List of tallest buildings and structures


The world's tallest artificial structure is the Burj Khalifa in Dubai. The building gained the official title of "tallest building in the world" and the tallest self-supported structure at its opening on January 9, 2010. The second-tallest self-supporting structure and the tallest tower in the world is the Tokyo Skytree. The tallest guyed structure is the KVLY-TV mast.
The Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat, an organization that certifies buildings as the "World's Tallest", recognizes a building only if at least 50% of its height is made up of floor plates containing habitable floor area. Structures that do not meet this criterion, such as the CN Tower, are defined as "towers".
There are dozens of radio and television broadcasting towers which measure over 600 metres in height, and only the tallest are recorded in publicly available information sources.

Debate over definitions

The assessment of the height of artificial structures has been controversial. Various standards have been used by different organizations which has meant that the title of world's tallest structure or building has changed depending on which standards have been accepted. The Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat has changed its definitions over time. Some of the controversy regarding the definitions and assessment of tall structures and buildings has included the following:
Within an accepted definition of a building further controversy has included the following factors:
This category does not require the structure to be "officially" open but does require it to be "topped out."
The tallest artificial structure is Burj Khalifa, a skyscraper in Dubai that reached in height on January 17, 2009. By April 8, 2008 it had been built higher than the KVLY-TV mast in North Dakota, USA. That September it officially surpassed Poland's Warsaw radio mast, which stood from 1974 to 1991, to become the tallest structure ever built. Guyed lattice towers such as these masts had held the world height record since 1954.
The Petronius Platform stands off the sea floor leading some, including Guinness World Records 2007, to claim it as the tallest freestanding structure in the world. However, it is debated whether underwater height should be counted, in the same manner as height below ground is ignored on buildings. The Troll A platform is, without any part of that height being supported by wires. The tension-leg type of oil platform has even greater below-water heights with several examples more than deep. However, these platforms are not considered constant structures as the vast majority of their height is made up of the length of the tendons attaching the floating platforms to the sea floor. Despite this, Guinness World Records 2009 listed the Ursa tension leg platform as the tallest structure in the world with a total height of. The Magnolia Tension-leg Platform in the Gulf of Mexico is even taller with a total height of.
Taipei 101 in Taipei, Taiwan, set records in three of the four skyscraper categories at the time it opened in 2004; at the time the Burj Khalifa opened in 2010 it remained the world's tallest inhabited building as measured to its architectural height. The height of its roof and highest occupied floor had been surpassed by the Shanghai World Financial Center with corresponding heights of. Willis Tower was the highest in the final category: the greatest height to top of antenna of any building in the world at.
Burj Khalifa broke the height record in all four categories for completed buildings.

Tallest structure by category

Due to the disagreements over how to measure height and classify structures, engineers have created various definitions for categories of buildings and other structures. One measure includes the absolute height of a building, another includes only spires and other permanent architectural features, but not antennas. The tradition of including the spire on top of a building and not including the antenna dates back to the rivalry between the Chrysler Building and 40 Wall Street. A modern-day example is that the antenna on top of Willis Tower is not considered part of its architectural height, while the spires on top of the Petronas Twin Towers are counted.
Note: The following table is a list of the tallest completed structure in each of the structural categories below. For a list of structures by function see the list later in the article. There can only be one structure in each category, unless the tallest is the same for more than one structure in the same category.
CategoryStructureCountryCityHeight Height Year builtCoordinates
Building Burj KhalifaDubai829.82,7222010
Self-supporting tower Tokyo SkytreeTokyo6342,0802011
Guyed steel lattice mastKRDK-TV mastGalesburg, North Dakota628.02,0601997
Mast radiatorLualualei VLF transmitterLualualei, Hawaii4581,5031972 ;
Twin buildingPetronas Twin TowersKuala Lumpur4521,4821998;
ChimneyEkibastuz GRES-2 Power StationEkibastuz419.71,3771987
RadarDimona Radar FacilityDimona4001,3122008 ;
Lattice towerKiev TV TowerKiev3851,2631973
Electricity pylonZhoushan Island Overhead Powerline TieZhoushan3701,2142009 ;
Partially guyed towerGerbrandy TowerIJsselstein366.81,2031961
Guyed tubular steel mastTV Tower VinnytsiaVinnytsia3541,1611961
BridgeMillau ViaductMillau3421,1222004
Blaw-Knox Tower Lakihegy TowerSzigetszentmiklós3141,0311968
DamJinping-I DamLiangshan3051,0012013
Wind turbineGE 3.4-137 wind turbine at Naturstromspeicher GaildorfGaildorf246.58092017
Statue Statue of UnityNarmada district, Gujarat2407902018
MinaretHassan II MosqueCasablanca2106891993
Cooling towerKalisindh Thermal Power StationJhalawar2026632012 ;
MonumentGateway ArchSt. Louis, Missouri1926301965
Water towerMain tower of Kuwait TowersKuwait City1876141979
Wooden structureATLAS-I at Kirtland Air Force BaseAlbuquerque1806001980
Masonry towerAnaconda Smelter StackAnaconda, Montana178.35851919
Inclined structureOlympic StadiumMontreal1755741976
ObeliskSan Jacinto MonumentLa Porte, Texas173.75701939
Ferris wheelHigh RollerLas Vegas167.65502014
Masonry buildingMole AntonellianaTorino167.55501889
FlagpoleJeddah FlagpoleJeddah1715612014
Church towerUlmer MünsterUlm1625301890
Industrial hallVehicle Assembly BuildingKennedy Space Center, Florida1605251966
Memorial crossSanta Cruz del Valle de los CaídosEl Escorial152.45001957
TelescopeArecibo TelescopeArecibo, Puerto Rico1504921963
Roller coasterKingda KaJackson, New Jersey138.984562005
TombGreat Pyramid of GizaGiza138.8455.22560 BCE
Air traffic control towerKuala Lumpur International Airport 2 Control TowerSepang141.3463.62013
StupaJetavanaramayaAnuradhapura122400273–301 CE
Wooden lattice towerGliwice Radio TowerGliwice1183871935
Storage siloSchapfen Mill TowerUlm1153772005
Aerial tramway support towerPillar of third section of Gletscherbahn KaprunKaprun113.63731966
SphereEricsson GlobeStockholm852791989
LighthouseÎle Vierge LighthouseFinistère82.52711902
GopuramMurudeshwara TempleMurudeshwara762492008

Tallest destroyed structures by category, not surpassed by existing structures

There are some destroyed architectural structures which were taller than the tallest existing structure of their type. There are also destroyed structures omitted from this list that had been surpassed in height prior to being destroyed.
CategoryStructureCountryCityHeight Height CoordinatesRemarks
Guyed mastWarsaw Radio MastGąbin646.382,121Completed in 1974, collapsed on August 8, 1991
Scientific research towerBREN TowerNevada Test Site4621,516Completed in 1962, demolished May 23, 2012
Guyed tubular steel mastShushi-Wan Omega TransmitterTsushima3891,276Completed in 1973, dismantled in 1998
Structure for scientific experimentSmokey Shot TowerNevada Test Site213700Guyed mast, which carried 44 kt yield nuclear bomb "Smokey" on top until its explosion on August 31, 1957
Wooden structureMühlacker Wood Radio TowerMühlacker190623Completed in 1934, destroyed on April 6, 1945, by the Germans to prevent usage by the Allies, replaced by mast radiator
Masonry buildingMole AntonellianaTurin167.5549.5Spire destroyed by a tornado in 1953
Pre-Industrial era buildingLincoln CathedralLincoln160524Completed in 1311, spire blown off in 1549
GasometerGasometer Zeche NordsternGelsenkirchen147482Completed in 1938, damaged at an air raid on May 13, 1940 in such a manner, that it was not usable any more and had to be demolished.
Storage siloHenninger TurmFrankfurt120394Constructed in 1961, demolished in 2013

Tallest structure by function

* "Mixed-use" is defined as having three or more real estate uses that are physically and functionally integrated in a single property and are mutually supporting.

Tallest buildings

Up until the late 1990s, the definition of “tallest building” was not altogether clear. It was generally understood to be the height of the building to the top of its architectural elements including spires, but not including "temporary" structures, which could be added or changed relatively easily without requiring major changes to the building's design. Other criteria for height measurement generally were not considered, which occasionally caused some controversy.
One historic case involved the building now famous for the Times Square Ball. Known as One Times Square, it was the headquarters for The New York Times, which gave Times Square its name. Completed in 1905, it reached a height of to its roof, or including its rooftop flagpole, which the Times hoped would give it a record high status. But because a flagpole is not an integral architectural part of a building, One Times Square was not generally considered to be taller than the Park Row Building in Lower Manhattan, which was therefore still New York's tallest.
A bigger controversy was the rivalry between two New York skyscrapers built in the Roaring Twenties — the Chrysler Building and the Bank of Manhattan Trust Building, now called the Trump Building but better known as 40 Wall Street. The latter was tall, had a shorter pinnacle, and had a much higher top occupied floor. In contrast, the Chrysler Building employed a very long spire secretly assembled inside the building to claim the title of world's tallest building with a total height of, despite having a lower top occupied floor and a shorter height when both buildings' spires are not counted in their heights. Although the architects of record for 40 Wall were H. Craig Severance and Yasuo Matsui, the firm of Shreve & Lamb served as consulting architects. They wrote a newspaper article claiming that 40 Wall was actually the tallest, since it contained the world's highest usable floor. They pointed out that the observation deck of 40 Wall was nearly higher than the top floor of the Chrysler, whose surpassing spire was strictly ornamental and essentially inaccessible. Despite the protest, the Chrysler Building was generally accepted as the tallest building in the world for almost a year, until it was surpassed by the Empire State Building’s in 1931.
That was in turn surpassed by the twin towers of New York’s original World Trade Center in 1972, which were in turn surpassed by the Sears Tower in Chicago in 1974. Now called the Willis Tower it was to its flat rooftop, or including its original antennas. But in 1978 One World Trade Center attained a taller absolute height when it added its new broadcasting antenna, for a total height of. The WTC north tower maintained this height record from 1978 until 2000, when the owners of the Willis Tower extended its broadcasting antennae for a total height of. Thus the status of the Willis Tower as the “totally” tallest was restored in the face of a new threat looming in the Far East — the “Siamese Twins.”
A major controversy erupted upon completion of the Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia in 1998. These twin towers, at, had a higher architectural height, but a lower absolute pinnacle height and a lower top occupied floor than the Willis Tower in Chicago. Counting buildings as structures with floors throughout, and with antenna masts excluded, the Willis was still considered the tallest at that time. Excluding their spires, which are higher than the flat roof of Willis, the Petronas Towers are not taller than Willis. At their convention in Chicago, the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat found the Willis Tower to be the third-tallest building, and the Petronas Towers to be the world's two tallest buildings.
Responding to the ensuing controversy, the CTBUH then revised their criteria and defined four categories in which the world's tallest building can be measured, retaining the old criterion of height to architectural top, and adding three new categories:
  1. Height to Architectural Top. This measurement is the most widely used and is used to define the rankings of the 100 Tallest Buildings in the World.
  2. Highest Occupied Floor
  3. Height to Top of Roof
  4. Height to Tip
The height-to-roof criterion was discontinued because relatively few modern tall buildings possess flat rooftops, making this criterion difficult to determine and measure. The CTBUH has further clarified their definitions of building height, including specific criteria concerning subbasements and ground level entrances, building completion, condition of the highest occupied floor and other aspects of tall buildings.
The height is measured from the level of the lowest, significant, open-air, pedestrian entrance. At the time, the Willis Tower held first place in the second and third categories, the Petronas Towers held the first category, and the original WTC north tower held the fourth category with its antenna. In 2000, however, a new antenna mast was placed on the Willis Tower, giving it the record in the fourth category. On April 20, 2004, the 101-storey Taipei 101 in Taipei, Taiwan, was completed, taking the world record for the first three categories. On July 21, 2007, it was announced that Burj Khalifa in Dubai, UAE, had surpassed Taipei 101. Since its completion in early 2010, Burj Khalifa leads in all categories with its spire height of.
Before Burj Khalifa was completed, Willis Tower led in the height-to-tip category with after its antenna was extended in 2000, making Willis Tower slightly taller height-to-tip than the WTC north tower's antenna that measured. After the September 11, 2001, attacks, the WTC became the world's tallest two buildings to be destroyed or demolished. They took that distinction from the Singer Building, which stood tall until the late 1960s where One Liberty Plaza now stands right across Church Street from the WTC site.
A different superlative for skyscrapers is their number of floors. The original World Trade Center set that record at 110 in the early 1970s, and this was not surpassed until the Burj Khalifa opened in 2010.
Structures such as the CN Tower, the Ostankino Tower and the Oriental Pearl Tower are excluded from these categories because they are not "habitable buildings", which are defined as frame structures made with floors and walls throughout.

History of record holders in each CTBUH">Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat">CTBUH category

Tallest freestanding structures on land

Freestanding structures must not be supported by guy wires, the sea or other types of support. It therefore does not include guyed masts, partially guyed towers and drilling platforms but does include towers, skyscrapers and chimneys.

The world's tallest freestanding structure on land is defined as the tallest self-supporting artificial structure that stands above ground. This definition is different from that of world's tallest building or world's tallest structure based on the percentage of the structure that is occupied and whether or not it is self-supporting or supported by exterior cables. Likewise, this definition does not count structures that are built underground or on the seabed, such as the Petronius Platform in the Gulf of Mexico. Visit world's tallest structure by category for a list of various other definitions.
The tallest freestanding structure on land is the Burj Khalifa in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. The building surpassed the height of the previous record holder, the CN Tower in Toronto, Ontario, on September 12, 2007. It was completed in 2010, with final height of.

History

The following is a list of structures that have held the title as the tallest freestanding structure on land.
Record fromRecord held Name and locationConstructedHeight Height CoordinatesNotes
c. 10000 BC2000Göbekli Tepe, Anatoliac. 10000 BC5-618The earliest temple of humankind.
c. 8000 BC4000Tower of Jericho, West Bankc. 8000 BC8.528
c. 4000 BC1350Anu Ziggurat, Urukc. 4000 BC1340
c. 2650 BC40Pyramid of Djoser, Egyptc. 2650 BC62203
c. 2610 BC5Meidum Pyramid in Egyptc. 2610 BC93.5307Shortly after completion Meidum Pyramid collapsed due to bad design/instability and is now.
c. 2605 BC5Bent Pyramid in Egyptc. 2605 BC101.1332Angle of slope decreased during construction to avoid collapse.
c. 2600 BC40Red Pyramid of Sneferu, Egyptc. 2600 BC105345
c. 2560 BC3871Great Pyramid of Giza in Egyptc. 2560 BC146481By 1647, the Great Pyramid had eroded to a height of approximately.
1311238Lincoln Cathedral in England1092–1311160525The central spire was destroyed in a storm in 1549. While the reputed height of is accepted by most sources, others consider it doubtful
154920St. Mary's Church in Stralsund, Germany1384–1478151495
15694Beauvais Cathedral in France1225–1604153502Spire collapsed in 1573 ; today, the church stands at a height of.
157394 St. Mary's Church in Stralsund, Germany1384–1478151495The spire burnt down after a lightning strike in 1647. The current spire's height is.
1647227Strasbourg Cathedral in France1439142469By 1647, the Great Pyramid had eroded to a height of approximately hence Strasbourg Cathedral was higher.
18742St. Nikolai in Hamburg, Germany1846–1874147483
18764Cathédrale Notre Dame in Rouen, France1202–1876151495
18804Cologne Cathedral in Germany1248–1880157515 ;
18845Washington Monument in Washington D.C., United States1884169555The world's tallest all-stone structure, as well as the tallest obelisk-form structure.
188941Eiffel Tower in Paris, France1887–1889300986First structure to exceed 300 metres in height. The addition of a telecommunications tower in the 1950s brought the overall height to.
19301Chrysler Building in New York, United States1928–19303191,046
193136Empire State Building in New York, United States1930–19313811,250First building with 100+ storeys. The addition of a pinnacle and antennas later increased its overall height to. This was subsequently lowered to.
19678Ostankino Tower in Moscow, Soviet Union1963–19675401,762Remains the tallest in Europe. Fire in 2000 led to extensive renovation.
197532CN Tower in Toronto, Ontario, Canada1973–19765531,815The tallest in the Western Hemisphere.
2007presentBurj Khalifa in Dubai, United Arab Emirates2004–2009829.82,722Holder of world's tallest freestanding structure. Topped out at in 2009.

Notable mentions include the Pharos of Alexandria, built in the third century BC and estimated between. It was the world's tallest non-pyramidal structure for many centuries. Another notable mention includes the Jetavanaramaya stupa in Anuradhapura, Sri Lanka, which was built in the third century, and was similarly tall at. These were both the world's tallest or second-tallest non-pyramidal structure for over a thousand years.
The tallest secular building between the collapse of the Pharos and the erection of the Washington Monument may have been the Torre del Mangia in Siena, which is tall, and was constructed in the first half of the fourteenth century, and the Torre degli Asinelli in Bologna, also Italy, built between 1109 and 1119.

World's highest observation deck

Timeline of development of world's highest observation deck since inauguration of Eiffel Tower.
Higher observation decks have existed on mountain tops or cliffs, rather than on tall structures. The Grand Canyon Skywalk, constructed in 2007, protrudes over the west rim of the Grand Canyon and is approximately above the Colorado River, making it the highest of these types of structures.

Timeline of guyed structures on land

As most of the tallest structures are guyed masts, here is a timeline of world's tallest guyed masts, since the beginning of radio technology.
As many large guyed masts were destroyed at the end of World War II, the dates for the years between 1945 and 1950 may be incorrect. If Wusung Radio Tower survived World War II, it was the tallest guyed structure shortly after World War II.

Tallest towers

Towers include observation towers, monuments and other structures not generally considered to be "habitable buildings", they are meant for "regular access by humans, but not for living in or office work, and are self-supporting or freestanding, which means no guy-wires for support", meaning it excludes from this list of continuously habitable buildings and skyscrapers as well as radio and TV masts.
Bridge towers or pylons, chimneys, transmission towers, and most large statues allow human access for maintenance, but not as part of their normal operation, and are therefore not considered to be towers.
The Tokyo Skytree, completed in February 2012, is, making it the tallest tower, and second-tallest freestanding structure in the world.

History of tallest tower

The following is a list of structures that have historically held the title as the tallest towers in the world.
FromToTowerTownPinnacle height
280 BC1180 ADPharos LighthouseAlexandria, Egypt122 m
11801240Malmesbury Abbey TowerMalmesbury, UK131.3 m
12401311Tower of Old St Paul's CathedralLondon, UK150 m
13111549Tower of Lincoln CathedralLincoln, UK159.7 m
15491647Tower of St Mary's churchStralsund, Germany151 m
16471874Tower of Strasbourg CathedralStrasbourg, France142 m
18741876Tower of St. NikolaiHamburg, Germany147 m
18761880Tower of Rouen CathedralRouen, France151 m
18801889Tower of Cologne CathedralCologne, Germany157.38 m
18891958Eiffel TowerParis, France312.3 m
19581967Tokyo TowerTokyo, Japan332.6 m
19671975Ostankino TowerMoscow, Russia540.1 m
19752010CN TowerToronto, Ontario, Canada553.33 m
20102011Canton TowerGuangzhou, China600 m
2011presentTokyo SkytreeTokyo, Japan634 m

Tallest structures, freestanding structures, and buildings

The list categories are:
Notes:
Source: