Dictionary Definition
skyscraper n : a very tall building with many
stories
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- A very tall building with a great number of floors.
- In the context of "archaic": A small sail atop a mast of a ship.
Translations
tall building
- Afrikaans: wolkekrabber
- Arabic:
- Basque: etxeorratz
- Belarusian: небасяг (nebasǎg)
- Bosnian: neboder
- Bulgarian: небостъргач (nebostărgač)
- Catalan: gratacel
- Chinese: 摩天大樓 (mó.tiān.dà.lóu)
- Croatian: neboder
- Czech: mrakodrap
- Danish: skyskraber
- Dutch: wolkenkrabber
- Esperanto: nubskrapulo
- Estonian: pilvelõhkuja
- Finnish: pilvenpiirtäjä
- French: gratte-ciel
- Galician: rañaceos
- German: Wolkenkratzer , Hochhaus
- Greek: ουρανοξύστης (ouranoxýstēs)
- Hebrew: גורד שחקים
- Hungarian: felhőkarcoló
- Indonesian: pencakar langit
- Italian: grattacielo
- Japanese: 超高層ビル (tyou.kou.sou-biru) 摩天楼 (matenrou)
- Korean: 마천루 (ma.cŏn.ru)
- Kurdish: balexane
- Lithuanian: dangoraižis
- Norwegian: skyskraper
- Occitan: gratacèl
- Persian:
- Polish: wieżowiec
- Portuguese: arranha-céu
- Romanian: zgârie-nori
- Russian: небоскрёб (neboskrǒb)
- Slovak: mrakodrap
- Slovenian: nebotičnik
- Spanish: rascacielos
- Swedish: skyskrapa
- Tamil: வானளாவி (vāṅaḷāvi)
- Thai: (tiikrafâa)
- Turkish: gökdelen
- Ukrainian: хмарочос (hmaročos)
- Urdu:
- Vietnamese: nhà chọc trời
sail
Extensive Definition
A skyscraper is a tall, continuously habitable
building. There is no
official definition or a precise cutoff height above which a
building may clearly be classified as a skyscraper. However, as per
usual practice in most cities, the definition is used empirically,
depending on the relative impact of the shape of a building to a
city's overall skyline. Thus, depending on the average height of
the rest of the buildings and/ or structures in a city, even a
building of 80 meters height (approximately 262 ft) may be
considered a skyscraper provided that it clearly stands out above
its surrounding built environment and significantly changes the
overall skyline of that particular city.
The word "skyscraper" originally was a
nautical term referring to a tall mast or its main sail on a
sailing
ship. The term was first applied to buildings in the late 19th
century as a result of public amazement at the tall buildings being
built in Chicago and
New
York City. The traditional definition of a skyscraper began
with the "first skyscraper", a steel-framed ten story building.
Chicago's now demolished ten story steel-framed Home
Insurance Building (1885) is generally accepted as the "first
skyscraper".
The structural definition of the word skyscraper
was refined later by architectural historians, based on engineering
developments of the 1880s that had enabled construction of tall
multi-storey buildings. This definition was based on the steel
skeleton—as opposed to constructions of load-bearing masonry, which passed their
practical limit in 1891
with Chicago's Monadnock
Building. Philadelphia's
City Hall, completed in 1901,
still holds claim as the world's tallest load-bearing masonry
structure at 167 m (548 ft). The steel frame developed in stages of
increasing self-sufficiency, with several buildings in Chicago and
New York advancing the technology that allowed the steel frame to
carry a building on its own. Today, however, many of the tallest
skyscrapers are built almost entirely with reinforced
concrete. Pumps and storage
tanks maintain water
pressure at the top of skyscrapers.
A loose convention in the United
States and Europe now draws the
lower limit of a skyscraper at 150 meters (500 ft). A skyscraper
taller than 300 meters (984 ft) may be referred to as
supertall. Shorter buildings are still sometimes referred to as
skyscrapers if they appear to dominate their surroundings.
The somewhat arbitrary term skyscraper should not
be confused with the slightly less arbitrary term highrise, defined by the
Emporis Standards Committee as "...a multi-storey structure
with at least 12 floors or 35 meters (115 feet) in height." Some
structural
engineers define a highrise as any vertical construction for
which wind is a more
significant load factor
than weight. Note that
this criterion fits not only high rises but some other tall
structures, such as towers.
The word skyscraper often carries a connotation
of pride and achievement. The skyscraper, in name and social
function, is a modern expression of the age-old symbol of the
world
center or axis mundi: a pillar that connects earth to heaven
and the four compass directions to one another.
History
Modern skyscrapers are built with materials such as steel, glass, reinforced concrete and granite, and routinely utilize mechanical equipment such as water pumps and elevators. Until the 19th century, buildings of over six stories were rare, as having great numbers of stairs to climb was impractical for inhabitants, and water pressure was usually insufficient to supply running water above . An early example of high-rise housing is the 16th-century city of Shibam in Yemen, which is regarded as one of the earliest example of urban planning based on the principle of vertical construction. Shibam was made up of over 500 tower houses, each one rising 5 to 9 storeys high, with each floor being an apartment occupied by a single family. The city was built in this way in order to protect it from Bedouin attacks.Another early example of high-rise housing was in
17th-century Edinburgh,
Scotland,
where a defensive city wall defined the boundaries of the city. Due
to the restricted land area available for development, the houses
increased in height instead. Buildings of 11 stories were common,
and there are records of buildings as high as 14 stories. Many of
the stone-built structures can still be seen today in the old town
of Edinburgh.
The oldest iron framed building in the world is
The
Flaxmill (also locally known as the "Maltings"), in Shrewsbury,
England.
Built in 1797,
it is seen as the "grandfather of skyscrapers” due to its fireproof
combination of cast iron columns and cast iron beams developed into
the modern steel frame that made modern skyscrapers possible.
Unfortunately, it lies derelict and needs much investment to keep
it standing. On 31 March 2005, it was announced that English
Heritage would buy the Flaxmill so that it could be
redeveloped.
The first skyscraper was the ten-storey Home
Insurance Building in Chicago, built in
1884–1885.
While its height is not considered unusual or very impressive
today, the architect, Major William Le Baron Jenney, created the
first load-bearing structural frame. In this building, a steel
frame supported the entire weight of the walls, instead of
load-bearing walls carrying the weight of the building, which was
the usual method. This development led to the "Chicago skeleton"
form of construction. After Jenney's accomplishment the sky was
truly the limit as far as building was concerned.
Sullivan's Wainwright
Building building in St.
Louis, 1891,
was the first steel frame building with soaring vertical bands to
emphasize the height of the building, and is, therefore, considered
by some to be the first true skyscraper.
The United Kingdom also had its share of early
skyscrapers. The first building to fit the engineering definition,
meanwhile, was the then largest hotel in the world, the Grand
Midland Hotel, now known as St
Pancras Chambers in London, opened in 1873
with a clock tower
82 metres (269 ft) in height. The 12-floor Shell Mex
House in London, at 58 metres (190 ft), was completed a year
after the Home Insurance Building and managed to beat it in both
height and floor count. 1877
saw the opening of the Gothic
revival style Manchester
Town Hall by Alfred
Waterhouse. Its 87-metre-high clock and bell tower dominated
that city's skyline for almost a century.
Most early skyscrapers emerged in the
land-strapped areas of Chicago, London, and New York toward the end
of the 19th century. A land boom in Melbourne,
Australia
between 1888-1891 spurned a significant number of early
skyscrapers, though none of these were steel reinforced and few
remain today and height limits and fire restrictions were later
introduced. London builders soon found building heights limited due
to a complaint from Queen Victoria, rules that continued to exist
with few exceptions until the 1950s; concerns about aesthetics and
fire safety had likewise hampered the development of skyscrapers
across continental Europe for the first half of the twentieth
century (with the notable exceptions of the 26-storey Boerentoren in
Antwerp,
Belgium,
built in 1932, and the 31-storey Torre Piacentini in Genoa, Italy, built in
1940). After an early competition between New York City and Chicago
for the world's tallest building, New York took a firm lead by 1895
with the completion of the American Surety Building. Developers in
Chicago also found themselves hampered by laws limiting height to
about 40 storeys, leaving New York to hold the title of tallest
building for many years. New York City developers then competed
among themselves, with successively taller buildings claiming the
title of "world's tallest" in the 1920s and early 1930s,
culminating with the completion of the Chrysler
Building in 1930 and the Empire
State Building in 1931, the world's tallest building for forty
years. From the 1930s onwards, skyscrapers also began to appear in
Latin
America (São Paulo,
Caracas,
Mexico
City) and in Asia (Tokyo, Shanghai, Hong Kong,
Singapore).
Immediately after World War
II, the Soviet Union
planned eight massive skyscrapers dubbed "Stalin
Towers" for Moscow; seven of
these were eventually built. The rest of Europe also slowly began
to permit skyscrapers, starting with Madrid, in Spain,
during the 1950s. Finally, skyscrapers also began to appear in
Africa, the Middle East and Oceania (mainly Australia) from the
late 1950s and early 1960s.
Still today no city in the world has more
completed individual free-standing buildings over 492 ft. (150 m)
than New York City.. Hong Kong comes in with the most in the entire
world, if one counts individually the multiple towers that rise
from a common podium (as
Emporis
does), in buildings that rise several stories as a single structure
before splitting into two or more columns of floors. The number of
skyscrapers in Hong Kong will continue to increase, due to a
prolonged highrise building boom and high demand for office and
housing space in the area. A new
building complex in Kowloon contains
several mixed-use towers (hotel-shops-residential) and
one of them will be 118 stories tall.
Chicago's skyline was not allowed to grow until
the height limits were relaxed in 1960; over the next fifteen years
many towers were built, including the massive 442-meter
(1,451-foot) Sears Tower,
leading to its current number of buildings over 492 ft. Chicago is
currently undergoing an epic construction boom that will greatly
add to the city's skyline. Since 2000, at least 40 buildings at a
minimum of 50 stories high have been built. The Chicago
Spire,
Trump International Hotel and Tower (Chicago), Waterview
Tower, Mandarin
Oriental Tower, 29-39 South LaSalle, Park
Michigan, and Aqua are some of the
more notable projects currently underway in the city that invented
the skyscraper. Chicago, Hong Kong, and New York City, otherwise
known as the "the big three," are recognized in most architectural
circles as having the most compelling skylines in the world. Other
large cities that are currently experiencing major building booms
involving skyscrapers include Shanghai in
China,
Dubai in the
United
Arab Emirates and Miami, which now is
third in the United States.
Today, skyscrapers are an increasingly common
sight where land is scarce, as in the centres of big cities,
because of the high ratio of rentable floor space per area of land.
Skyscrapers, like temples and palaces in the past, are considered
symbols of a city's economic power. In an overall basis, not only
skyscrapers define a skyline, they also play an important role to
define an identity of a city. (See Skyline)
History of tallest skyscrapers
At the beginning of the 20th century, New York City was a center for the Beaux-Arts architectural movement, attracting the talents of such great architects as Stanford White and Carrere and Hastings. As better construction and engineering technology become available as the century progressed, New York became the focal point of the competition for the tallest building in the world. The city's striking skyline has been composed of numerous and varied skyscrapers, many of which are icons of 20th century architecture:- The Flatiron Building, standing 285 ft (87 m) high, was one of the tallest buildings in the city upon its completion in 1902, made possible by its steel skeleton. It was one of the first buildings designed with a steel framework, and to achieve this height with other construction methods of that time would have been very difficult.
- The Woolworth Building, a neo-Gothic "Cathedral of Commerce" overlooking City Hall, was designed by Cass Gilbert. At 792 feet (241 m), it became the world's tallest building upon its completion in 1913, an honor it retained until 1930, when it was overtaken by 40 Wall Street.
- That same year, the Chrysler Building took the lead as the tallest building in the world, scraping the sky at 1,046 feet (319 m). More impressive than its height is the building's design, by William Van Alen. An art deco masterpiece with an exterior crafted of brick, the Chrysler Building continues to be a favorite of New Yorkers to this day.
- The Empire State Building, the first building to have more than 100 floors (it has 102), was completed the following year. It was designed by Shreve, Lamb and Harmon in the contemporary Art Deco style. The tower takes its name from the nickname of New York State. Upon its completion in 1931, it took the top spot as tallest building, and at 1,472 feet (448 m) to the very top of the antenna, towered above all other buildings until 1973.
- When the World Trade Center towers were completed in 1973 many felt them to be sterile monstrosities, even though they were the world's tallest buildings at that time. But most New Yorkers became fond of "The Twin Towers",until the loss of lives in the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks there came great sadness for the loss of the buildings. The Empire State Building is again the tallest building in New York City.
Momentum in setting records passed from the
Unites States to other nations in 1997 with the opening of the
Petronas
Twin Towers in Kuala
Lumpur, Malaysia. The
record for world's tallest building remained in Asia with the
opening of Taipei 101 in
Taipei,
Taiwan, in
2004. A number of architectural records will reside in the Middle East
2009 with the opening of the Burj Dubai in
Dubai,
UAE.
With this geographical transition a change can be
seen in the approach to skyscraper design. For much of the
twentieth century large buildings such as the Sears Tower and World
Trade Center (New York) took the form of simple geometrical shapes.
They were designed as large boxes. This reflected the
"international style" or modernist
philosophy shaped by Bauhaus architects
early in the century. By the 1990s skyscraper design began to
exhibit postmodernist
influences. The newest record setters, though modern, incorporate
traditional architectural features associated with the part of the
world where they stand. Taipei 101 recalls the traditions of Asian
pagoda architecture even
as the Burj Dubai incorporates motifs
from traditional Arabic art.
The result in each case is a building that does not look equally at
home in any skyline in any city in the world, but a building that
reflects its own continent and culture.
For current rankings of skyscrapers by height,
see List of
skyscrapers.
The following list measures height of the roof.
The more common gauge is the highest architectural detail; such
ranking would have included Petronas
Towers, built in 1998. See list of
skyscrapers for details.
Source: emporis.com
Future Skyscrapers
The following skyscrapers are either approved or due to be completed in the near future:- Construction of the Burj Dubai is taking place in Dubai. Its exact future height has been kept secret, but it is expected to become at least high, making it the tallest building in the world. The Burj Dubai is due to be completed in June 2009.
- Construction has started for a skyscraper in Chicago to be completed in 2011. The Chicago Spire, with 150 floors, will be the tallest residential building in the world. Designed by Santiago Calatrava, it will also hold the title of North America's tallest free-standing structure.
- The Freedom Tower is now under construction and is the main tower comprising the redevelopment of the site of the former Twin Towers of the World Trade Center in New York following the attacks of September 11, 2001. Its antenna will reach a height of .
- Standing at and scheduled to be completed in 2008, the Shanghai World Financial Center will surpass its neighbour Jin Mao Tower to become the tallest skyscraper in Shanghai and in mainland China.
- The Tour Generali in Paris La Défense, scheduled to be completed in 2011, is an entirely green building office skyscraper that is set to be the tallest building in Paris and in the European Union.
- Construction is expected to start for the Shard London Bridge, also known as the Shard of Glass, at the beginning of 2008. At , it is set to be the tallest building in the United Kingdom and the second tallest in the European Union after the Tour Generali in Paris when completed in 2012.
Quotations
-
- ''"What is the chief characteristic of the tall office building? It is lofty. It must be tall. The force and power of altitude must be in it, the glory and pride of exaltation must be in it. It must be every inch a proud and soaring thing, rising in sheer exaltation that from bottom to top it is a unit without a single dissenting line."
See also
References
- Skyscrapers: Form and Function, by David Bennett, Simon & Schuster, 1995.
External links
- Historical photos of skyscrapers in New York City
- Skyscraper Museum
- Tallest Building in the World
- SkyscraperPage Technical information and diagrams
- SkyScrapers.org High Resolution skyscraper illustrations.
- 1880s "skyscraper" citations from word researcher Barry Popik.
skyscraper in Afrikaans: Wolkekrabber
skyscraper in Arabic: ناطحة سحاب
skyscraper in Belarusian (Tarashkevitsa):
Небасяг
skyscraper in Bosnian: Neboder
skyscraper in Bulgarian: Небостъргач
skyscraper in Catalan: Gratacel
skyscraper in Czech: Mrakodrap
skyscraper in Danish: Skyskraber
skyscraper in German: Wolkenkratzer
skyscraper in Estonian: Pilvelõhkuja
skyscraper in Modern Greek (1453-):
Ουρανοξύστης
skyscraper in Spanish: Rascacielos
skyscraper in Esperanto: Nubskrapulo
skyscraper in Basque: Etxeorratz
skyscraper in Persian: آسمانخراش
skyscraper in French: Gratte-ciel
skyscraper in Galician: Rañaceos
skyscraper in Korean: 마천루
skyscraper in Hindi: गगनचुम्बी इमारत
skyscraper in Croatian: Neboder
skyscraper in Indonesian: Pencakar langit
skyscraper in Ossetian: Арвысхъауæг
skyscraper in Icelandic: Skýjakljúfur
skyscraper in Italian: Grattacielo
skyscraper in Hebrew: גורד שחקים
skyscraper in Georgian: ცათამბჯენი
skyscraper in Latvian: Debesskrāpis
skyscraper in Lithuanian: Dangoraižis
skyscraper in Hungarian: Felhőkarcoló
skyscraper in Malay (macrolanguage): Pencakar
langit
skyscraper in Dutch: Wolkenkrabber
skyscraper in Japanese: 超高層建築物
skyscraper in Norwegian: Skyskraper
skyscraper in Norwegian Nynorsk:
Skyskrapar
skyscraper in Occitan (post 1500):
Gratacèl
skyscraper in Polish: Wieżowiec
skyscraper in Portuguese: Arranha-céu
skyscraper in Romanian: Zgârie-nori
skyscraper in Russian: Небоскрёб
skyscraper in Simple English: Skyscraper
skyscraper in Slovak: Mrakodrap
skyscraper in Slovenian: Nebotičnik
skyscraper in Serbian: Облакодер
skyscraper in Finnish: Pilvenpiirtäjä
skyscraper in Swedish: Skyskrapa
skyscraper in Tamil: வானளாவி
skyscraper in Thai: ตึกระฟ้า
skyscraper in Vietnamese: Nhà chọc trời
skyscraper in Turkish: Gökdelen
skyscraper in Ukrainian: Хмарочоси
skyscraper in Urdu: بلند ترین عمارات
skyscraper in Yiddish: וואלקן קראצער
skyscraper in Contenese: 摩天大廈
skyscraper in Chinese: 摩天大樓
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
antenna tower, architecture, barbican, belfry, bell tower, building, campanile, casa, cliff dwelling, colossus, column, construct, construction, consulate, country house,
country seat, cupola,
dacha, deanery, derrick, dome, dwelling house, edifice, embassy, erection, establishment, fabric, farm, farmhouse, fire tower,
hall, house, houseboat, lake dwelling,
lantern, lighthouse, living machine,
lodge, manor house,
manse, martello, martello tower,
mast, minaret, monument, obelisk, observation tower,
packaged house, pagoda,
parsonage, penthouse, pilaster, pile, pillar, pinnacle, pole, prefab, prefabricated house,
prefabrication,
presidential palace, pylon, pyramid, ranch house, rectory, roof, shaft, sod house, spire, split-level, standpipe, steeple, structure, stupa, superstructure,
television mast, tope,
tour, tower, town house, turret, vicarage, water tower, windmill
tower