Top Ten Tallest Buildings

SMALLLLLLL TEST

It’s alive and well in the 21st century

Everything from status and recognition
For as long as human civilization has been around, we’ve been obsessed with the height of our buildings. Theories abound as to why this is so, everything from status and recognition, to simply the ability to make it work. Whatever the psychology driving the process is, it’s alive and well in the 21st century. The current Top Ten Tallest Buildings are all skyscrapers, which, in this day of ever taller
competitions, are now further divided as Supertall, (over 300 meters), or Megatall, (over 600 meters). Dubai’s Burj Khalifa, at just under 830 meters, is the sole Megatall entry, though certainly that will change in the not too distant future.



As remarkably tall buildings proliferate, the engineering challenges mount as well. Early on, the primary issue engineers faced was the materials themselves. Stone can only be stacked so high, even if it’s done to amazing effect, as with the Chartre Cathedral in France. The breakthrough came in the late 19th century, at the hands of the American engineer/architect William La Baron Jenney. Born in the U.S., Jenney went to France for his formal engineering and architectural education, graduating from the prestigious l’École Centrale des Arts et Manufactures in Paris; he was classmates with Gustave Eiffel, the designer of his namesake tower. Perhaps that association had something to do with the innovation Jenney devised in 1884 when he conceived and built the 10 story Home Insurance Building in Chicago, Illinois – The world’s first skyscraper.



That iconic structure was the first building framed with metal columns and beams, overcoming previous limitations in one elegant stroke, and producing a structure some 65% lighter than an equivalent made of stone or brick. That weight savings was the key to ever taller structures to come, as colleagues grasped the magnitude of Jenney’s revelation and advanced upon his work. He expanded on his work through the end of the century, and passed away in 1907.


The curtain wall, a direct descendant of Jenney’s innovation, is a ubiquitous feature in skyscrapers. Rather than employing load bearing walls as conventional construction does, curtain walls are born by or suspended from the load bearing framework, allowing a wide variety of exterior shapes and surfaces – The glass walled skyscraper is a direct result of such innovation. The load bearing frameworks of the tallest buildings are all derivations of a tubular core, allowing the building not only its height, but the ability to resist lateral loads from wind and seismic forces.
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While common key elements of design and construction allow soaring towers to proliferate, each project presents myriad complex issues that are simple considerations in lesser structures. Everything from HVAC to moving people between floors require highly detailed modeling prior to hard design and construction. High powered computers and software have clearly become must-have tools of the trade.
Here is the list of the current Top Ten Tallest Buildings:

Burj Khalifa, Dubai – 828 meters


Shangai Tower,Shangai – 632 meters



Makkah Royal Clock Tower, Saudi Arabia – 601 meters



One World Trade Center, New York City – 541 meters



Taipei 101, Taiwan – 508 meters



Shanghai World Financial Center, Shanghai – 492 meters


International Commerce Centre – 484 meters



Petronas Twins Towers, Malaysia – 452 meters



Zifeng Tower, China – 450 meters



Willis Tower, Chicago – 442 meters



Kingkey 100, China – 442 meters

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