TURBULENCE is the word/concept everyone's toeing up to. Also Venturi Effect. While not trivial to model turbulence, there's never been a time with so many proven mature tools, most good enough to avoid having to build physical wind-tunnel models. Will this be a steel-framed or concrete structure?
NOT a Civil/Structural Eng., but in a prior century, I developed Mechanical/Structural CAD S/W that incorporated ACI 318. NOT a Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) wizard, but plenty of consultants/uni professors are.
You're probably not in a HVHZ, but I am (So. Florida), and have seen real-world inter-building turbulence "work" things loose over a 5-15 hour hurricane passage. Fasteners and anchors that would hold indefinitely under the constant steady load of the proverbial stationary testing via aircraft engine + propeller, will fail after just a couple hundred turbulence-induced push-pull "work" cycles. Think about it, you only ever see PULL-OUT values for anchor failure (performed in slow-mo, with a hydraulic jack). I've never seen a "PUSH-then-PULL, M times, at N strokes per minute" test value... hmmm... (OTOH I only use these items at the handyman/homeowner level.)
If you want a dramatic example of (rapidly-varying) Venturi Effect suctioning windows off a high-rise bldg., see L'Hermitage Condos, Fort Lauderdale, FL, Oct. 2005, Hurricane Wilma. This property is 2 identical concrete-core towers, ~100m height, whose plan is shaped like 3-leaf clovers, "notched" into each other, resulting in a very "snakey, S-turn" wind-path between the towers. That was only a mid-range Cat 2 at that location. Keep in mind these twin towers are post-Andrew, late 1990s construction, built to the latest strictest codes. (If I had a PE stamp, I wouldn't want it on that structure... architects got artsy with the complex shape--which IS way nicer than a boring rectangle--but it seems the PE/SE didn't do the "fancy" modeling...?)
You don't say how much "face" your proposed bldg. presents to the existing tower, and if parallel or angled, but 6 meters seems "tight", and could create significant NON-steady Venturi pressure-drops with wind velocities well below hurricane strength. I assume this is some dense urban area, and other towers could be erected equally close to the other faces/aspects of your bldg...?
Just based on case-studies and anecdotes, if I were the AHJ, I'd specify the attachment of the glazing should be BETTER than what was used on the 55m tower. "Not fair!..."
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