When is a building considered a skyscraper?
This article is also available here in Spanish.

When is a building considered a skyscraper?

My list

Author | M. Martínez Euklidiadas

Over the past few centuries, cities have been getting taller as new materials, new building techniques and, of course, elevators were discovered. The end of the 19th century saw the establishment of the skyscraper, a tall and habitable building.

What is a skyscraper?

The New World Encyclopedia defines a skyscraper as a "very tall, continuously habitable building". The Oxford dictionary admits that it also contains offices, while the Britannica defines it as "a very tall, multi-storied building". Merriam Webster is even less stringent: it is simply "a very tall building".

Although there are dozens of definitions for a skyscraper, nearly all of them coincide on one thing: they are tall buildings with numerous floors inside. The Eiffel Tower, the Pyramids of Giza or Christ the Redeemer are not skyscrapers because, although they are very tall, they do not contain floors or they are not buildings.

Is there a specific size for a tall building to be considered a skyscraper?

There is not a global consensus on how tall a building must be in order to be considered a skyscraper. In the history of skyscrapers, there were some five-story buildings christened as such in around 1820, although the world’s first modern building considered a skyscraper was the Home Insurance Building in Chicago, completed in 1884 and demolished in 1931.

With its 10 floors and standing 42 meters tall, today it would not fall within the concept of a very tall building, but its internal steel structure was undoubtedly an accomplishment during its era. In around 1880, the term skyscraper was applied to buildings that had between 10 and 20 floors, although new construction techniques require more than 40 or 50 floors, according to the Britannica.

skyscraper 2

According to the B1M, skyscrapers must rise to a minimum height of 150 meters, while the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat (CTBU) talks of the relativity of the height, indicating that what is important is how high the building is in relation to its width.

How is a skyscraper built (and rebuilt)?

Brick masonry buildings can support their own weight but, in order to support their own load, skyscrapers must have a concrete and steel structure, although wood is now being used. This sits on concrete foundations to prevent the building from sinking or swaying in the wind.

After the foundations and the structure, cranes are required to transport the materials, together with safety elements, electrical, plumbing, temperature control and safety infrastructures (fire protection systems are crucial in skyscrapers) are installed.

Since demolishing and rebuilding a building is energetically expensive and strictly not sustainable, an increasing number of architecture studios are choosing to give tall buildings a second life. To do so, they ‘clean’ the structure, review it and build on it.

The world’s tallest skyscrapers

From tallest to smallest, the world’s Top 10 skyscrapers are listed as follows:

  1. Burj Khalifa. 828 meters
  2. Merdeka. 679 meters
  3. Shanghai Tower. 632 meters
  4. Makkah Royal Clock Tower. 601 meters
  5. Ping An Finance Center. 599 meters
  6. Lotte World Tower. 555 meters
  7. One World Trade Center. 541 meters
  8. Guangzhou CTF Finance Centre. 530 meters
  9. Tianjin CTF Finance Centre. 530 meters
  10. CITIC Tower. 528 meters

Images | Michel Engels, Lisanto 李奕良

Related content

Recommended profiles for you

UC
Umit Canturk
TEKSU
SY
Stephen Yu
Techreport Inc.
CEO
SC
STEFANO CRUCIANI
Titan4
Operation
PC
PHILLIPE COSTA
Federal University of Rio de Janeiro
Researcher, PhD Student, Professor
CA
Concepción Artero
Agenda 21 ARCHITECTS Studio
Architect
SG
Sofia Garcia
University
Student
CD
Carolina Dal bo
Aa2000
Susteinability nanager
DD
DEFRY NUR MUHDI DHANA
UNIVERSITAS MERDEKA MADIUN INDONESIA
college student
PB
Patrick BENESSE
ALTISPOT
CEO
PP
Pauline Parisse
HEC Paris
I am a student at HEC Paris passionate about the cities of tomorrow
PM
Paul Marais
Kyanite360 Ltd
CEO
AT
Alireza Tehrani
Niligo
CEO
HH
Harianto Harianto
goverment
public relations designer in government
DA
Dyllan Alvarado
student
Student
PB
Paulo Barata
CME, S.A.
Technical Manager for Energy & Industry
AF
arash farajzadeh
miunicipality
vice president
JS
Juan Pablo Solano
IE
Master in Real estate
AO
Abiola Olusola
Westan Homes and Smart Cities
Chief Executive Officer
CA
Cynthia Aguirre
-
Architecture Student
AJ
Alfonso Jimenez Labora
Ecologika
Director