AllFrontierGlobal · business library
Business library › World's tallest buildings

World's tallest buildings

Here is a list of some of the world's tallest buildings as of 2024: Burj Khalifa - Dubai, UAEHeight: 828 meters (2,717 feet)Floors: 163Completed: 2010 Merd

Difficulty FoundationalRead ~1 minBloom UnderstandConcepts 8 linkedCluster Cluster WMode Chat-ready
Chat with AI about this

Here is a list of some of the world's tallest buildings as of 2024:

  1. Burj Khalifa - Dubai, UAE
    Height: 828 meters (2,717 feet)
    Floors: 163
    Completed: 2010
  2. Merdeka 118 - Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
    Height: 678.9 meters (2,227 feet)
    Floors: 118
    Completed: 2022
  3. Shanghai Tower - Shanghai, China
    Height: 632 meters (2,073 feet)
    Floors: 128
    Completed: 2015
  4. Abraj Al-Bait Clock Tower - Mecca, Saudi Arabia
    Height: 601 meters (1,971 feet)
    Floors: 120
    Completed: 2012
  5. Ping An Finance Centre - Shenzhen, China
    Height: 599 meters (1,965 feet)
    Floors: 115
    Completed: 2017
  6. Lotte World Tower - Seoul, South Korea
    Height: 555 meters (1,819 feet)
    Floors: 123
    Completed: 2016
  7. One World Trade Center - New York City, USA
    Height: 541 meters (1,776 feet)
    Floors: 104
    Completed: 2014
  8. Guangzhou CTF Finance Centre - Guangzhou, China
    Height: 530 meters (1,740 feet)
    Floors: 111
    Completed: 2016
  9. Tianjin CTF Finance Centre - Tianjin, China
    Height: 530 meters (1,739 feet)
    Floors: 98
    Completed: 2019
  10. China Zun (CITIC Tower) - Beijing, China
    Height: 528 meters (1,732 feet)
    Floors: 108
    Completed: 2018

These buildings represent the pinnacle of modern architectural and engineering achievements, with heights that define the skylines of their respective cities.

Chat with AI about this

Prompt pack

Live intelligence

Latest research — open scholarly works
Books — titles on this topic
In context — encyclopaedic summary

See also

AI for world peaceAI vs World ChampionsWorld explorersWorld's most expensiveWorld's most populousWorld Trade InstitutionsOne Bad AppleThe confusion of truth