There have been a fair amount of threads that have started out talking about one thing, say Raleigh's future skyline, that have often divulged into talking about high rise buildings and city skylines. So I figured why not just have one central thread for such discussion.One of the coolest high rise buildings I learned about today was the main building at Moscow State University. Standing at 787 ft. tall the main building when completed was the 7th-tallest building in the world, and the tallest outside New York City. It was the tallest building outside of North America until the KLI 63 building in Seoul was completed in 1985. It was also the tallest building in Europe until 1988. The building is the world's tallest dedicated educational establishment and surpassed the University of Pittsburgh's 535 ft. Cathedral of Learning which is also an awesome building and takes a shit on Duke University's Duke Chapel.Moscow State University Main Buildingmay need to right click view imagePitt's Cathedral of LearningI figure it'd be nice to start out with some high rise buildings that you wouldn't normally think about.[Edited on October 2, 2007 at 10:02 PM. Reason : ]
10/2/2007 9:58:22 PM
this thread has some good potential as i am a big fan of skyscrapers. unfortunately, i have nothing to contribute at the moment...
10/3/2007 7:36:13 AM
I recently visited the Cathedral in Lincoln, UK. It was the tallest building in the world from 1300-1549. Really an amazing sight.I have also been up to the top of Taipei 101. The city really lacks a good skyline though it kind of stands out too much.
10/3/2007 7:55:47 AM
Taipei 101 looks like a bunch of chinese food cartons stacked on top of each other.
10/3/2007 9:31:47 AM
ironically, (or not), that was kinda the point, indirectly...I like how some of these buildings claim "tallest" by virtue of "integrated structural antenna and masts" while the ones on the sears tower aren't ............
10/3/2007 9:34:47 AM
Watched a show on the Shanghai World Financial Center still under construction. Looks like a sweet building.
10/3/2007 10:32:06 AM
10/3/2007 11:59:11 AM
sorry, i don't have anything to contribute - but these photos are fantastic.
10/3/2007 4:22:24 PM
It may not be the tallest, and it may be well known, but I still have to throw in a picture of NYC's Chrysler Building--in my humble opinion, the most beautiful skyscraper ever constructed.
10/3/2007 4:29:08 PM
10/3/2007 5:15:16 PM
it is very niiiiiice. very symmetric.
10/3/2007 5:15:38 PM
^^^Wow, you read my mind. I was going to post the Chrysler Building when I got home from work. I agree it's one of the most prettiest skyscrapers out there, and it's so old too. They did an extensive renovation and cleanup of the building on the outside some years ago to restore it to it's former glory. Hopefully I get to go in it when I go back up to NY to visit my old roommate next week. It held the title of World's Tallest Building for one year from 1930-1931 when the Empire State Building opened. At 1,046 ft, it is still the tallest brick building in the world. I love it, especially when it's lit up at night. The eagle ornaments shooting out from the building and the unique top make it magnificent.[Edited on October 3, 2007 at 5:30 PM. Reason : ^]
10/3/2007 5:28:35 PM
Did you guys know it is the tallest BRICK skyscraper?I have a lot to contribute to this topic, but am a bit busy right now.See these threads by me until then which contain many world records:?topic=464598?topic=452462[Edited on October 3, 2007 at 6:03 PM. Reason : ]
10/3/2007 5:40:08 PM
always reminds me of the unfulfilled drawings of hugh ferrisshere's some of his stuff (both realised and imaginary)***http://www.columbia.edu/cu/libraries/inside/units/ldpd/avery/html/index.htmlhere's a link to the page where you can download a viewer cause they made it a non-traditional image filehttp://www.columbia.edu/cu/lweb/indiv/avery/da/ferriss.html[Edited on October 3, 2007 at 5:50 PM. Reason : +]
10/3/2007 5:48:19 PM
10/3/2007 6:40:30 PM
I was always fascinated by the work of Albert Speer. He was the official architect of the Third Reich and designed a number of massive Romanesque buildings dreamed up by Hitler. Why the scale is absurd the engineering is impressive. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uSrfp_uJiikWhile the dome pictured doesn't fit most definitions of a skyscraper, it would have been 1,000 ft tall and had room for 150,000 people inside. Recently its been determined that the swampy ground in Berlin isn't solid enough to support such large stone structures.Ultimately Speer went on to serve as Germany's armament minister and spent 20 years in jail after the war.[Edited on October 3, 2007 at 6:44 PM. Reason : . ]
10/3/2007 6:43:36 PM
I recently discovered the beautiful Shenzhen Special Zone Press Tower in Shenzhen, China. Currently the 77th tallest completed building in the world.
10/3/2007 7:02:31 PM
I give you London's 30 St Mary Axe aka The Gherkin. While a very young building, it has already obtained iconic status and has been featured in a couple of films such as Match Point and Basic Instinct 2.
10/3/2007 9:23:55 PM
just beautiful...
10/3/2007 9:56:59 PM
10/3/2007 10:17:45 PM
they said Albert Speer's design for the great hall is totally shoddy. They said there are so many things wrong with it and that it never would've worked. They said it was so large that when it was full of people, all the heat from the people at the top breathing would've caused it to pretty much rain inside that place. And, like you said, the ground could never hold anything that large. Germania
10/3/2007 10:24:05 PM
The great hall concept only popped up after Hitler visited the Pantheon, got turned onto domes, and then drew a sketch of the German dome that would put the Greeks to shame. Speer is just the poor guy who got stuck with making Hitler's sketch a workable design.
10/3/2007 10:40:21 PM
not really scraping the sky too much but marvelous to look at is The Ark in Hamersmith, London
10/3/2007 11:09:04 PM
^^^^ I wonder if they will ever complete the Ryugyong Hotel. They ceased working on it in 1992. It's one of the biggest White Elephants ever. You'd think the North Korean people would wise up and use this as an example of why their country is going nowhere under their current government. I guess organizing a revolt is harder than it seems.
10/3/2007 11:30:18 PM
The wikipedia article about the Ryugyong hotel mentions that (according to Emporis) they used substandard concrete so it would take a LOT of structural work to make it safe to finish it out...$$$
10/3/2007 11:54:35 PM
You'd think North Koreans would be pissed off that the government kept up construction during the famine.
10/4/2007 12:16:43 AM
Who wants to rate the best high rises in NC. I know there aren't a ton of outstanding ones, but it would be fun. Here's some of the best ones I can think of from each of the major cities in NC in no particular orderCharlotteBank of America Corporate Center (The Queen City's Crown)Hearst TowerOne Wachovia CenterBank of America Plaza (sorry it's the best pic I could find, even though it has the Emporis watermark)Interstate TowerThree Wachovia Center201 North TryonTwo Wachovia Center (this building is really cool looking when they light it up at night; it glows a bright white)400 South TryonCarillon TowerCharlotte Plaza aka the Grant Thornton building525 North Tryon aka ODELL Plaza (sorry for the size, but it was the best pic that captured its essence)The Arlington aka The Pink BuildingThe Westin (Charlotte's tallest hotel)I'll get to W-S, G-boro, Raleigh, and Durham later. Gotta go to bed. [Edited on October 4, 2007 at 12:59 AM. Reason : may need to right click view image to see some of the pics]
10/4/2007 12:57:48 AM
winstonsalemskyscrapers.com or something along those lines is (or was, at least) a pretty neat sitewinston has the wachovia building/giant weiner, the BB&T building -- i've always hated that building, the old wachovia building -- which i think was renovated for condos a few years ago, and the reynolds building, which looks pretty cool during christmaseverything else is under 20 stories or sothe GMAC building is pretty cool, dark glass and suchthe nissen building on 4th street is really nice and really new, there's a pool on the roofand there's another building on fourth street (one fourth st. maybe?) that isn't that tall but looks greatas far as gigantic sprawling complexes go, WF/bowman-gray is ridiculous[Edited on October 4, 2007 at 7:30 AM. Reason : GIS has shit for winston buildings]
10/4/2007 7:21:28 AM
aha, the london "suppository" skyscraper
10/4/2007 8:51:10 AM
10/4/2007 8:56:36 AM
Winston-SalemWachovia CenterWinston TowerBB&T Financial CenterReynolds Building (this art deco building was designed by the same architects that did the Empire State building)Nissen Building (can you believe this building is 80 years old!)One West Fourth Street
10/4/2007 6:09:02 PM
jesus, how can you actually post some of that shit in Winston and Charlotte in a skyscraper thread? Those things are fucking weak. My buddy used to live on the top floor of the Nissen building...the 19th floor!!For fuck's sake, the Home Depot's corporate HQ is 22 stories and it's just a crappy little building
10/4/2007 6:44:47 PM
Look here is Hearst tower.Hearst tower from the top [Edited on October 4, 2007 at 7:27 PM. Reason : a]
10/4/2007 7:19:27 PM
10/4/2007 7:28:25 PM
DurhamUniversity TowerSunTrust Bank Building formerly Central Carolina Bank (CCB) Building (like W-S's Reynold's Building, this was also designed by the same architects that designed the Empire State Building)Durham Centre
10/4/2007 8:41:11 PM
theres something about its presence that gives me chills. probably the fact that it sticks out off the grid like its in the street and the fact that it has grand central right there.
10/4/2007 9:16:40 PM
The most amazing thing about this picture is when those buildings were built. Burj - not doneTaipei 101 - 2004Sears Tower - 1973Petronas - 1998Empire State - 1931It's just amazing to me that they could build a 450m tall building in the 1920s that is still strong and standing today....[Edited on October 4, 2007 at 10:11 PM. Reason : .]
10/4/2007 10:09:03 PM
10/4/2007 10:10:10 PM
charlotte does have a beautiful skylineanyway my vote for NC goes to either the westin, BOA Center, or the hearst tower. can't decide on which is my favorite though[Edited on October 4, 2007 at 10:25 PM. Reason : ,]
10/4/2007 10:25:02 PM
RaleighTwo Hanover SquareWachovia Capitol CenterTwo Progress PlazaQuorum CenterClarion Hotel
10/4/2007 10:47:02 PM
GreensboroWachovia TowerRenaissance PlazaJefferson Standard BuildingJefferson Pilot Building[Edited on October 4, 2007 at 11:03 PM. Reason : ]
10/4/2007 11:02:10 PM
Being from Greensboro originally, I've gotta give some love to the Jefferson Standard and Jefferson Pilot buildings (they're connected). The Standard building is an absolutely beautiful piece of architecture, even though it's not particuarly tall. And the JP building is a very successful sympathetic addition, that blends very well with its 60 year older neighbor/conjoined twin.(One odd note about the Standard building--as beatiful as the east and south facades of the building are, the north side (and I think the west) were left without the elaborate terracotta/stone ornament because of the builders' confidence that more tall buildings would sprout up around it in no time. The west side is no longer visible since that's where the newer JP building connects, but the north face of the building has been an austere brick wall (though at least it does have windows) for 70 years now. That's what you get for expecting anything big in Greensboro.)Also, you forgot the Guilford building, which I've always liked. It gets forgotten because it's on the southern edge of downtown and it's not that tall, but it's an attractive 1920's building and worthy of mention...(You may have to right-click and view image, emporis doesn't like linking...)[Edited on October 5, 2007 at 10:34 AM. Reason : d]
10/5/2007 10:32:31 AM
I think the Hearst tower takes the cake on coolest NC skyscraper. Followed by the Westin in Charlotte.Oh, and ignore the haters who are all "why do you post charlotte in a skyscraper thread?". Idiots. We know there are much larger ones. But for once, get it through your head that bigger does not automatically mean better.
10/5/2007 10:44:10 AM
^ The Westin is cool as well. Though not quite as fun as the Hearst.[Edited on October 5, 2007 at 11:46 AM. Reason : a]
10/5/2007 11:45:32 AM
I like how the Hearst Tower looks like it's getting wider as it goes up. The floors actually get taller as it goes up. The Burj Al Arab (The World's Tallest Hotel and billed as the World's Only 7-star Hotel)It looks like a sail on a boat. I guess they don't have to worry about oceanfront and oceanview rooms. [Edited on October 5, 2007 at 4:26 PM. Reason : ]
10/5/2007 4:25:28 PM
Two International Finance Centre in Hong Kong, currently the 7th tallest building in the world
10/5/2007 10:14:56 PM
nothing to contribute, but keep up the good work, i am thoroughly enjoying this thread!
10/6/2007 1:52:45 AM
^^That thing gives the Winston-Salem Wachovia building some competition in the "most phallic building" category...
10/6/2007 11:12:51 AM
Going back to Hong Kong we have the Bank of China Tower, a beautiful building and currently the 12th tallest building in the world. I love how it looks at night.[Edited on October 6, 2007 at 2:59 PM. Reason : ]
10/6/2007 2:58:56 PM
remember when you got to all the weird future shit in sim citythats what this looks like to me i like Hearst tower the best in NCwachovia and boa are both building new buildingsthey're sort of in a battle to be Charlotte's golden child right now.trying to out donate, out employ out salary one another kinda cool.
10/7/2007 2:39:15 AM