Blackstation/courtesy gensler
Standing at 2,074 feet (632 meters) tall, the Shanghai Tower is the world's second tallest building.
via SL Green Realty Corp
A new tall tower has broken ground in New York City. Named the One Vanderbilt Avenue tower, the building is designed by Kohn Pedersen Fox architects, and construction officially started today. At 1,401 feet tall, upon completion it will be the second tallest building in New York after the One World Trade Center.

Height: 427m (1,401ft)
Architect: Kohn Pedersen Fox
image courtes of emaar / via aurecon group
A new megatall skyscraper will dominate the Dubai skyline. Currently unnamed -- 'The Tower', as it's being referred to by its developers for now -- will be built on the Dubai Creek Harbour, and will be 100m taller than Dubai's Burj Khalifa -- a skyscraper that is currently the tallest building in the world. Megatall buildings are defined by the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat (CTBUH) as a builidng over 600 meters (1,968 feet) in height.
Height: 928m (3,044ft)
Architect: Santiago Calatrava
image courtes of emaar / via aurecon group
The expected completion date for the structure is 2020.

Height: 928m (3,044ft)
Architect: Santiago Calatrava
image courtes of emaar / via aurecon group
The building will hold ten observation decks in its oval-shaped peak. One deck will offer a 360-degree view of the city.

Height: 928m (3,044ft)
Architect: Santiago Calatrava
istockphoto
Currently world's tallest building, since it was completed in 2010, is the Burj Khalifa. It stands a massive 198 meters (650 feet) above its nearest competitor.

Height: 828m (2717ft)
Floors: 163
Architect: Skidmore, Owings & Merrill
Jeddah Economic Company/Adrian Smith + Gordon Gill Architecture
Another threat to the Burj Khalifa's tallest building title is the Jeddah Tower in Saudi Arabia. The tower is currently under construction and due to top out at 1,000 meters at a cost of $1.23 billion.

Height: 3,280ft
Architect: Adrian Smith + Gordon Gill Architecture
In Feburary, a proposal for a mile-high tower in Tokyo was revealed.
Height: 1,600m (5,250ft)
Architect: Kohn Pefersen Fox Associates and Leslie E Robertson Associates
Kohn Pedersen Fox
The 1,600 meter tower is part of a future city concept named "Next Tokyo 2045," which envisions a floating mega-city in Tokyo Bay.

Height: 1,600m (5,250ft)
Architect: Kohn Pefersen Fox Associates and Leslie E Robertson Associates
DBOX
In December 2015, plans were unveiled for the 1 Undershaft -- a 300m tall building that could become the City of London's tallest building.
Height: 300m (984ft)
Floors: 73
Architect: Aroland Holdings
DBOX
1 Undershaft will sit across the river from London's tallest building, The Shard, which is 9.6 meters taller.

Height: 300m (984ft)
Floors: 73
Architect: Aroland Holdings
Courtesy CIM Group
432 Park Avenue, the tallest all-residential tower in the western hemisphere, opened its doors in December 2015, recently became the hundredth supertall building in the world.

Height: 425.5m (1396ft)
Floors: 85
Architect: Rafael Vinoly, SLCE Architects, LLP
Gensler

Completed in 2015, Asia's tallest building surpasses the Shanghai World Financial Center and the Jin Mao Tower in Shanghai's Pudong district. Estimated to cost $2.4 billion, its completion marked the end of a project in the financial district stretching back to 1993.

Height: 632m (2073ft)
Floors: 128
Architect: Jun Xia, Gensler
FAYEZ NURELDINE/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
Situated close to the Grand Mosque of the holy city of Mecca, the tower complex is one part of the $15 billion King Abdulaziz Endowment Project, seeking to modernize Mecca and accommodate the ever-growing number of pilgrims.

Height: 601m (1972ft)
Floors: 120
Architect: Dar Al-Handasah Architects
STAN HONDA/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
Known as the "Freedom Tower," One World Trade Center stands on part of the site previously occupied by the Twin Towers. It's the highest building in the western hemisphere, and cost $3.9 billion according to Forbes.

Height: 541.3m (1776 ft)
Floors: 94
Architect: Skidmore, Owings & Merrill
Taiwan Tourism
The first skyscraper to break the half-kilometer mark, the world's tallest building between March 2004 and March 2010 is also one of the greenest -- certified LEED platinum in 2011. Designed to withstand the elements, including typhoons, earthquakes and 216 km/h winds, Taipei 101 utilizes a 660-tonne mass damper ball suspended from the 92nd floor, which sways to offset the movement of the building.

Height: 508m (1667ft)
Floors: 101
Architect: C.Y. Lee & Partners
ChinaFotoPress/Getty Image
Construction of Shanghai's third supertall building took 11 years, but the skyscraper dubbed "The Bottle Opener" was met with critical praise and high-end residents when it completed in 2008, including the Park Hyatt Shanghai and offices for Ernst & Young, Morgan Stanley, and BNP Paribas.

Height: 492m (1614.17ft)
Floors: 101
Architect: Kohn Pederson Fox
ANTHONY WALLACE/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
Hong Kong's tallest building has 108 floors -- but walking around it, you'd get a different story. The city's tetraphobia -- the fear of the number four -- means floors with the number have been skipped, and the International Commerce Center is marketed as a 118-story skyscraper.

Height: 484m (1588ft)
Floors: 108
Architect: Kohn Pedersen Fox
Goh Seng Chong/Bloomberg via Getty Images
The joint eighth highest completed skyscraper is still the tallest twin towers in the world. Finished in 1996 and inaugurated in 1999, it's been the site of numerous hair-raising stunts. Felix Baumgartner set a then-BASE jump world record in 1999 by jumping off a window cleaning crane, and in 2009 Frenchman Alain Robert, known as "Spiderman," freeclimbed to the top of Tower Two without safety equipment -- and did so in under two hours.

Height: 451.9m (1483ft)
Floors: 88
Architect: Cesar Pelli
Sun Chen
The architects behind the Burj Khalifa are also responsible for the world's tenth tallest building. Skidmore, Owings & Merrill's Zifeng Tower in Nanjing completed in January 2010 and sits just above the Willis Tower (previously the Sears Tower) in the rankings, eclipsing the SOM-designed Chicago icon by a mere 7.9 meters (26 ft).

Height: 450m (1476ft)
Floors: 66
Architect: Skidmore, Owings & Merrill
Teddy Cross
Completed in March 2016, the Lotte World Tower is Seoul's first supertall skyscraper, and is currently the sixth tallest building in the world.

Height: 556 meters (1824 feet)
Architect: Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates
Wong Tung & Partners
A hotel and office hybrid, this straightforward supertall building by Wong Tung & Partners in Hunan Province's booming capital city is expected to be completed by 2017.

Height: 452 metres (1,482 ft)
Architect: Wong Tung & Partners
E8xE8
The Suzhou IFS is two meters shy of the Changsha tower.
Height: 450 meters (1476 feet)
Architect: Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates
Pei Cobb Freed & Partners
The World One skyscraper in Mumbai will be as tall as the Willis Tower, the second tallest building in North America, and will be one of the world's tallest residential structures.

Height: 442 meters (1450 feet)
Architect: Pei Cobb Freed & Partners
DLN Architects
This design mimics and simplifies the neo-Gothic spires of an earlier skyscraper boom, à la the Woolworth and Empire State Buildings.
Height: 383 meters (1,257 ft)
Architect: Dennis Lau & Ng Chun Man Architects & Engineers
Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates
Kohn Pedersen Fox is back with this 90-story residential building. Zigzagging cuts in the curtain-wall break up the monotony of yet another boxy tower.

Height: 372 metres (1,220 ft)
Architect: Kohn Pedersen Fox

Story highlights

The Shanghai Tower elevator travels at 20.5 meters per second

Experts say the fastest elevator humanly possible would travel at 24 meters per second

Designed by Mitsubishi Electric, the elevator won three Guinness World Records titles in 2016.

CNN  — 

The Shanghai Tower – the world’s second tallest building – has just set three Guinness World Records.

The Chinese skyscraper now officially has the world’s fastest elevator, tallest elevator in a building and the fastest double-deck elevator.

Standing at 2,074 feet (632 meters) tall, a fast lift was always going to be necessity for the tower.

Installed in July, the Mitsubishi Electric-designed elevator travels at an incredible 20.5 meters per second (67 ft/s) – faster than Usain Bolt can run (40 ft/s), but slightly slower than a cheetah (95 ft/s).

Visitors are whisked up to the building’s viewing tower by the lightning fast elevator, from where they have unrivaled views of the Bund.

Close race

The Shanghai Tower is not alone in its need for speed.

In the Southern Chinese city of Guangzhou, home to 8.25 million, Hitachi this summer unveiled its fastest elevator in Guangzhou’s CTF Tower, which stands at 1,739 feet tall.

Its lift zooms from floors zero to 95 in an incredible 45 seconds – or 20 meters per second (65 ft/s).

“We wanted it to be fast, but the current speed was not anticipated,” says David Ho, head of design at New World Development, who was involved in the development of the CTF Tower.

“But the ‘fastest’ title will be gone soon,” he predicts.

The terracotta warrior

The CTF Tower isn’t just the tallest skyscraper in Guangzhou – it’s the tallest terracotta building in the world.

“That in itself was a huge technical challenge for us,” Forth Bagley, principal architect at KPF, which designed the building, tells CNN of working with this unique material.

“The client wanted a material that recalled the (historic) ceramics (trade) of the region.”

03:20 - Source: CNN
Race to the top

The result is an elegant skyscraper with a daily footfall of 25,000 people, zipping between the building’s hotel, office and residential space.

“The elevatoring strategy required us to bring in high volumes of people … and the client made a huge investment to try to make sure that happened quickly,” Forth says.

Inside the cabin an indicator shows passengers how fast they are going – perhaps to prove that they aren’t being cheated.

A high-tech air pressure adjustment system that protects ears from popping and blocks any uncomfortable G-force backlash means this lift is so smooth it’s hard to believe it’s the world’s second fastest.

Lift me up

It’s not only China that is faced with the challenge of getting people through ever-taller towers with increasing efficiency.

Reaching 1km into the sky, the Jeddah Tower in Saudi Arabia will be the world’s tallest building when completed in 2019.

A building so tall, naturally, requires an exceptionally fast elevator.

Chow Tai Fook Enterprises Ltd
The CTF Tower in Zhujiang New Town in Guangzhou, Southern China.

Finnish maker Kone has risen to the challenge, developing the “ultrarope” elevator, which uses a carbon-fibre cable strong enough to power a lift more than 1km in length – previously, about 500km was the maximum length possible for a lift cable.

One third of the weight of traditional lift ropes, it also makes super speeds a reality.

The ultrarope lift will travel at “over 33 feet per second”, and “reach the highest liveable floor in the world in 52 seconds,” according to Kone.

When finally unveiled, it could easily be faster than Hitachi’s creation. However, Albert So, an expert in elevator engineering, believes lift technology can’t get much faster

“I predict the maximum speed of a vertical lift cabin cannot be more than 79 feet per second,” he says. “This is not because we can’t make lifts that go faster than this, but because of the air pressure.”

If a lift traveled faster than this, he says, it wouldn’t give passengers enough time to acclimatize to the air pressure on the top floor.

Engineers would need to pressurize the entire building, like an airplane cabin.

Lifts that move sideways?

Perhaps the most exciting innovation in lift technology is coming from German transport firm Thyssenkrupp.

By using magnetic levitation, or “maglev” technology – which uses magnetic fields rather than elevator cables to propel cabins – the company is proposing elevators that move both vertically and horizontally.

This type of elevator would be slower, at least initially, but it could increase travel efficiency throughout a sprawling building.

Wolfgang Traeger
This floating wooden pavilion is the Pavillion of Reflections in Zurich. It was revealed as part of Manifesta, an annual contemporary art biennial.
Wolfgang Traeger/courtesy manifesta
The wooden structure is a collaborative project between 30 architecture students from ETH in Zurich and design firm Studio Tom Emerson.
Wolfgang Traeger/courtesy manifesta
Described as an "urban island," the floating structure is intended for leisurely use, and features an open-air cinema.
courtesy White Arkitekter
The "Sida Vid Sida" ("side by side") building is a proposed project by Swedish architects White Arkitekter.
courtesy White Arkitekter
The proposed design won an architecture competition in the city of Skelleftea. There were 55 entries from 10 countries.
courtesy White Arkitekter
The design was selected for its use of wood as a building material, as it pays tribute to Skelletea's rich local timber industry.
courtesy White Arkitekter
The building is expected to be completed in 2019.
courtesy plp architecture
Oakwood Tower is a proposed structure by PLP Architecture and Cambridge University's Department of Architecture.
courtesy plp architecture
At 80 stories high, it would be London's first wooden skyscraper, and another addition to the growing trend for structures made entirely of timber.
Lendlease
The Forte in Melbourne was completed in 2012, and is a 10-story structure built entirely of wood.
Lendlease
For two years, the 104-foot tall structure was the tallest wooden building in the world.
Snølys
That title was soon taken by the Treet in Norway.
Morten Pedersen
Treet was completed in 2014, and is 14 stories tall.
Courtesy of MGA
The Wood Innovation and Design Center (WIDC) is located in the province of British Columbia in Canada.
Courtesy of MGA
The building is a hub for wooden design education and research.
dean irvine/cnn
In Bali, the 18-home Green Village is constructed almost entirely of bamboo.
dean irvine/cnn
"This is the future. It's pure architecture ... to breathe fresh air and touch nature, that's everything," says architect Defit Wijaya.
CRG Architects
CRG Architects proposed a skyscraper made entirely of bamboo at the World Architecture Festival in 2015.
crg architects
Bamboo was recently recognized by the United Nations as a green building material that can help combat climate change.

“I think this is our future,” says So. “Our elevators will become more like a chess board, the pieces on the board moving around the building.”

So acknowledges that governments around the world remain unconvinced of horizontal elevators’ safety credentials, but says their introduction is only a matter of time.

“There is no practical value of building tall, when a tall building becomes slimmer as it gets taller,” So says. “Most of the area at the top of the building is used for the elevator.”

A bigger building with a horizontal elevator is a better use of space, he says.