How We Rank Skyscrapers is Absurd

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  • čas přidán 27. 12. 2023
  • Head to givewell.org to make your donation that does the most help. To get your donation matched, choose CZcams | Stewart Hicks.
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    _Description_
    Join me on an enlightening journey through the world of skyscrapers and sandwiches in my latest video! As an architecture enthusiast and proud Chicagoan, I delve into the contentious topic of building heights - specifically, the debate surrounding the Willis Tower, Petronas Towers, and One World Trade Center.
    Exploring Skyscraper Controversies: We start with an Italian beef sandwich in hand, symbolizing my "beef" with the official height rankings of these iconic buildings. Why does the Willis Tower, a symbol of Chicago's architectural prowess, rank lower than its competitors?
    Investigating the Criteria: Through historical clips, expert interviews, and a humorous yet informative narrative, we uncover how the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat (CTBUH) determines these rankings. You won't believe the complexities involved in measuring a building's height!
    A Historical Perspective: Travel back in time to the Home Insurance Building in Chicago, considered the world's first skyscraper, and discover how definitions and standards have evolved. Did you know about the New York Tribune Building and its role in this height race?
    Global Skyscraper Race: Witness how the race for the tallest building shifted from the U.S. to Asia, transforming city skylines worldwide. I share insights on the factors driving this trend, from technological advancements to cultural aspirations.
    Beyond Height: Learn why skyscraper height might just be a "vanity metric." We highlight innovative structures that prioritize sustainability and functionality over mere height, showcasing the future of skyscraper design.
    A Culinary Conclusion: As I savor my sandwich, I reflect on the true meaning of building tall. It's not just about reaching the sky but about how these structures shape our cities and identities.
    Interactive Elements: Pause the video to digest detailed definitions and criteria for skyscraper heights, and don't miss the intriguing footnotes!
    Visual Delights: Experience stunning visuals, including overhead shots, historical footage, and dynamic animations that bring the story of skyscrapers to life.
    Engage with Us: Like, share, and subscribe for more content where architecture meets storytelling. Comment below with your thoughts on skyscraper heights and your favorite sandwich!
    _CREDITS_
    Video co-produced and edited by Evan Montgomery.
    Stock video and imagery provided by Getty Images, Storyblocks, and Shutterstock.
    Music provided by Epidemic Sound
    #Architecture #Skyscrapers #Chicago #WillisTower #PetronasTowers #OneWorldTradeCenter #UrbanDesign #History #CZcams #Education #Entertainment
    Dive into this architectural adventure and discover why the tallest buildings might not always be what they seem. It's a blend of education, humor, and, of course, good food!
    _Membership_
    Join this channel to get access to perks:
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    _About the Channel_
    Architecture with Stewart is a CZcams journey exploring architecture’s deep and enduring stories in all their bewildering glory. Weekly videos and occasional live events breakdown a wide range of topics related to the built environment in order to increase their general understanding and advocate their importance in shaping the world we inhabit.
    _About Me_
    Stewart Hicks is an architectural design educator that leads studios and lecture courses as an Associate Professor in the School of Architecture at the University of Illinois at Chicago. He also serves as an Associate Dean in the College of Architecture, Design, and the Arts and is the co-founder of the practice Design With Company. His work has earned awards such as the Architecture Record Design Vanguard Award or the Young Architect’s Forum Award and has been featured in exhibitions such as the Chicago Architecture Biennial and Design Miami, as well as at the V&A Museum and Tate Modern in London. His writings can be found in the co-authored book Misguided Tactics for Propriety Calibration, published with the Graham Foundation, as well as essays in MONU magazine, the AIA Journal Manifest, Log, bracket, and the guest-edited issue of MAS Context on the topic of character architecture.
    _Contact_
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    University of Illinois at Chicago School of Architecture: arch.uic.edu/
    #architecture #urbandesign

Komentáře • 1,5K

  • @duncanbeggs4088
    @duncanbeggs4088 Před 5 měsíci +2204

    This would be like a 5'6" guy growing a huge mohawk and suddenly insisting that he's 6'2"

    • @mgscheue
      @mgscheue Před 5 měsíci +38

      Ha, yes!

    • @skurinski
      @skurinski Před 5 měsíci +64

      Or wearing platform shoes

    • @shaami8622
      @shaami8622 Před 5 měsíci +126

      Hence why part of the criteria is "a spire, which neither be added or be removed". Its like saying youre born with a freakishly long neck and so is part of your overall height.

    • @johnh8705
      @johnh8705 Před 5 měsíci +15

      Women use their height in heels as gospel

    • @drewidlifestyle7883
      @drewidlifestyle7883 Před 5 měsíci +4

      @@shaami8622but hair is natural

  • @erinwiebe7026
    @erinwiebe7026 Před 5 měsíci +2653

    I'm not a Chicagoan, or even an American. But to me, this building is and will forever be the Sears Tower.

    • @PiousMoltar
      @PiousMoltar Před 5 měsíci +97

      Same, but more importantly than what it is called, it is obviously taller than 1 WTC.

    • @imveryangryitsnotbutter
      @imveryangryitsnotbutter Před 5 měsíci +16

      Um acktually, it's the Sears-Roebuck Tower.

    • @Strideo1
      @Strideo1 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Yes.

    • @timmmahhhh
      @timmmahhhh Před 5 měsíci +29

      ​@@imveryangryitsnotbutter nobody ever says Roebuck even if that was the company name. Even the mall stores used Sears to K.I.S.S.

    • @hifijohn
      @hifijohn Před 5 měsíci +14

      @@imveryangryitsnotbutterthe company yes but the building was always called the sears tower.

  • @Zylork0122
    @Zylork0122 Před 5 měsíci +1500

    Height by occupied floor is the only measure that matters to me. Where can a person stand within the building? By that measure, Central Park Tower is the tallest in the US.

    • @checkoutmyyoutubepage
      @checkoutmyyoutubepage Před 5 měsíci +1

      Also if a round rock is orbiting a sun, it’s a planet.

    • @mgscheue
      @mgscheue Před 5 měsíci +236

      That seems most reasonable to me, too. I mean, you could tack a spire a few hundred feet tall on a much shorter building and claim it's the world's tallest building.

    • @richiy86
      @richiy86 Před 5 měsíci +40

      ​@checkoutmyyoutubepage so there should be THOUSANDS of planets? The Sun is orbited by 8 planets, at least 5 dwarf planets and tens of thousands of asteroids. The criteria that a planet needs enough mass to gravitationally sweep the trash in its neighborhood is a reasonable one to cut off all the small rocks out there. Pluto isn't even the 9th most massive, we just found it before other dwarf planets.

    • @checkoutmyyoutubepage
      @checkoutmyyoutubepage Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@richiy86 I said round rock. Pluto is round. Asteroids aren’t round.

    • @MitchellBPYao
      @MitchellBPYao Před 5 měsíci

      Pretty obviouwhos the tallest

  • @MrGriff305
    @MrGriff305 Před 5 měsíci +834

    I have always been bothered by the whole spire or antenna thing. It should just be roof height, and that's it

    • @RonnieRLD
      @RonnieRLD Před 5 měsíci +46

      But in cases like 180 N Stetson Ave shown in the video, or the Chrysler Building, where there is no flat roof and the building tapers into a spire, where do you count to?

    • @derekschinke2512
      @derekschinke2512 Před 5 měsíci +125

      highest habital floor @@RonnieRLD

    • @RonnieRLD
      @RonnieRLD Před 5 měsíci +41

      @derekschinke2512 probably the most useful metric to measure, but it doesn't factor in mechanical floors before the roof or the roof height, which visually is what more people would go off of.
      It's a 97' difference from the highest occupied floor to roof height on the Sears Tower.

    • @lewisgarrison860
      @lewisgarrison860 Před 5 měsíci +25

      I mean why its a thing. Towers get built way beyond their roof and that should still count for something. There should be 2 lists really. Its just annoying that the technicality of one counting and one not counting made the shorter tower count as being taller.

    • @VocalMabiMaple
      @VocalMabiMaple Před 5 měsíci +3

      ​@@RonnieRLDthe roof, obviously

  • @CanImperator
    @CanImperator Před 5 měsíci +386

    I would argue that the Sears tower should still be considered taller than One World Trade Center. One World Trade Center was *planned* with a spire, but at some point the spire was changed to a bare antenna, therefore it should not count towards the building's height. Of course, that would ruin the whole 1776 feet thing.

    • @tjr4459
      @tjr4459 Před 5 měsíci +37

      All of this is now moot as Central Park tower is taller and that has no antenna.

    • @blushdog99
      @blushdog99 Před 5 měsíci

      @@tjr4459 and grand hyatt(175 park) is coming up as well now

    • @LUIS-ox1bv
      @LUIS-ox1bv Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@tjr4459Exactly!

    • @archangelcharlie
      @archangelcharlie Před 5 měsíci +2

      Willis.

    • @CanImperator
      @CanImperator Před 5 měsíci +14

      @@archangelcharlie NEVER! lol

  • @Simoxs7
    @Simoxs7 Před 5 měsíci +190

    I think they should use the highest occupied floor for the tallest buildings. It incentivizes actually making the buildings useful to the highest floor where now all buildings have a spire to „cheat“ on their height

    • @MattMcConaha
      @MattMcConaha Před 5 měsíci +3

      What happens when a company ends their lease and vacate the building? Is the building short until someone else comes and occupies the space again?

    • @Simoxs7
      @Simoxs7 Před 5 měsíci +24

      @@MattMcConaha yeah I didn’t use the correct terminology it would’ve been better to say „highest usable floor“

    • @MattMcConaha
      @MattMcConaha Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@Simoxs7 usable for what

    • @mqegg
      @mqegg Před 5 měsíci +2

      ​@@Simoxs7yea what does useable mean? you can make it so one dude can fit up there and it will be "useable"

    • @serbianspaceforce6873
      @serbianspaceforce6873 Před 5 měsíci +18

      @@mqeggusable as in practically usable. Easily accessible via stairs or elevator, with some minimum square footage.

  • @annecruzmaria
    @annecruzmaria Před 5 měsíci +428

    Actually-Daley selling off parking to a private company is the worse thing to happen to Chicago.

    • @zekewalker1350
      @zekewalker1350 Před 5 měsíci +74

      For literally a century in exchange for a single billion dollars. The city plows through SIXTEEN BILLION a year!
      all of the street parking for as long as anyone alive today shall live got sold for 1/16th of the yearly budget.
      What the fuck even happened there?

    • @davidw7
      @davidw7 Před 5 měsíci

      @@zekewalker1350 not related to this video therefore best saved for political demonizing our cities in the ideology war we created thankfully one man to thank our Twitter and chief one. Even small cities and counties chose ill-advised moves all over this nation. My small city and county certainly did and it is as Red as someone's tie of choice. Both corrupt and broke and abandoned more or less by Corporate America for its Union past in Appalachia and they left their old mills to rot allowed to. Still very cheap to live so fine by me in retirement now LOL.

    • @timmmahhhh
      @timmmahhhh Před 5 měsíci +14

      Along with the double whammy of the Skyway. You're right though parking affects far more people but did you see that the Skyway rates are going up again? I know, you're as shocked as I am.

    • @davidw7
      @davidw7 Před 5 měsíci

      @@timmmahhhh Just nothing to do with skyscrapers and our current political demonizing and American hate of its own cities and half or more of its people causes not debates but literally loathing, name-calling and labeling our whole cities as cess-pools even vs that politician even.... as a local you promote that NEGATIVITY in our current era of division by our IDEOLOGY WAR and certain media promotes city-hate by it and of course red vs blue period.

    • @gintasindreika933
      @gintasindreika933 Před 5 měsíci +1

      As a Chicagoan, I totally agree.

  • @Jim0i0
    @Jim0i0 Před 5 měsíci +391

    The antenna vs. spire thing is so dumb. I say that most antennae are dual purpose. Visual design elements that are also handy for radio frequency communication. Maybe the height should be measured from the sidewalk to the floor of the top habitable level. It would be the difference in elevation that you experience when you interact with the structure. That way, cathedral ceilings, antennae, and spires don't come into play.
    We don't measure a person's height by including their platform shoes and 6" afro.

    • @StephenCoorlas
      @StephenCoorlas Před 5 měsíci +24

      100% Agree. Simple and logical.

    • @gabrielarrhenius6252
      @gabrielarrhenius6252 Před 5 měsíci +11

      I think the point is, buildings which are built with antenna in mind are designed to still look good without them while buildings with spires will just look wrong without them

    • @StephenCoorlas
      @StephenCoorlas Před 5 měsíci +44

      @@gabrielarrhenius6252 That's debatable and subjective. The elevation height of a floor you are standing on is not debatable. Not logically debatable at least.

    • @UnbeltedSundew
      @UnbeltedSundew Před 5 měsíci +26

      Lol, yeah it's a bit like saying poofy hair counts as height but a tall hat doesn't.

    • @phen314
      @phen314 Před 5 měsíci +6

      @@gabrielarrhenius6252I see that argument, but also the Empire State Building always looks wrong to me pre-antenna.

  • @Jordan.Vaughn
    @Jordan.Vaughn Před 5 měsíci +97

    My brother and I use to try and memorize every city in the world by their skylines and we would obsess over the tallest buildings in the world, but when we found out they counted the freaking antennas we lost it. We always counted it by the number of stories and how high the building was in feet from the base of street level to the last story.

    • @TheMuteemChannel
      @TheMuteemChannel Před 5 měsíci +23

      clarification: They count the SPIRES, not the antennas. But I also think it´s dumb to differanciate between spire and antenna

    • @ThatRPGuywithtoomanyOCs
      @ThatRPGuywithtoomanyOCs Před 5 měsíci +8

      @@TheMuteemChannel I agree and disagree. For architectural reasons, they can be different, but if you count the height of just one why not just build a pole spire to be the tallest in a race of pointy peaks? It turns it less into a meaning, and more into, "we added a pointy hat on top!" It's like comparing a hat that adds height to hair, but because you can remove hats easier you only count hair. Now everyone grows out their hair and styles it tall to be legally 7 feet tall.
      Just count to the base of the roofing. It means that domes, spires, antennae, etc. are all no longer considered true height, and sets all architectural features on even playing fields.

    • @szinpad_kezedet
      @szinpad_kezedet Před 4 měsíci +2

      Using number of floors to compare buildings is terrible, because different buildings have different floor heights. The Hancock Centre in Chicago is 334 metres tall with 100 floors, but The Pinnacle in Guangzhou is 360 metres tall with 60 floors.

    • @harbl99
      @harbl99 Před 3 měsíci +2

      If a vanity element like a spire counts for height, then so does a functional non-integral element like an antenna. Simple as. (Sit down Petronas Towers)

  • @bundallo
    @bundallo Před 5 měsíci +325

    FINALLY SOMEONE ADRESSED THIS :D
    For years I've been wondering how could petronas towers be higher that the sears tower

    • @alveolate
      @alveolate Před 5 měsíci +22

      it's always been addressed tho. pretty much since the petronas towers were completed, every comparison just showed the sears towers top floor being much higher than the petronas towers top floors, meaning every report also had to include the whole spiel about "spires being a permanent part of the structure but antennae are not".
      i think folks just let their emotions take over and preferred to feel faux outrage. except for malaysians... the outrage over there is REAL. petronas towers cost a ton to the govt, which was both incompetent and corrupt. the twin towers had a very high inoccupancy rate for many years (haven't checked recently) and became an empty symbol of "malaysian pride", since it was clearly a white elephant.
      altho i think sears also went out of business? but not too sure if that actually meant low occupancy rate in sears/willis tower.
      ultimately, skyscrapers are just not a very good idea in terms of modern urban design, especially factoring in energy efficiency and population density vs transport/logistics. skyscrapers generally consume quite a lot more power per occupant than shorter buildings with similar occupancy. they also warp traffic conditions around them, requiring a lot more infrastructure to support it (and i'm not just talking about burj khalifa's infamous poop trucks).

    • @vintagedigital108
      @vintagedigital108 Před 5 měsíci +9

      @@alveolatenot so sure about petronas being a white elephant tho. It’s always crammed like hell every time I go there

    • @speedracer9132
      @speedracer9132 Před 5 měsíci +11

      Building height sure be measured by usable floors, plain and simple. Spires and any other construction is just artificially inflating the height

    • @Carthodon
      @Carthodon Před 5 měsíci +12

      @@speedracer9132 I'm inclined to agree. All this definition does is guarantee that whatever the tallest building is, it is guaranteed to have a spire.

    • @TheFinalDirectorsCut
      @TheFinalDirectorsCut Před 5 měsíci

      @@speedracer9132 Sure, sure. So how tall is the Chrysler Building than?

  • @carazy123_
    @carazy123_ Před 5 měsíci +33

    I care about 3 metrics, and as such, want 3 lists:
    1) highest occupied floor
    2) highest roofline/top of structure before narrow pointy bois
    3) highest overall reach, including antennae

    • @SoloRenegade
      @SoloRenegade Před 5 měsíci +9

      highest above seal level would be interesting as well, as this would give Sears another 600ft. Which building sticks the highest into our atmosphere.

    • @bigdiccmarty9335
      @bigdiccmarty9335 Před 5 měsíci

      @@SoloRenegade so a hut on top of Everest?

    • @vez3834
      @vez3834 Před 4 měsíci +5

      @@SoloRenegade I don't necessarily want countries to be building skyscrapers on mountains just to make a vanity project though. Less oxygen up there. But it would be an interesting little tid bit.

    • @SoloRenegade
      @SoloRenegade Před 4 měsíci

      @@vez3834 it would be interesting, from a scientific what-if point of view. but I agree, totally impractical.

    • @stephenspackman5573
      @stephenspackman5573 Před 27 dny +1

      @@SoloRenegade Highest into (out of?) the atmosphere and furthest from the centre are not the same thing, though. And how ‘high’ is a building on the moon going to be? ;)

  • @jonreznick5531
    @jonreznick5531 Před 5 měsíci +58

    Your shade about renaming the Sears Tower is brilliant.

    • @CheeseMiser
      @CheeseMiser Před 5 měsíci +3

      Willis
      Reply if you are wrong

    • @archangelcharlie
      @archangelcharlie Před 5 měsíci +2

      It’s called the Willis Tower. Also, it’s no longer called Comiskey Park.

    • @SoloRenegade
      @SoloRenegade Před 5 měsíci +5

      The name of a tower when built, is its name for life. It will forever be the Sears tower.

  • @boogitybear2283
    @boogitybear2283 Před 5 měsíci +61

    The Sears Tower will always be the Sears tower to me and I’m from Nashville. I think that is the most iconic looking skyscraper I’ve ever seen. The views at night when it’s clear are breathtaking.

    • @CheeseMiser
      @CheeseMiser Před 5 měsíci

      Congrats on being an old fart with bad memory and stubbornness

    • @archangelcharlie
      @archangelcharlie Před 5 měsíci +2

      It’s called the Willis Tower. What do you call Wrigley Field these days?

    • @milehighboost5521
      @milehighboost5521 Před 5 měsíci +6

      ​@@archangelcharlie why do you care so much. People can refer to it as the Sears Tower and we know what they means. Wrigley is still Wrigley

    • @SoloRenegade
      @SoloRenegade Před 5 měsíci +6

      the name a tower was given when built is its name forever.

    • @meraak1
      @meraak1 Před 15 dny +1

      it's the Willis tower + ratio

  • @jaimetorres3113
    @jaimetorres3113 Před 5 měsíci +17

    Spires and antenna shouldn't be used regardless of if they were "integral to the building design." The height should be the occupied tallest floor.

    • @MatthewStinar
      @MatthewStinar Před 5 měsíci

      The only acceptable answer ☝🏻 And to clarify, that's floor as in where you stand, not the ceiling of the highest story.

    • @ariffin128
      @ariffin128 Před měsícem

      yeah petronas still taller than sears

  • @shigemorif1066
    @shigemorif1066 Před 5 měsíci +152

    I always wondered if they could put up cladding around the antennae to make it an architectural feature. Problem solved! 😂

    • @vidcas1711
      @vidcas1711 Před 5 měsíci +57

      Seriously though, the antennae to me are integral to the aesthetic of the building to me. The Sears Tower would look noticeably different without then.

    • @BS-vx8dg
      @BS-vx8dg Před 5 měsíci

      @@vidcas1711 And indeed, the Sears Tower looks much different today than when it was first completed. It's antennae were much shorter, stubbier (and, to my mind, cooler looking). Here's one angle: live.staticflickr.com/4073/5432157253_289490c0ba_b.jpg

    • @ntatenarin
      @ntatenarin Před 5 měsíci +23

      ​​@@vidcas1711 Years ago, in Golden Nugget restaurant, on the cover of the menu, it had an old picture of Sears without the antennas. It looked so weird!
      Besides that, I say we make the antennas of the Sears a permanent feature (a spire) and retake the tallest building! Heck, make it even taller! Mwahahaha!

    • @davidw7
      @davidw7 Před 5 měsíci +3

      Yes I never understood to build a whole building and at the top and end do a cost-cutting of eliminating the sheathing it to look SLEEK as a more true spire..... it LOOKS like a antenna because of that but I do not believe they have any sort of broadcast from the spire portion?

    • @BS-vx8dg
      @BS-vx8dg Před 5 měsíci +7

      @@davidw7 Actually David, those actually are antennae. I remember when they were much shorter (presumably spires) when it was first built, but it was only a few years before they added the antennae. See en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Willis_Tower#Broadcasting

  • @justinschmelzel8806
    @justinschmelzel8806 Před 5 měsíci +24

    I think it should be measured from the bottom open air pedestrian entrance to the top of the last enclosed workable floor in other words you can put a desk in there and use it as an office. No spires counted no antenna.

    • @jordanwutkee2548
      @jordanwutkee2548 Před 4 měsíci

      So you wouldn't count fully enclosed steel-framed floors full of elevator and HVAC mechanical equipment above the highest office floor?

    • @justinschmelzel8806
      @justinschmelzel8806 Před 4 měsíci

      @@jordanwutkee2548 if it is an actual enclosed floor it counts. If someone can walk around inside or work inside (this doesn't mean office work, plumming, electrical work all that is still work). Then it counts.

  • @punkinholler
    @punkinholler Před 5 měsíci +41

    This is like when the Guinness book of records dethroned the Causeway bridge in NOLA as the world's longest in favor of a Chinese bridge that spanned several patches of dry ground (The Causeway is 24 miles over open water)

    • @theviniso
      @theviniso Před 5 měsíci +12

      Guinness is not about the truth, it's about marketing. I don't know wether or not the Chinese land bridge truly trumps the American one but you shouldn't take Guinness' records so seriously.

    • @punkinholler
      @punkinholler Před 5 měsíci +7

      @@theviniso I don't take it seriously, it was just a real sore point for the locals. They petitioned Guinness about it and got a new category of bridge added for longest span over open water.

    • @TheOmegaXicor
      @TheOmegaXicor Před 5 měsíci +10

      @@theviniso it's easy to say that but when the difference between "best" and "second best" is 200 million a year in tourist economy, the truth matters.

    • @ThatRPGuywithtoomanyOCs
      @ThatRPGuywithtoomanyOCs Před 5 měsíci +4

      Guinness is a good beer, but not a good record company. It's literally, "pay us an assload of money and we will BS a new record for you." Heck, they even reject record attempts that are easily broken because the original person paid them more or was popular. A lot of gaming related records they have are easily beaten, but because some big name person did it they will never undo it.

  • @tcsnowdream9975
    @tcsnowdream9975 Před 5 měsíci +56

    I love the continuous theme in the video of no one calling it the correct name. Long live Sears Tower!

    • @CheeseMiser
      @CheeseMiser Před 5 měsíci +1

      Viva la willis

    • @JoeOvercoat
      @JoeOvercoat Před 5 měsíci

      @@CheeseMiser Hip hip hooray for Sears!

    • @CheeseMiser
      @CheeseMiser Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@JoeOvercoat the dying shell of a company isnt something to be proud of

    • @JoeOvercoat
      @JoeOvercoat Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@CheeseMiser Their building most certainly is.

    • @CheeseMiser
      @CheeseMiser Před 5 měsíci

      @@JoeOvercoat that building fast been used by sears for majority of its existence. Litterally all of the lines point away from the sears name. Get over it.

  • @CommissarYarric9
    @CommissarYarric9 Před 5 měsíci +9

    Just want to compliment you supporting Givewell; the difference between ineffective and effective charity is literally 100-fold at times, it makes such an amazing difference to support the right charities! I am happy to see their work getting more press.

  • @TristouMTL
    @TristouMTL Před 5 měsíci +94

    The love Chicago has for its Sears Tower is infectious and more than makes up for any of the "-est" titles the buildingd may have given up.

    • @hifijohn
      @hifijohn Před 5 měsíci +5

      It was important because it took the title of the tallest away from NYC.

    • @CheeseMiser
      @CheeseMiser Před 5 měsíci +2

      Willis

    • @capo328
      @capo328 Před 5 měsíci +5

      Sears

    • @Eli-ss9gj
      @Eli-ss9gj Před 5 měsíci

      @@hifijohn important bc it belonged to NYC… lmao. Even when the convo isn’t relevant to NYC they still get pulled in somehow

    • @SoloRenegade
      @SoloRenegade Před 5 měsíci +1

      Sears. the name during construction is the name for life.@@CheeseMiser

  • @Doggieman1111
    @Doggieman1111 Před 5 měsíci +35

    Agreed, it should be the highest interior story that humans can visit

    • @SoloRenegade
      @SoloRenegade Před 5 měsíci +2

      yes, and spires should not count at all

  • @curtdilger6235
    @curtdilger6235 Před 5 měsíci +53

    Fortunately, Chicago still has the most beautiful tower, the John Hancock. It's what the ancient Romans would have built if they had steel. An enormous, elegant, crossed braced siege tower. Love your work. Regards

    • @Blackadder75
      @Blackadder75 Před 5 měsíci +4

      why Romans? it has by far a more Star Wars vibe

    • @curtdilger6235
      @curtdilger6235 Před 5 měsíci +5

      @@Blackadder75 Hi, well when the designer Bruce Graham had it built in 1968, Star Wars was still an unrealized cheesy idea from George Lucas. I do think Graham would be very familiar with the many engravings of tapered roman siege towers, however, the same ones easily accessed with Google nowadays. The structural sobriety and severity of Roman architecture is nicely reflected in Hancock's pure structure, with no concessions to decoration or embellishment. Cheers.

    • @appa609
      @appa609 Před 5 měsíci +4

      Bro... the romans had steel.

    • @curtdilger6235
      @curtdilger6235 Před 5 měsíci +3

      @@appa609 The ancient Romans had limited, primitive forms of tool steel for tools and weapons, and did not generally avail themselves of the wootz or Damascus forging methods available at the time. They did not have structural steel for buildings, unless I'm missing the archaeological discoveries of wide flanges, channels, and angles buried in Roman soil. Perhaps all the of the ancient Roman structural steel has corroded into dust, and we're missing the whole era of ancient steel Roman buildings, but I highly doubt it. Cheers

    • @NightRanger77
      @NightRanger77 Před 25 dny

      It’s ugly and looks like a big taser. Not surprising in such a violent city lol

  • @ArielleDomantay
    @ArielleDomantay Před 5 měsíci +23

    Born and raised in Chicago, and Al’s doesn’t hit anymore. They skimp on the meat and don’t dip the bread like they used to. A lot of the natives Chicago moved to the suburbs. Johnnie’s Beef is where it’s is at now

  • @Chris-55
    @Chris-55 Před 5 měsíci +14

    Even if the WTC's spire didn't count, the Willis Tower wouldn't be the tallest in America, it's the Central Park Tower

    • @shanekeenaNYC
      @shanekeenaNYC Před 5 měsíci

      Elevators would certainly classify as tall building technology, would they not?

    • @LUIS-ox1bv
      @LUIS-ox1bv Před 5 měsíci +1

      Correct!

  • @Zacian2.0
    @Zacian2.0 Před 5 měsíci +5

    I guess I am gonna go 3D Print a 10 mile stick, attach it to my house, and call it the tallest building in the world

  • @CanTheyBeatMeTho
    @CanTheyBeatMeTho Před 5 měsíci +32

    Some of Downtown Chicago's buildings are so tall that on a lot of low cloudy days, the building tops vanish into the clouds.
    It's weird, if you work in the building's upper floors it looks like it's foggy outside or like there's a storm, but when you step outside on the ground you'll see the weather's fine. A cloud/fog just floated into/around the top of building. Looking up at it, it looks like the sky is falling.

    • @nathanlewis42
      @nathanlewis42 Před 5 měsíci +2

      that is true in Seattle too and I would bet that it's also true in San Francisco though I haven't seen it. Seattle has tall buildings too but they are not as tall as in Chicago. Whether or not you can see the tops of the buildings has to do with the height of the fog, not just the height of the buildings.

  • @jeremynewell9903
    @jeremynewell9903 Před 5 měsíci +29

    The measurement should be "to the top of uppermost roof or parapet exclusive of ornamentation"

    • @scottblair3719
      @scottblair3719 Před 5 měsíci +5

      Yes, this! I know some samples are very difficult to judge (ie. Burj Khalifa and Chrysler Building), but generally one can make a pretty clear distinction between roof height and ornamentation.

    • @theviniso
      @theviniso Před 5 měsíci +4

      By this metric the Shanghai tower is the tallest building on Earth and the Central Park Tower the tallest in the US.

    • @scottblair3719
      @scottblair3719 Před 5 měsíci +3

      @@theviniso I already consider CPT the tallest in the US. Shanghai tower vs. Burj Khalifa is a harder call. Roof height is sometimes impossible to pin down.

    • @TheOmegaXicor
      @TheOmegaXicor Před 5 měsíci +1

      "From sea-level or the lowest inhabited floor (whichever is higher) to the roof of the highest occupied floor" solves everything, decoration is just that, optional. Any floors that aren't used don't count, and you measure it with a 45 degree laser and Pythagorean mathematics.

    • @desertdude540
      @desertdude540 Před měsícem +1

      Your proposed sea level rule would be unfair to anyone building a skyscraper in some place that's situated below sea level, like Death Valley or much of Holland.

  • @justanotherdude32
    @justanotherdude32 Před 5 měsíci +11

    I'll never forget this, about 15 years ago my cousin, friend and I were up in the city just kinda exploring, having fun. Well we all decided hey, we been up here so many times but never been up in the Sear-Willis Tower! And I was younger so I wasnt as direction savvy as I am now so we were a little lost, and I kept asking people on the street like hey, you know which way the Willis tower is? EVERYONE I asked looked at me and kinda laughed and would go "Uhh yeah, the Sears tower is that way.."

    • @Utonian21
      @Utonian21 Před 18 dny

      You probably could've just looked up, lol

  • @cyrkielnetwork
    @cyrkielnetwork Před 5 měsíci +5

    Meassuring buildgs from the lowest to the highest restroom seams to be the best and most logical way

  • @yeowchongong5608
    @yeowchongong5608 Před 5 měsíci +22

    Hahahaha it’s Sears all right!!! 😂 same here. Always will be Sears in my heart.

  • @omarhernandez6518
    @omarhernandez6518 Před 5 měsíci +242

    The Chicago hate is real. The Sears Tower was built in 1973 & somehow still looks more attractive & more dominant than any other super tall skyscraper in the United States & arguably in the world.

    • @BSuydam99
      @BSuydam99 Před 5 měsíci +24

      It was built in the international style, which is a timeless style.

    • @davidvavra9113
      @davidvavra9113 Před 5 měsíci +5

      Betcherass

    • @timmmahhhh
      @timmmahhhh Před 5 měsíci +1

      That hate extended to the Olympics going to Rio for 2016.

    • @yamiangie
      @yamiangie Před 5 měsíci +1

      I was just coming hear from nebula to say yeah it's more attractive to me.

    • @tylerkochman1007
      @tylerkochman1007 Před 5 měsíci +12

      John Hancock Center is pretty competitive in aesthetics.

  • @mrwedge18
    @mrwedge18 Před 5 měsíci +12

    10:20
    Must've caught him right before his lunch break

  • @sleeplessstu
    @sleeplessstu Před 5 měsíci +81

    Arguably the Sears Tower remains one of the tallest buildings in the world. If you measure by volume, most of the taller towers (including the Burj Kalifa) habitable floorspace above the top floor of the Sears tower are nothing but “vanity floors” or small condos and offices that make up a very small percentage of the building’s total square feet. If you put a spire on a building and fill it with tiny floors, should this count for total height ? I think a better measure of height would include some kind of volumetric percentage of each floor as the building rises. This would make a much better comparison.

    • @archangelcharlie
      @archangelcharlie Před 5 měsíci +1

      Willis

    • @KPSWZGII
      @KPSWZGII Před 5 měsíci +16

      @@archangelcharlie I will NEVER accept the name Willis Tower!!!

    • @TimJBenham
      @TimJBenham Před 5 měsíci +2

      Mean floor square footage height.

    • @JoeOvercoat
      @JoeOvercoat Před 5 měsíci

      @@archangelcharlieSears.

    • @barrylenihan8032
      @barrylenihan8032 Před 5 měsíci +21

      There is no argument that the Sears Tower is 'one of the tallest buildings in the world', but introducing a volumetric criterion to consider it taller than the Burj Khalifa is stretching the definition of tallness to a point of meaningless.

  • @TheIronWaffle
    @TheIronWaffle Před 5 měsíci +53

    As a very recent Chicago transplant, I’m outraged. Outraged. First Pluto and now this.
    Gonna have to drown my own rage out in Italian Beef. Just added Al’s to my “Want to go” maps list.

    • @annecruzmaria
      @annecruzmaria Před 5 měsíci

      👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍

    • @BellaBellaElla
      @BellaBellaElla Před 5 měsíci +1

      This ain't like Pluto. There are other things in the keiper belt larger than Pluto... You wouldn't say that asteroids in the asteroid belt are planets (I hope). :) :)

    • @TheIronWaffle
      @TheIronWaffle Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@BellaBellaElla It was a joke. I was riffing off his winking rage over an issue that tickled my humor as an echo of the Pluto debate. The real critique of my quip, if there’s any point to such things, is that Willis’s demotion occurred years before Pluto’s, despite my lack of awareness.
      I actually attended a lively and genial lecture at the Smithsonian by one of the scientists - whose name slips my memory - that made a key discovery that led to the “demotion” shortly after the decision. For what it’s worth, I agree with their decision.
      Anyhow. The important lesson for me here remains that now I know where to go for Italian beef.

    • @timmmahhhh
      @timmmahhhh Před 5 měsíci +2

      You'll be glad you added Al's to your list. Portillos is good, Buona is too heavily seasoned, Al's 👍👍👍
      And they're all closer than Pluto.

    • @BellaBellaElla
      @BellaBellaElla Před 5 měsíci

      @@TheIronWaffle oh yeah. It's Al's! And in my opinion, havin it baptized is always THE way to go. :)

  • @itchardhen
    @itchardhen Před 5 měsíci +3

    This is great. Thanks to both of you for being good sports, and to Stewart for creating content that reinforces healthy disagreement and dialogue as a means of challenging one's own beliefs, learning something, and maybe even changing one's mind.

  • @Nchinnam
    @Nchinnam Před 5 měsíci +7

    Central Park tower is the tallest in the US. highest floor should be the rule

  • @adrianreyes2318
    @adrianreyes2318 Před 5 měsíci +8

    1/3 of Burj Khalifa's official height is a spire... Limits should be put on how much a spire can contribute to a building's total height. That's ridiculous.

    • @JoeOvercoat
      @JoeOvercoat Před 5 měsíci +3

      It also seems wrong to be classified as the worlds tallest building, because you have to follow these architectural rules, but one of the rules doesn’t include having its own septic system from day one

    • @theviniso
      @theviniso Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@JoeOvercoat How is it wrong? Is the Burk Khalifa not the world's tallest building?

  • @flantc
    @flantc Před 5 měsíci +5

    I am 52. When I was young I heard a lot of talk about how if you wanted to build tall you need to use steel. The last 25 or so have been interesting because concrete has dethroned steel to become the new king of building big.

    • @theviniso
      @theviniso Před 5 měsíci

      As far as I know the Petronas towers are the tallest noteworthy buildings to rely mostly on concrete for their structure. Everything else uses a ton of steel.

    • @SoloRenegade
      @SoloRenegade Před 5 měsíci

      concrete has a theoretical height limit that would blow people's minds. it would dwarf anything standing today.

  • @daniellemmon7793
    @daniellemmon7793 Před 9 dny +2

    Sears Tower wins the title for worlds most iconic and beloved building. No one can take that away.

  • @kigas24
    @kigas24 Před 5 měsíci +5

    As a fellow Chicagoan, I love the seriousness of this video.

  • @joe42m13
    @joe42m13 Před 5 měsíci +8

    Honestly, if you showed me a picture of the Sears Tower without the antennae I probably wouldn't recognize it.

  • @SirSayakaMikiThe3rd
    @SirSayakaMikiThe3rd Před 5 měsíci +5

    We have the same problem. Here in Los Angeles, we have the US Bank Tower vs. Wilshire Grand. The US Bank tower is more prominent and has a higher roof height, but the Wilshire Grand has a dinky spire. Look, I love the Wilshire Grand. The lights and screen at the top make for cool light shows, but its not actually the tallest and no one here thinks it is.

    • @x--.
      @x--. Před 5 měsíci

      Well, the local news networks sure think it and say so but you are absolutely right.

    • @EvanJS2005
      @EvanJS2005 Před 5 měsíci

      i agree i have been to the Wilshire grand hotel its nice but i dont think it should count but i will say this if the Wilshire grand wasnt built San Francisco would actaully hold the title of tallest building west of the Mississippi so la is lucky

  • @moneybagz82
    @moneybagz82 Před 5 měsíci +23

    Ok but we do realize that the central park tower in Manhattan is over 100ft taller than the willis/sears tower by roof height right?😂

    • @Eli-ss9gj
      @Eli-ss9gj Před 5 měsíci +6

      They’ll ignore that though lmao

    • @just_cade
      @just_cade Před 5 měsíci +1

      This

    • @Mrhalligan39
      @Mrhalligan39 Před 5 měsíci +7

      Fair’s fair but CPT wasn’t finished until 2020 which would have given Sears Tower 20 more years at the top and put to rest all that pokey-bits nonsense. I hate to talk smack about One World Trade but they may as well call that thing a friggin blimp dock.

    • @bipinnambiar
      @bipinnambiar Před 5 měsíci

      And the etc isn’t technically finished yet. There is another building to be made, but the guy who owns wants to squeeze the fame and cash out of it. Sick if you ask me.

    • @moneybagz82
      @moneybagz82 Před 5 měsíci

      @Mrhalligan39 lol we don't make the rules. It was supposed to be taller but the designers made it that way with the spire. They had other designs they were choosing from. Better ones in my opinion... but here we stand lol

  • @mbox314
    @mbox314 Před 5 měsíci +5

    It was called the Sears tower but if Ron White won his lawsuit it would have been called "Ron White's big ol fucking building"

  • @AntneeUK
    @AntneeUK Před 5 měsíci +6

    Laughing my head off at the Sears/Willis _corrections_ 😂 I remember writing an essay at college about the Petronas towers when they were new. Fascinating structure, but yeah, taller than the Sears tower? Technicality!

  • @JJP316
    @JJP316 Před 5 měsíci +6

    ALL real Chicagoans only call it the Sears Tower.

  • @edwinsparda7622
    @edwinsparda7622 Před 5 měsíci +2

    I lived in chicago as a kid in the Logan Square area from 1995 to 2001. The skyline always left me in awe. It will always be the Sears Tower to me.

    • @SoloRenegade
      @SoloRenegade Před 5 měsíci

      The name of a tower when built, is its name for life. It will forever be the Sears tower.

  • @AcAlvin
    @AcAlvin Před 5 měsíci +7

    As a Malaysian, that new pnb 118 tower is absolutely hugeee. It will be open soon for the public next year 😇

    • @Tayy_B
      @Tayy_B Před 3 měsíci

      Indeed it is, but I somehow can't help but feel that Kuala Lumpur is on the map architecture-wise mostly due to the fact that its tallest buildings claiming to be the tallest in the world (or one of) are only so due to their spires height and not highest occupied floor/roofheight. I still see Shanghai Tower as taller than merdeka 118 but because of its 500ft+ spire it's still classified as taller. It's as If I were 5'11" and extended my arm vertically and claimed to be 7ft+. Otherwise, just vanity height.
      That said, I find myself constantly looking at videos of mb118 since it has such an odd form and design that's weirdly elegant in its own unique way, which I still can't make out its design. One of the coolest looking skyscrapers no doubt.

  • @mtbikesam68
    @mtbikesam68 Před 5 měsíci +4

    Always and forever the Sears Tower. In grade school in the 1970s, I went to the Scholastic book fair every year to get my new copy of the Guinness Book of World Records and all of those years, the Sears was the tallest. My son lives in Chicago and when we visit, I always speak to the tower to let it know that it will always be the tallest building in the world in my heart.

    • @SoloRenegade
      @SoloRenegade Před 5 měsíci +1

      The name of a tower when built, is its name for life. It will forever be the Sears tower.

  • @nikamumladze8220
    @nikamumladze8220 Před 5 měsíci +7

    10:21 these slipups were so funny, i think he might be doing in purpose 😂

  • @getrealnow73
    @getrealnow73 Před 5 měsíci

    your effervescent passion that you display in your videos is engaging thank you

  • @ianthespacecadet5987
    @ianthespacecadet5987 Před 5 měsíci +1

    the sears tower is so sentimental to me because my grandpa who passed away in 2010 was from Chicago, and he would tell me so many stories about that building and told me one day he was gonna take me there but sadly when I was 11, he died. A year later my Aunt and uncle came down to visit us in NC from Iowa and asked me if I wanted to go back with them for a month. They ended up surprising me with the detour to Chicago and I was able to actually go on the Sears Tower ( got changed to the willis tower by that time) and see the sky deck! It almost felt unreal to be in Chicago, and be on the Willis Tower, and it was almost bitter sweet because it wasn’t with my grandpa, but it felt almost like divine intervention the way all that went down.

  • @thpass
    @thpass Před 5 měsíci +12

    Thank you for this thorough , comprehensive video on the subject. I'm old enough to remember the pride of saying "Sears tower is the world's tallest building" as a kid and it was easily my favorite back then. I think the measuring criteria has an arbitrary aspect to it but for me the time factor is far more relevant . Empire State building was tallest for 40 yrs, Sears tower for 26 yrs. Petronas' held it for less than that. WHo knows how long Burj Kalifa will hold it? I also found it funny the CTBUH spokesman could notremember the name of the old Prudential building (with the tall antenna) which used to be Chicago's tallest in the 1960s.

    • @davidpaul2797
      @davidpaul2797 Před 5 měsíci

      Yeah...that guy was a real clown

    • @kjhuang
      @kjhuang Před 5 měsíci

      Burj Khalifa will probably hold it for a long time unless the Jeddah Tower gets finished. No one outside of the Middle East is building anything over 2000 feet going forward.

  • @Fr00stee
    @Fr00stee Před 5 měsíci +15

    I thought spires didn't count to height because you can just slap a ridiculously tall spire onto the top of a not very tall building and have it count as "the world's tallest building" even though the actual building part isn't tall

    • @mgscheue
      @mgscheue Před 5 měsíci +3

      My thoughts, exactly. You could have a building half the height of the current world's tallest, stick on a spire whose height is equal to the height of the building plus a foot, and say "there, the new world's tallest building!".

    • @austinreid3951
      @austinreid3951 Před 5 měsíci +6

      The rules say that something like 2/3rds of the floors must be habitable to count as a building. Otherwise it's a tower

    • @mgscheue
      @mgscheue Před 5 měsíci

      @@austinreid3951 Interesting.

    • @Fr00stee
      @Fr00stee Před 5 měsíci

      @@austinreid3951 what counts as a "floor"

    • @JoeOvercoat
      @JoeOvercoat Před 5 měsíci

      You must let go of logic & common sense and embrace the technicalities of the ‘definition’.

  • @OnlineAdjunct
    @OnlineAdjunct Před 2 dny

    I worked across in a building across the street from the Sears Tower when it was being built. I remember when Mayor Richard J. Daley autographed the last girder. I remember eating in a cafeteria in it four stories below street level. My most vivid memory was when the wind blew out some windows during construction and showered our building, and several others, with broken glass. You can fact check how far the cafeteria was below street level, but I remember going down some escalators from street level.

  • @coasternut3091
    @coasternut3091 Před 5 měsíci +1

    I'm pretty sure the ones by Central Park are taller now. Their superstructures are also taller than One World

  • @johnnychen9897
    @johnnychen9897 Před 5 měsíci +3

    Not from Chicago, but love the city, its rich archictural heritages, amazing food and the openly verbal people that lives there. this video somehow reminds of all those things I loved about Chicago... Anyways, I'm just here to say Al's Italian beef is the best, and that building is forever Sears Tower for me.

  • @fatviscount6562
    @fatviscount6562 Před 5 měsíci +3

    Sad to not see any mention of the original Sears Tower at 906 S Holman Ave, a truly beautiful building.

  • @JoshuaVarghese
    @JoshuaVarghese Před 5 měsíci +1

    WE NEED TO BRING AWARENESS TO THE WEST! Some years ago the SalesForce Tower in SF dethroned the U.S. Bank building in LA as the tallest building in the west. This was absolutely fair.
    But then LA built some stupid “Wiltshire Grand Tower,” which is not actually taller than either of the aforementioned buildings if not for its spire. And I know art is subjective, but that spire is an unsightly thing that does not match the design language of the rest of the curvy building. It’s just there, on this short building.
    I believe (and you all should to) that SalesForce Tower is the tallest building west of the Mississippi River.
    Thank you

  • @Josh-yr7gd
    @Josh-yr7gd Před 5 měsíci +8

    Glad you could get this off your chest Stewart. I feel your pain, and I'm not even from Chicago.

  • @soapysoapster
    @soapysoapster Před 5 měsíci +8

    even tho One World Trade Center isnt technically the tallest in america, so isnt Sears Tower tho because theres a taller building on middle manhattan near Central Park called the Central Park Tower (it has no spire and measures 480 meters)

  • @scottwendt9575
    @scottwendt9575 Před 5 měsíci +3

    The definitions of the council also created a controversy in Minneapolis… quite a story about whether a rooftop equipment “shed” is part of the building…

  • @OldSchoolHipHop90
    @OldSchoolHipHop90 Před 4 měsíci +1

    About time someone addresses this!!!!! It always ticked me off how they have short changed the Sears Tower when compared to the Petronas and the One World Trade. I hope Chicago can get back in the race and build "The Illinois" which is a future concept in Chicago that Metaballstudio showed in their skyscraper video.

  • @RonnieRLD
    @RonnieRLD Před 5 měsíci +2

    I don't understand why One World Trade Center gets to call its antenna a spire. It's got some decorative cladding around it, but it's not a continuation of the form of the building.

  • @vetar3372
    @vetar3372 Před 5 měsíci +3

    The sears tower is DEFINITELY taller than the willis tower

  • @Yvaelle
    @Yvaelle Před 5 měsíci +11

    I love your videos but I find your background music really distracting to the point where I have to pause after every couple minutes and come back later because the music is so annoying and unnecessary. The content is enough, let us hear you talk.

    • @shyrain67
      @shyrain67 Před 16 dny +4

      its not that loud and its just background music. it doesnt bother me at all and tbh i didnt even notice it until you said something

    • @madrox001
      @madrox001 Před 10 dny +1

      Really annoying, thx for mentioning it now I can’t unhear it

  • @malikdaniyel146
    @malikdaniyel146 Před 5 měsíci

    Thanks for clarifying the criteria for world's tallest building.

  • @CakeboyRiP
    @CakeboyRiP Před 5 měsíci +2

    I'm confinced I have the longest! And no one can ever tell me otherwise.
    Love the videos and hope to see more in 2024 ✌🏻

  • @paolofusco7940
    @paolofusco7940 Před 5 měsíci +8

    As an Italian, my only comment is "what the hell is an Italian beef?!?"

    • @asten77
      @asten77 Před 5 měsíci +3

      Come to Chicago! It's fantastic.

    • @PiousMoltar
      @PiousMoltar Před 5 měsíci +1

      Moo-ma-mia!

    • @JoeOvercoat
      @JoeOvercoat Před 5 měsíci

      It sounds like a mob thing. 🤪

  • @JosephHuether
    @JosephHuether Před 5 měsíci +100

    Could someone please “sunset” the term “curtain wall”? I know…I know…it will probably never happen.
    It has been confusing architecture students and the half-dozen “civilians” who actually care for generations now. IMO…the correct term should really be “stacked wall” because 99% of modern exterior cladding systems are actually “stacked” on building structures…usually floor slab and spandrel edges using a wide array of construction techniques and components. Facades rarely “hang” like curtains. Exceptions include Norman Fosters “Willis Faber and Dumas Building” (facade by structural engineer Peter Rice) and Gordon Bunshaft’s bronze and glass cube at the Beinecke Library at Yale.
    People continue to call virtually any mass masonry exterior wall building that is steel framed and supports the exterior wall’s gravity loads on a floor-by-floor basis a “curtain wall”.

    • @Apotheosis01
      @Apotheosis01 Před 5 měsíci +11

      put the quotes away

    • @timmmahhhh
      @timmmahhhh Před 5 měsíci +10

      I think stacked wall is equally confusing because it sounds like walls are stacked onto each other rather than on the structural system.

    • @davidw7
      @davidw7 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Still the key words are still - load-bearing - as the elephant in the room and were stone and brick but still owed its load bearing to the interior steel frame as it WAS if it is - Load-Bearing. Still if load bearing even in part? A 10 story building would have a base a few feet thick as some do especially those transitional ones or chose both. The Monadnock building Chicago utilizes BOTH and its hidden steel interior AND exterior brick and stone ... BOTH support the load of the building and is NOT labeled as having a - curtain wall.
      The visibly thick brick walls are therefore-- six-feet-thick at the corners -- and does support the building's weight at the perimeters, but are also aided elsewhere by a hidden steel framework. So both standards are utilized.
      We use the term - cladding for granite etc. slapped onto a exterior other than just a metal and glass sheathing.

    • @JosephHuether
      @JosephHuether Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@timmmahhhh
      How about “shelf wall”?
      LOL, yeah…I have been living with the term curtain wall for 45 years and acknowledge that it is totally embedded in architecture terminology from architectural history to textbooks to manufacturers literature and on and on. Just couldn’t resist a short rant since most curtain walls I have done as a professional have been stacks of bricks that sit on shelf angles.
      I also dislike “storefront”…another architectural component term that will probably outlast the existence of actual stores.
      BTW…the late brilliant structural engineer Lev Zeitlin once developed a structural concept for a high-rise that was nearly 100% tensile. Was a huge fan of wire rope but in the end didn’t actually build much with it. More curtain-floor than curtain-wall.

    • @JosephHuether
      @JosephHuether Před 5 měsíci

      @@davidw7
      Here in New Haven CT, Yale University has an entire collegiate gothic style residential college campus built in the teens, twenties and thirties with steel frames and exterior cladding of granite, brick and structural clay tile. I have heard some architects still refer to these low-rise exteriors as curtain walls.
      Interesting, steel frames were selected for these buildings for speed. Building around a steel armature instead of sequentially starting by “piling rocks” allowed more work to be done simultaneously. Structures were topped off and enclosed much more quickly…especially on the buildings which have very complex and highly articulated gothic style exteriors.

  • @JordanReeve
    @JordanReeve Před 5 měsíci

    Great Video as always !

  • @a1white
    @a1white Před 5 měsíci +1

    I remember going up to viewing platform at the top of Sears tower 20 years ago. Absolutely incredible experience.

    • @cocodojo
      @cocodojo Před 5 měsíci +1

      Those window sections that jut outwards just a bit so you can look straight down is scary AF when your sight goes from looking at the surrounding horizon to "Hey, I wonder how it looks do... holy jeebus!!!"
      Also having to use the express elevator to get to the viewing deck near the top is crazy fast compared to the usual slow elevators we're used to.

  • @richh650
    @richh650 Před 5 měsíci +4

    I have also been outraged how a building with a 0ver 400-foot tower/spiral on top, can be classified as the tallest.

    • @SoloRenegade
      @SoloRenegade Před 5 měsíci

      spires don't count

    • @richh650
      @richh650 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@SoloRenegade umm, yes, they do unfortunately when built with the building. One World Trade's top floor is about 1320 feet high, but it has an over 400-foot spire on top, that is how it gets its 1776 height.

    • @SoloRenegade
      @SoloRenegade Před 5 měsíci

      @@richh650 spires don't count

    • @richh650
      @richh650 Před 5 měsíci

      @@SoloRenegade I don't like that they do, but they do. Do some simple research

    • @SoloRenegade
      @SoloRenegade Před 5 měsíci

      @@richh650 No research required. I do not acknowledge illogical standards created by private people.
      Any criteria I define is equally valid as theirs, and my criteria disqualifies spires.
      spires don't count.

  • @barryrobbins7694
    @barryrobbins7694 Před 5 měsíci +4

    The Transamerica Pyramid isn’t exceptionally tall, but the San Francisco skyline would not be the same without it.

    • @barryrobbins7694
      @barryrobbins7694 Před 5 měsíci +1

      …and one of the architects, William Pereira, is a Chicago native.

    • @d.b.4671
      @d.b.4671 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Salesforce Tower, on the other hand, could mysteriously vanish overnight and no one would miss it. :P

    • @barryrobbins7694
      @barryrobbins7694 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@d.b.4671 There is also the Millennium Tower that is San Francisco’s equivalent of the Leaning Tower of Pisa. Will tourists be flocking to see it in the future?😀

  • @FatheredPuma81
    @FatheredPuma81 Před dnem +1

    TLDR: The top of the Sears tower is counted and an antennae while the top of other towers gets to be a spire.

  • @en6853
    @en6853 Před 5 měsíci

    I got to visit the Sears tower on the first day the sky deck was open. Really fun experience

  • @Muddler182
    @Muddler182 Před 5 měsíci +13

    Why not just have sears be the tallest building in America and one world be the tallest structure/tower in America

    • @MrDooDoo-pw7of
      @MrDooDoo-pw7of Před 5 měsíci

      What about tallest skyscraper though?

    • @Muddler182
      @Muddler182 Před 5 měsíci

      @@MrDooDoo-pw7ofI guess world trade center because of the spire I don’t really know

    • @theviniso
      @theviniso Před 5 měsíci

      The CN Tower still exists and is taller than both... unless you mean the US only and not America the continent.

    • @Muddler182
      @Muddler182 Před 5 měsíci

      @@theviniso yea

  • @thastayapongsak4422
    @thastayapongsak4422 Před 5 měsíci +3

    For skyscrapers, they should just count the height at the highest occupied floor, not even the ceiling of that floor.

  • @robvegas9354
    @robvegas9354 Před 2 hodinami

    That sandwich looks good.
    The tallest buildings here in Australia by floor height are in Melbourne but the tallest building in the country has an antenna which is on the gold coast.

  • @itsmederek1
    @itsmederek1 Před 5 měsíci +1

    In the Netherlands we call skyscrapers ‘cloudscratchers’ which is awesome imo

  • @tomsparxxx
    @tomsparxxx Před 5 měsíci +8

    You forgot to mention Marina City. It once had antennas, but no longer. Great example for not including antenna height.

    • @tylerkochman1007
      @tylerkochman1007 Před 5 měsíci +1

      There have tall buildings that have removed spires, domes, steeples, and cupolas, or rooftop statues. But those elements aren’t discredited in height like antennas are (unless to falsely advertise antennas as “spires” the way 1 WTC somehow managed to)

  • @TM10000
    @TM10000 Před 5 měsíci +19

    I've always thought counting spires is ridiculous. We don't need any more tapering needle buildings where the occupiable floors only go about 3/4ths of the way up. Counting antennae would be equally ridiculous. Despite no longer holding the height title, Sears Tower still has the most masculine looking design of any skyscraper. The more feminine Hancock building standing tall at the opposite end of the skyline gives the feeling of the king and queen of steel reigning watchfully over their kingdom. Al's Beef is the best Italian Beef sandwich too. Sorry Portillo's fans.

    • @theviniso
      @theviniso Před 5 měsíci +1

      I lol'ed at "masculine design"

    • @TM10000
      @TM10000 Před 5 měsíci

      @@theviniso I figured masculine sounded better than boxy. 😄

  • @user-yy9hk9od9u
    @user-yy9hk9od9u Před 5 měsíci +1

    If not usable space like spires, it should not count in height, so the Sears Tower is clearly taller than the Petronas Twins.

  • @gagginglemer1
    @gagginglemer1 Před 5 měsíci +2

    I suppose mentioning the current tallest building makes this video more timeless, but I would have liked a mention on the Burj Khalifa. But as always, loved the video!

  • @jw77019
    @jw77019 Před 5 měsíci +6

    I realize this is off topic, but in years to come it will become widely discussed that Sears was poised to remain a huge retailer, possibly the largest. It had a tremendous catalogue and mail order business which is essentially what todays e-commerce is. They had deals with IBM and AOL for e-commerce. I remember buying my IBM PC that came preloaded with all that software. It was bought and sold off in pieces to run it in the ground and be destroyed for maximum profit.

    • @ThatRPGuywithtoomanyOCs
      @ThatRPGuywithtoomanyOCs Před 5 měsíci +1

      People already talk about this. Sears was the AMAZON of mail order shopping. You could buy anything, including a house, from Sears.
      They died out because they couldn't transition to online shopping fast enough, and got superseded by Amazon who did what they did but online.

  • @jonathanstensberg
    @jonathanstensberg Před 5 měsíci +12

    Pro Tip: every metric is useful until people start consciously aiming for it. Then people just manipulate their way to a higher ranking, making the metric increasingly less informative over time.

    • @TheOmegaXicor
      @TheOmegaXicor Před 5 měsíci +1

      Not when you make the metric specific early on, then if people start aiming to manipulate their way in then they are creating unique buildings, "from sea-level to the roof of the highest occupied floor" doesn't allow for much manipulation but if the building has a restaurant on the 120th floor of the spire, fine they have managed to build that and pay people to work up their. If the restaurant is closed because it is unsafe, congratulations you go from 1st to 50th.

    • @FindingClock4
      @FindingClock4 Před 5 měsíci

      @@TheOmegaXicor Your definition of skyscraper would make sense if this applied in a place like Florida, where it is extremely flat and close to sea level, but unfortunately, people build cities in high places. Luckily, someone had a similar question on Quora and did the work for us: Paste this after the Quora homepage link : [/What-building-s-roof-is-the-highest-above-sea-level-in-the-world], for Peter Wade's answer to this question.
      The largest problem you will run into are buildings like the Public Investment Fund Tower in Saudi Arabia, being in the top 100 tallest buildings, but with an elevation of 991m (beating any on the top 100 list) due to that building being built in a mountainous region/country it suddenly is the tallest in the world. The cities of Denver, Colorado or Lhasa, China who are on even higher mountains and have tall buildings are additional arguments against that definition.
      You run into shenanigan problems, as someone will just build a "skyscraper" in definition in a place like Chile or Nepal in a decently reasonably accessible place. Boom! The base camp to Mt Everest will get a skyscraper just to have an excuse for world's tallest skyscraper, but it'd be like a single or double stored building, only barely qualifying as a skyscraper, or suddenly there is a dormitory building near an astronomical observatory that "just so happens" to fit the qualifications of a skyscraper. Especially if it is "from sea-level to the roof of the highest occupied floor".
      Tl;dr: But mountains exist, and skyscrapers exist on mountains, tall ones too. Suddenly, with that definition, the Burj Khalifa is now very low on a very long list.

    • @mqegg
      @mqegg Před 5 měsíci +1

      ​@TheOmegaXicor from sea level doesnt make sense. people living in places where the ground is above sea level will have it so much easier

    • @felonyx5123
      @felonyx5123 Před 5 měsíci

      @@mqegg Place a dollhouse on Mount Everest, behold the world's tallest building.

    • @SoloRenegade
      @SoloRenegade Před 5 měsíci

      @@felonyx5123 doesn't work like that, otherwise you could add about another 600ft to the Sears tower.

  • @saulgoodman2018
    @saulgoodman2018 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Telling someone in NYC to meet them down by the river.
    Means you will be sleeping with the fish.

  • @djinn666
    @djinn666 Před 15 dny +1

    The fact that they prescribe the type of construction tells me all I need to know regarding the validity of their measure.

  • @CortexNewsService
    @CortexNewsService Před 5 měsíci +8

    Former Chicagoan. It will ALWAYS be Sears Tower and it was indeed robbed of its title.

    • @Strideo1
      @Strideo1 Před 5 měsíci +4

      I'm not even from Chicago and I cringe whenever I hear "Willis" Tower.

    • @CheeseMiser
      @CheeseMiser Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@Strideo1 I cringe when I hear yall talk like this pridefully uneccepting of change

    • @capo328
      @capo328 Před 5 měsíci +2

      @@CheeseMiser It's cringier to hear people change the name they use for a landmark that's been called by another name for decades just because of a business transaction. If the Golden Gate Bridge's name was officially changed most people would still use the old name, and rightfully so.

  • @russellgrant1535
    @russellgrant1535 Před 5 měsíci +3

    Buildings are built for human occupation.
    Only the part that can be occupied counts.
    Spires cannot be occupied.
    ->Spires don't count
    Q.E.D.

    • @MatthewStinar
      @MatthewStinar Před 5 měsíci

      Likewise rooves and ceilings. Habitable floor level is the only meaningful metric.

  • @danielwilliams2203
    @danielwilliams2203 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Another piece of evidence re: how important that “tallest building” title is to Chicago is to look at the history of failed plans to recover it: The Sky Needle, The Spire, the original design for Trump tower, etc.

  • @D31209
    @D31209 Před 5 měsíci

    I'm not from Chicago but this always bothered me as well. Thanks for clearing that up.

  • @nathanielm77
    @nathanielm77 Před 5 měsíci +4

    I think if antennas don’t count, then spires shouldn’t either.

  • @roccobierman4985
    @roccobierman4985 Před 5 měsíci +3

    I've always said, that if a helicopter would have to maneuver to avoid it, then it exists and should be counted. Just because they are antennas added after the original design process is a stupid, stupid criteria for deciding if it counts in the height of a building.

    • @johnsmith7298
      @johnsmith7298 Před 5 měsíci +4

      Exactly, if we're going based on "height", then pretending something doesn't exist because it's an antenna is just dumb. My solution is to have multiple categories. So if someone wants to do something silly like add a 1,000 foot antenna then ok, they are the tallest per antenna. But pretending the building is not taller is just asinine.

  • @upshotMusicTV
    @upshotMusicTV Před 5 měsíci

    I’ve always had questions regarding this topic! Thanks for making this video!

  • @paulveres305
    @paulveres305 Před 5 měsíci

    This is very good content. I had the same beef - we can't regard some puny spires better than the solid Sears tower box! I agree it makes sense though... Wonderful organization CTBUH, important work!

  • @blakefewell
    @blakefewell Před 5 měsíci +6

    Could the argument be made that the antennae on the Sears (Willis) Tower are now an architectural feature (spire) because of how it is lit up at night? It is both creative and functional.

    • @mgscheue
      @mgscheue Před 5 měsíci +2

      They definitely are an important part of the appearance of the building.

    • @davidw7
      @davidw7 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Yes they could have said the new taller spire they rebuilt a few years ago were NOW a Permanent feature..... of course they though still function for broadcast beacons so .... Also in the 2020s now, it really does not matter as NYC Skinny's would still have the tallest in the US and Western Hemisphere title. Ole Sears still did not lose tallest in Chicago since the Chicago Spire mega-tall was started and canceled by the 2007 08 Crash and if the Tribune Tower East Super-tall approved to build since before Co'vid gets built yet to its full height? It will still be 29ft shorter than ole Sears top floor.

    • @theviniso
      @theviniso Před 5 měsíci +1

      I think the point is that the antennae weren't part of the architect's vision for the building. Otherwise you could simply slap some giant antenna on any existing building and call it the tallest.

    • @davidw7
      @davidw7 Před 5 měsíci

      @@theviniso Still you can do that with a spire and add one at any time no? When One Chicago building was topped out in 2022. It was just shy of supertall status.
      Wikipedia notes that its design did give the idea of a spire added in the original design.
      with this -- although a final height was determined and a spire may have been added to the design.
      It rises to 973 ft (296 m) with supertall status at 984 ft (300 m). No spire was added so it is 11 ft shy of supertall. DO WE NOT THINK AT ANYTIME A STUBBY SPIRE COULD STILL BE ADDED?
      Another city skyscraper is 961 ft (293 m) no spire. Perhaps a rule will say it must have been built and originally planned with the spire built originally to ever count vs one added later?

  • @who2u333
    @who2u333 Před 5 měsíci +3

    I still think that renaming the Sears tower is worst thing to happen since Mrs. O'Leary's cow.

  • @asymptoticspatula
    @asymptoticspatula Před 4 měsíci

    As a kid in the 80s living in Indiana, I took vicarious pride in the Sear's Tower. Hell yeah, that's my neighbor's building! So the incredulity really hit me when it was "dethroned" by the Petulant Towers.

  • @PauloSergioMDC
    @PauloSergioMDC Před měsícem

    This is so great. My side interest since high school a quarter century ago has been architectural wonders - buildings and bridges alike. That antennae atop the original One World Trade Center was about a meter taller than those atop the Sears Tower. And, the original World Trade Center Twin Towers didn't have curtain walls - the walls were part of its load bearing structure that enabled the massive open-plan office space those buildings had; the Twin Towers together had nearly double the office space of the Sears Tower.. So technically, the World Trade Center wasn't a skyscraper... But I drew the line at highest occupied floor/roof height. All incredible buildings anyway.