Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The Tallest Structures Throughout History
Episode Date: April 22, 2021Standing next to an extremely tall structure can be an exhilarating experience. Something which was no less exhilarating to early humans. Ever since humans created the first pile of rocks, we have bee...n trying to build ever-larger piles of rocks. These piles of rocks eventually evolved into structures hundreds of meters tall. Learn more about the structures which have held the title of the tallest in the world, on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Standing next to an extremely tall structure can be an exhilarating experience, something which was no less exhilarating to early humans.
Ever since humans created the first pile of rocks we've been trying to build ever larger pile of rocks.
These pile of rocks eventually evolved into structures hundreds of meters tall.
Learn about the structures which have held the title of the tallest in the world on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
What if your perceptions about the past were wrong?
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In this discussion, as you'll soon see, it's not nearly as straightforward as it might seem.
In the introduction, I specifically avoided the word building, because many of the things I'm going to be talking about were not buildings per se.
There might have been monuments, memorials, or simply architectural structures built to create something iconic for a city skyline.
As with many issues, when we go back deep into history, our knowledge of things becomes murky.
The structure, we'll start with, goes back about 12,000 years, and holds the title just because it's a story.
It's the oldest structure we have evidence of.
Golbeki-Tepi in Turkey.
Golbeki-Tempe is an ancient temple that may have predated the first human city.
It's worthy of an episode of its own as its discovery required a total rewrite of our understanding of the rise of civilization.
The height of Golbeki-Tepi is about 6 meters or 18 feet.
The next structure for which we have evidence is the Tower of Jericho.
As the name implies, it was built in the town of Jericho, one of the oldest cities of the world, which is in modern-day Palestine.
It was discovered in the 1930s, and it was estimated to be about 8.5 meters or 28 feet tall.
We have no clue if there was anything taller than the Tower of Jericho at this time.
This just happens to be the tallest thing we found evidence for.
Today, you can buy ladders that are taller than this.
But this must have been awe-inspiring for the people at the time when cities and agriculture were still a brand new thing.
From here, we'll have to fast forward to the year 4,000 BC, to Uruk, Iraq, where we'll find the Anusianian.
Ziggarnat. This was a far different kind of structure than the Tower of Jericho. This was a very
broad structure with a temple on the top. It was almost like an early alpha version of the large
structures which would immediately come after. It topped out at 13 meters or 40 feet. All three of the
buildings I've just mentioned are from deep history and our knowledge of anything from this period
is dependent upon what we find, which means this could totally change next year if we find something new.
From here, however, things start to become clear. We move to this.
the year 2648 BC, which saw the start of the period of pyramid building in Egypt. In quick succession,
there were new record holders for the title of tallest human structure. The first was the step pyramid
of Dozier, which was 205 feet or 62.6 meters tall. 38 years later, there were three different
pyramids built within 10 years, all taller than the next. The medium pyramid, the bent pyramid,
and the red pyramid of Dashur. The red pyramid stood 344 feet or 105,000.
meters, and it's located about 40 kilometers or 25 miles south of Cairo, and it looks like a proper
pyramid. In 2570 BC, we come to the structure which really kicks off the period for which we
have solid knowledge, and the reason is simply that this structure was so much larger than anything
else for so long. I am, of course, talking about the Great Pyramid of Giza. The Great Pyramid
is 481 feet tall, or 146.6 meters, much taller than the Great Pyramid.
the Red Pyramid. To put the age of the Great Pyramid into perspective, the present time is closer
to the life of Queen Cleopatra than her life was to the beginning of the Great Pyramid. When Julius
Caesar saw it, it was already older than Roman ruins are today. I should also note that the Great
Pyramid didn't always look like it does today. Originally, it was white, covered with a very smooth limestone.
All of the cladding in the pyramid was stripped away over the years. It's originally,
look would have been even more impressive than it is today. The Great Pyramid held the title of the
tallest built human structure for about 4,000 years. The secret to the Great Pyramid, of course,
is its sheer mass. It is fundamentally just a bunch of cut stones piled on top of each other. It didn't
require the advanced engineering which would be required for future buildings. All of the structures
built during the Persian, Roman, Byzantine, Greek, Chinese, Indian,
Mongol and Islamic empires never reached the height of the Great Pyramid, and that is really saying
something.
Honorable mentions during this period include the Coliseum in Rome, the Hyacofia in Istanbul,
the Feroz Lighthouse in Alexandria, the Jadavara Namaya Stupa in Sri Lanka, the Kaniska
Stupa in modern-day Pakistan, the Brihadashvara Temple in India, the Huang Zhong Temple in Guangzhou
South Korea, and the 100-meter-tall pagoda of Chang'an in China.
The age of the pyramids wasn't topped until the age of the cathedrals in Europe.
Even then, there were centuries of cathedrals constructed before anything managed to top the Great Pyramid.
That finally happened, however, in the year 1311, when the spire of the Lincoln Cathedral in England topped out at 160 meters or 525 feet.
Unfortunately, the spire of the cathedral collapsed in 1548 and was never rebuilt.
and therefore the title passed to the Church of St. Mary in Strasland, Germany.
This was a Lutheran church, and built as a parish church by a very rich community of merchants,
who were part of the Hanseatic League.
I've actually visited this church, and it was shockingly large for something which wasn't a cathedral.
There was another church within walking distance, which was almost as large, but destroyed,
which was built by a rival merchant group.
This was slightly smaller than the Lincoln Cathedral Spire at 151 meters or 490.
five feet tall. Its spire was destroyed by lightning in 1647 and never rebuilt to its original height.
By this time, however, the Great Pyram had actually gotten a little bit shorter due to the pillaging of stones at the top.
So when the St. Mary Spire fell, the title went back down again and fell to the Strasbourg Cathedral in France.
The Strasbourg Cathedral held the title for almost 250 years, and during that time, nothing had been built which topped the Lincoln Cathedral spire from 1311.
but this was soon about to change.
Starting in 1874, there was a quick succession of cathedrals that all set records for the tallest structure,
and all of which finally surpassed the height of the Lincoln Cathedral over 500 years earlier.
St. Nicholas's Lutheran Church in Hamburg, followed by the ruined cathedral in France,
and finally the Cologne Cathedral all held the record briefly,
but the Cologne Cathedral reaching 157 meters or 515 feet,
just barely over the height of the original Lincoln Cathedral.
With the completion of the Cologne Cathedral, the era of cathedrals holding the title of the tallest human structure was over.
In the late 19th century, humanity was developing new technologies, and it was possible to build higher than ever before.
The last two title holders in the 19th century weren't buildings at all.
The first was the Washington Monument, which was built in 1884.
It is 169 meters or 555 feet tall, and was the last stone structure to hold the title.
It was also the first time the tallest structure was located in the new world.
It held the record for only five years until the completion of the Eiffel Tower in Paris.
Originally built for the 1889 World's Fair, it was intended to be a temporary structure.
However, once it was up, the Parisians fell in love with it, and it became an icon of the city.
It reached 300 meters, or 986 feet.
An antenna was put on the top in the 1950s to increase its height to 1,063 feet, which is its current height.
The Eiffel Tower ushered in several innovations.
The first and most important was the use of iron to build extremely tall structures.
And the second was the creation of towers that had no real purpose other than to be really tall.
The Eiffel Tower held the spot for 41 years until the era of the skyscraper.
In 1930, the Chrysler building in New York City hit a height of 319 meters or 1,046 feet,
the first structure to break the 1,000-foot barrier.
However, its record was broken just one year later by the Empire State Building, which hit 381 meters or 1,250 feet.
At this point, the discussion of what was the tallest structure has actually been pretty clean.
After World War II, however, things began to get messy, and it's here we'll have to branch off into three different types of structures.
Buildings, towers, and guide towers.
Guide towers are things like TV and radio broadcasting antennas that use guy wires for support.
They're built by humans, but not designed for humans to even climb except for maintenance purposes.
These types of structures were the tallest things ever built for decades.
In quick succession, several record holders were built in a very short period of time.
Very quickly, the record-sending towers were built in New Mexico, Maine, Missouri, Georgia,
and finally the KVLY mast in Bismarck, North Dakota.
They were all built in a period of nine years from 1954 to 1963.
The KVLY Tower reached a height of six,
606 meters or 1,98 feet.
That record stood until 1974, when the largest guide structure ever built was constructed,
the Warsaw Radio Mast. It hit a height of 646.4 meters or 2,121 feet.
Unfortunately, it collapsed in a spectacular fashion in 1991.
The second category is that of a tower. This is a freestanding structure not designed for humans to live or work.
In 1967, the freestanding record of the Empire State Building was surpassed by the Ostenkino Tower in Moscow at 540 meters or 1,762 feet.
It was primarily used as a TV tower but also had an observation deck.
This was surpassed by the CN Tower in Toronto in 1975, which reached 553 meters or 1,815 feet.
There have been subsequently taller towers built in Tokyo and Guangzhou, China, but as you'll see, they really don't factor into the discussion.
of the tallest thing.
In the tallest building category, there has been a ton of controversy as to what constitutes
the tallest.
Is it the top floor?
Is it an observation deck, an architectural spire, or maybe an antenna on the roof?
The World Trade Center in New York surpassed the Empire State Building in 1972, which was then
surpassed by the Sears Tower in Chicago in 1974.
The Sears Tower, and I refuse to call it the Willis Tower, and the World Trade Center kept
going back and forth based on the top of the building or the top of the antenna.
This intensified with the 1998 construction of the Patronus Towers in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
The Council of Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat, yes, that is a thing, stepped in and
created a list of rules to determine what was the tallest. They determined both Petronus Towers
to be the tallest in the world. This all became moot in 2004 with the construction of Taipei
101, which reached 508.2 meters or 1,667 feet.
Thankfully, all of these distinctions became irrelevant in 2010, with the completion of the
Birch Khalifa in Dubai.
By any criteria you wish to use, it is the tallest thing ever built by humans, and it
crushes any other structure.
Its absolute tip tops out at an amazing 829.8 meters, or 2,700,000,000.
22 feet. Bigger than any building, any TV tower, and doing so by a very wide margin.
It is a 183.4 meters taller than the Warsaw Radio Mast was, which is still the second tallest thing ever built.
It's even taller than any deep sea oil platform, again by a wide margin.
Is there anything in the future that could possibly beat the Birch Khalifa?
There is only one building, even in the planning stages, which might be bigger, and in fact
construction has begun on it, the Jetta Tower.
The Jetta Tower is planned to be the first one-kilometer tall structure on Earth.
However, construction of the tower halted in 2018 due to labor reasons, and construction
hasn't begun again.
It's only about a third completed.
The estimated cost of the tower will be around $20 billion.
If the Jetta Tower should be built, it's hard to see.
anyone else bothering to build something taller.
To do so requires an
enormous amount of money, and any
such building could never economically
justify itself. The only
reason to build such a structure would be
for national pride.
So unless the Jetta Tower resumes construction,
the Birch-Kalifa is safe for the moment.
And if construction
doesn't resume, it's quite possible
that its record just might be safe
forever. The associate
producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Thor Thompson.
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