Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat
It
turns out that most of the world’s tallest buildings are doing the
architectural equivalent of wearing platform shoes. That is, they’re
scraping skies courtesy of dozens—sometimes hundreds—of meters of
“vanity height,” says a new report (pdf) by the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat (CTBUH), first spotted by io9.
That’s the term CTBUH uses to describe the distance between the highest
floor occupied and the top of the building. Here are some of the
report’s most startling facts:
61% of the world’s supertall buildings need vanity height to qualify
It
turns out that 61% of the world’s “supertall” buildings—those over 300
meters (984 feet)—wouldn’t be so super if not for their vanity height.
China’s 390-meter CITIC Plaza, in Guangzhou, is the tallest building to
be knocked off the list if vanity height is discounted. (It would shrink
to 296 meters.)
Who’s the vainest of them all?
With
a vanity height of 39% of its total, the Burj al Arab in Dubai is the
vainest of the supertall buildings. On the other hand, Dubai also has
the least vain supertall building; a mere 1% of the tower known as The
Index counts as vanity height (it lacks a spire).
If you broaden the search to buildings that are simply tall, Moscow’s Ukraina Hotel is the vainest of them all; 42% of its 206 meters comes from vanity space.
Reuters/Gary Hershorn
New York City is really vain
When
One World Trade Center is completed in 2014, New York City will have
three of the “tallest 10 Vanity Heights,” says CTBUH. Bank of America
Tower has 36% vanity height, while the New York Times Tower has 31%.
Just shy of 30% of One World Trade Center is slated to be unoccupied.
So is the UAE
The
United Arab Emirates’ 19 supertall buildings have, on average, vanity
heights of 19%, followed by China’s average of 14% for its 24 buildings.
And while only 42% of China’s 24 supertalls wouldn’t qualify as
supertall without their vanity heights, 68% of UAE’s 19 wouldn’t.
Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat
But even without its vanity height, the Burj Khalifa still wins
As
CTBUH points out, if the vanity height portion of the Dubai’s Burj
Khalifa, the tallest building in the world, were a standalone building
in Europe, at 244 meters it would be the continent’s 11th-tallest
building. But even if you’re counting height based solely on the highest
occupied floor, the Burj Khalifa would still win:
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