Precursors The
tallest structure in ancient times was the
Great Pyramid of Giza in
ancient Egypt, built in the 26th century BC. It was not surpassed in height for thousands of years, the
Lincoln Cathedral having exceeded it in 1311–1549, before its central spire collapsed. The latter in turn was not surpassed until the
Washington Monument in 1884, which was surpassed by the
Eiffel Tower in 1889, the first ever supertall structure. However, being uninhabited, none of these structures actually comply with the modern definition of a skyscraper. In 1930, the
Chrysler Building surpassed the Eiffel Tower by pinnacle height, becoming the tallest structure built until then and the first supertall skyscraper by pinnacle height, only to be surpassed a year later in every regard by the
Empire State Building as the first supertall skyscraper also by roof height. High-rise apartments flourished in
classical antiquity.
Ancient Roman insulae in
imperial cities reached 10 and more stories. Beginning with
Augustus (r. 30 BC-14 AD), several
emperors attempted to establish limits of for multi-stories buildings, but were met with only limited success. Lower floors were typically occupied by shops or wealthy families, with the upper rented to the lower classes. The skylines of many important
medieval cities had large numbers of high-rise urban towers, built by the wealthy for defense and status. The residential
Towers of 12th century
Bologna numbered between 80 and 100 at a time, the tallest of which is the high Asinelli Tower. A
Florentine law of 1251 decreed that all urban buildings be immediately reduced to less than . Even medium-sized towns of the era are known to have proliferations of towers, such as the 72 towers that ranged up to height in
San Gimignano.
Cairo in the 16th century had high-rise
apartment buildings where the two lower floors were for commercial and storage purposes and the multiple stories above them were
rented out to
tenants. An early example of a city consisting entirely of high-rise housing is the 16th-century city of
Shibam in Yemen. Shibam was made up of over 500 tower houses, 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. Shibam still has the tallest
mudbrick buildings in the world, with many of them over high. An early modern 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, although only partially iron framed, is
The Flaxmill in
Shrewsbury, England. Built in 1797, it is seen as the "grandfather of skyscrapers", since its fireproof combination of cast iron columns and cast iron beams developed into the modern steel frame that made modern skyscrapers possible. In 2013 funding was confirmed to convert the derelict building into offices.
Early skyscrapers in
Liverpool is the world's first metal framed glass
curtain walled building. The stone
mullions are decorative. in
Montevideo, was the tallest
reinforced concrete structure at 100 m (330 ft) high. In 1857,
Elisha Otis introduced the
safety elevator at the
E. V. Haughwout Building in New York City, allowing convenient and safe transport to buildings' upper floors. Otis later introduced the first commercial passenger elevators to the
Equitable Life Building in 1870, considered by some architectural historians to be the first skyscraper. Another crucial development was the use of a steel frame instead of stone or brick, otherwise the walls on the lower floors on a tall building would be too thick to be practical. An early development in this area was
Oriel Chambers in
Liverpool, England, built in 1864. It was only five floors high. The
Royal Academy of Arts states, "critics at the time were horrified by its 'large agglomerations of protruding plate glass bubbles'. In fact, it was a precursor to Modernist architecture, being the first building in the world to feature a metal-framed glass
curtain wall, a design element which creates light, airy interiors and has since been used the world over as a defining feature of skyscrapers". Further developments led to what many individuals and organizations consider the world's first skyscraper, the ten-story
Home Insurance Building in Chicago, built from 1884 to 1885. While its original height of 42.1 m (138 ft) does not qualify as a skyscraper today, it was record setting for the day. The building of tall buildings in the 1880s gave the skyscraper its first architectural movement, broadly termed the
Chicago School, which developed what has been called the Commercial Style. The architect, Major
William Le Baron Jenney, created a 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. This was then draped with a stone curtain for aesthetic purposes. This development led to the "Chicago skeleton" form of construction. In addition to the steel frame, the Home Insurance Building also utilized fireproofing, elevators, and electrical wiring, key elements in most skyscrapers today.
Burnham and Root's
Rand McNally Building in Chicago, 1889, was the first all-steel framed skyscraper, while
Louis Sullivan's
Wainwright Building in St. Louis, Missouri, 1891, was the first
steel-framed building with soaring vertical bands to emphasize the height of the building and is therefore considered to be the first early skyscraper. In 1889, the
Mole Antonelliana in Italy was 197 m (549 ft) tall. Most early skyscrapers emerged in the land-strapped areas of New York City and Chicago toward the end of the 19th century. A land boom in
Melbourne, Australia between 1888 and 1891 spurred the creation of a significant number of early skyscrapers, though none of these were steel reinforced and few remain today. Height limits and fire restrictions were later introduced. In the late 1800s,
London builders found building heights limited due to issues with existing buildings. High-rise development in London is restricted at certain sites if it would obstruct
protected views of
St Paul's Cathedral and other historic buildings. This policy, 'St Paul's Heights', has officially been in operation since 1927. Concerns about
aesthetics and fire safety had likewise hampered the development of skyscrapers across continental Europe for the first half of the 20th century. By 1940, there were around 100 high-rise buildings in Europe (
List of early skyscrapers). Some examples of these are the tall 1898
Witte Huis (White House) in
Rotterdam; the tall
PAST Building (1906–1908) in
Warsaw; the
Royal Liver Building in Liverpool, completed in 1911 and high; the tall 1924
Marx House in
Düsseldorf, the tall
Borsigturm in
Berlin, built in 1924, the tall
Hansahochhaus in
Cologne, Germany, built in 1925; the
Kungstornen ''(Kings' Towers)'' in
Stockholm, Sweden, which were built 1924–25; the
Ullsteinhaus in Berlin, Germany, built in 1927; the
Edificio Telefónica in
Madrid, Spain, built in 1929; the
Boerentoren in Antwerp, Belgium, built in 1932; the
Prudential Building in
Warsaw, Poland, built in 1934; and the
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 the lead by 1895 with the completion of the tall
American Surety Building, leaving New York with the title of the world's tallest building for many years. America by far produced the most skyscrapers in this period.
Modern skyscrapers Modern skyscrapers are built with
steel or
reinforced concrete frameworks and
curtain walls of
glass or
polished stone. They use mechanical equipment such as
water pumps and
elevators. Since the 1960s, according to the CTBUH (Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat) the skyscraper has been reoriented away from a symbol for
North American corporate power to instead communicate a city or nation's place in the world. The construction of very tall skyscrapers entered a three-decades-long era of stagnation in 1930 due to the
Great Depression and then
World War II. Shortly after the war ended, Russia began construction on a series of skyscrapers in
Moscow. Seven, dubbed the "
Seven Sisters", were built between 1947 and 1953; and one, the
Main building of Moscow State University, was the tallest building in Europe for nearly four decades (1953–1990). Other skyscrapers in the style of
Socialist Classicism were erected in East Germany (
Frankfurter Tor), Poland (
PKiN), Ukraine (
Hotel Moscow), Latvia (
Academy of Sciences), and other
Eastern Bloc countries.
Western European countries also began to permit taller skyscrapers during the years immediately following World War II. Early examples include
Edificio España (Spain) and
Torre Breda (Italy). From the 1930s onward, skyscrapers began to appear in various cities in
East and
Southeast Asia as well as in
Latin America. Finally, they also began to be constructed in cities in Africa, the Middle East,
South Asia, and Oceania from the late 1950s. Skyscraper projects after World War II typically rejected the classical designs of the
early skyscrapers, instead embracing the uniform
international style; many older skyscrapers were redesigned to suit contemporary tastes or even demolished—such as New York's
Singer Building, once the world's tallest skyscraper. German-American architect
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe became one of the world's most renowned architects in the second half of the 20th century. He conceived the glass façade skyscraper and, along with Norwegian
Fred Severud, designed the
Seagram Building in 1958, a skyscraper that is often regarded as the pinnacle of modernist high-rise architecture. Skyscraper construction surged throughout the 1960s. The impetus behind the upswing was a series of transformative innovations which made it possible for people to live and work in "cities in the sky". at the
Willis Tower in Chicago. Khan made important advancements in skyscraper engineering. In the early 1960s
Bangladeshi-American structural engineer
Fazlur Rahman Khan, considered the "father of
tubular designs" for high-rises, discovered that the dominating rigid
steel frame structure was not the only system apt for tall buildings, marking a new era of skyscraper construction in terms of multiple
structural systems. His central innovation in
skyscraper design and construction was the concept of the
"tube" structural system, including the "framed tube", "trussed tube", and "bundled tube". His "tube concept", using all the exterior wall perimeter structure of a building to simulate a thin-walled tube, revolutionized tall building design. These systems allow greater economic efficiency, and also allow skyscrapers to take on various shapes, no longer needing to be rectangular and box-shaped. including the hundred-story
John Hancock Center and the massive
Willis Tower. Other pioneers of this field include
Hal Iyengar,
William LeMessurier, and
Minoru Yamasaki, the architect of the
World Trade Center. Many buildings designed in the 1970s lacked a particular style and recalled ornamentation from earlier buildings designed before the 1950s. These design plans ignored the environment and loaded structures with decorative elements and extravagant finishes. This approach to design was opposed by Fazlur Khan and he considered the designs to be whimsical rather than rational. Moreover, he considered the work to be a waste of precious natural resources. Khan's work promoted
structures integrated with architecture and the least use of material resulting in the smallest impact on the environment. The next era of skyscrapers will focus on the environment including performance of structures, types of material, construction practices, absolute minimal use of materials/natural resources, embodied energy within the structures, and more importantly, a holistically integrated building systems approach. Vanity height, according to the CTBUH, is the distance between the highest floor and its architectural top (excluding antennae, flagpole or other functional extensions). Vanity height first appeared in New York City skyscrapers as early as the 1920s and 1930s but supertall buildings have relied on such uninhabitable extensions for on average 30% of their height, raising potential definitional and sustainability issues. The current era of skyscrapers focuses on
sustainability, its built and natural environments, including the performance of structures, types of materials, construction practices, absolute minimal use of materials and natural resources, energy within the structure, and a holistically integrated building systems approach.
LEED is a current
green building standard. Architecturally, with the movements of
Postmodernism,
New Urbanism and
New Classical Architecture, that established since the 1980s, a more classical approach came back to global skyscraper design, that remains popular today. Examples are the
Wells Fargo Center,
NBC Tower,
Parkview Square,
30 Park Place, the
Messeturm, the iconic
Petronas Towers and
Jin Mao Tower. Other contemporary styles and movements in skyscraper design include
organic,
sustainable,
neo-futurist,
structuralist,
high-tech,
deconstructivist,
blob,
digital,
streamline,
novelty,
critical regionalist,
vernacular,
Neo Art Deco and
neohistorist, also known as
revivalist. 3 September is the global commemorative day for skyscrapers, called "Skyscraper Day". New York City developers 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. The first completed tall
World Trade Center tower became the world's tallest building in 1972. However, it was overtaken by the Sears Tower (now
Willis Tower) in Chicago within two years. The tall Sears Tower stood as the world's tallest building for 24 years, from 1974 until 1998, until it was edged out by
Petronas Twin Towers in Kuala Lumpur, which held the title for six years. ==Design and construction==