas hotel which caused sun 'death ray'

Revelation as screens are put up to stop sun hitting street
Shade: The scaffolding with netting designed to stop the 'heat ray' from the Walkie Talkie tower
Kiran Randhawa6 September 2013

The architect who designed the Walkie 'Scorchie' tower in central London suffered similar problems with the sun's rays on a Las Vegas hotel he designed, it emerged today.

Uruguayan-born Rafael Vinoly designed the Vdara Hotel, in Las Vegas, where a “death ray” of sunlight, caused by the design of the building, allegedly left guests with severe burns in September 2010.

A screen was erected today to prevent the London skyscraper from causing further damage by focusing the sun's rays on to the ground.

Egg-cellent: An egg is fried in intense sunlight reflected from the "Walkie-Talkie" building in Eastcheap
PA

The half-finished 37-storey tower known as the “Walkie Talkie” due to its distinctive shape is now being called the “Walkie Scorchie” because of its ability to bounce heat from the sun onto the next street.

Temporary scaffolding with black netting was put up this morning to cover businesses affected in Eastcheap.

Sun fried: CityAM reporter Jim Waterson tucks into a fried egg roll, cooked in intense sunlight reflected from the "Walkie-Talkie" building
PA

Nearby business owners say the £200 million project has blistered paintwork, caused tiles to smash and singed fabric. A motorist has also said the intense heat melted part of his Jaguar.

Experts say they believe the fires start because the reflections of sunlight bounce off the building’s curved windows and all converge at one point, concentrating the light.

Blistering heat: A lemon, complete with sun damage, is seen in the window of a gentlemen's grooming shop across the street from the 37-storey skyscraper at 20 Fenchurch Street
PA

Land Securities and Canary Wharf, developers of the building at 20 Fenchurch Street, said in a joint statement last night: “Following approval from the City of London, we will be erecting a temporary scaffold screen at street level on Eastcheap within the next 24 hours.

“This solution should minimise the impact on the local area over the next two-to-three weeks, after which time the phenomenon is expected to have disappeared.

“We are also continuing to evaluate longer-term solutions to ensure this issue does not recur in future.”

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