courtesy GORPROJECT
The Council of Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat (CTBUH) has released a comprehensive list of the world's twisting tall buildings that are either completed or under construction. From Shanghai to Dubai, CNN takes a look at these spectacular spiraled skyscrapers, as well as some of the other tallest buildings in the world.
JOHANNES EISELE/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
Topping CTBUH's list in terms of height is Shanghai Tower, which twirls 632 meters (2,073 feet) into the sky.
Connie Zhou/courtesy gensler
Shanghai Tower is also the tallest building in China, and the second tallest skyscraper in the world after the famous Burj Khalifa in Dubai.
Connie Zhou/courtesy gensler
Located in Shanghai's burgeoning Lujiazui financial district and designed by architects Marshall Strabala and Jun Xia from the firm Gensler, its twisted form accommodates strong typhoon winds. The tower was completed at the end of 2015.
via lakhta center press center
Although not yet completed, the second tallest twisted building on CTBUH's list is the Lakhta Center, a tower in St Petersburgh, Russia.
via lakhta center press center
Designed by British architect Tony Kettle in conjunction with Gorproject, the tower has a projected height of 462 meters (1,516 feet) and is due to be completed by the end of 2018.
Bjarke Ingels Group
'The Eleventh' towers in Manhattan, New York, will have a rotating aesthetic that gives the appearance of movement. The towers, designed by Bjarke Ingels Group, will stand 300 and 400 feet tall when they are completed in 2019.
designed by Andrew Bromberg at Aedas
A residential skyscraper in Dubai Marina, Ocean Heights stands 310 meters (1,017 feet) tall and has 83 floors. The tower is the second highest twisting tall building that's been completed and was designed by American architect, Andrew Bromberg from Aedas.
KARIM SAHIB/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
Completed in 2013 and designed by Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, Cayan Tower soars 306 meters (1,005 feet) into the sky. It's the third tallest twisted tower in the world that's complete, according to CTBUH.
courtesy GORPROJECT
A white ribbon wraps around Moscow's stunning Evolution Tower, which topped out at 246 meters (807 feet) when completed in 2015.
courtesy GORPROJECT
Inspired by the city's St Basil Cathedral and Russia's never completed Talin's Tower, the chief architect for design was Philip Nikandrov, from Gorproject.
JOHAN NILSSON/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
The world's first ever twisted tall building was the 190 meter (623 feet) Turning Torso, which was designed by Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava and completed in 2005.
AFP/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
"The unconventional form of a twisting building means every component of tall building design must be rethought," says the CTBUH report author, Shawn Ursini.
Iwan Baan/courtesy MAD Architects
Dubbed the 'Marilyn Monroe' towers by local residents due to its fluid, natural lines, Absolute World Towers was designed by MAD architects.
Tom Arban Photography Inc
Absolute World's two twisted towers stand at 176 meters (577 feet) and 158 meters (518 feet) tall.
istockphoto
Claiming the crown for the world's tallest building upon its completion in 2010, the Burj Khalifa stands a massive 198 meters (650 feet) above its nearest completed competitor.
image courtes of emaar / via aurecon group
However, the Burj Khalifa's 828 meter (2,717 feet) mark on Dubai's skyline may soon be eclipsed by a new mega-tall skyscraper.
image courtes of emaar / via aurecon group
Although not yet officially named, 'The Tower' at Dubai Creek Harbour will be 100m taller than the Burj Khalifa.
image courtes of emaar / via aurecon group
The Santiago Calatrava designed tower is expected to be completed in 2020 and will hold ten observation decks in its oval-shaped peak.
Jeddah Economic Company/Adrian Smith + Gordon Gill Architecture
Also competing for the title of the world's tallest building is Jeddah Tower in Saudi Arabia. Designed by Adrian Smith + Gordon Gill Architecture, the tower aims to break the 1 km (3,280 feet) threshold upon its expected completion in 2019. Such innovation doesn't come cheap - the building is expected to cost $1.23 billion.
Taking the race to even further extremes, a proposal for a tower double the height of the Burj Khalifa was unveiled In Feburary by Kohn Pefersen Fox Associates (KPF) and Leslie E Robertson Associates (LERA).
Kohn Pedersen Fox
The 1,600 meter -- one entire mile -- tower is part of a future city concept named "Next Tokyo 2045," which envisions a floating mega-city in Tokyo Bay.
DBOX
In December 2015, plans were unveiled for 1 Undershaft -- a 300 meter (984 feet) tall building that could become the City of London's tallest skyscraper.
DBOX
1 Undershaft will sit across the river from London's existing tallest building, The Shard, which sits 309 meters (1,013 feet) above London at its highest point.
Courtesy CIM Group
432 Park Avenue, the tallest all-residential tower in the western hemisphere, opened its doors in December 2015 and recently became the hundredth supertall building in the world. The 425.5 meter (1,396 feet) building was designed by Rafael Vinoly of SLCE 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. At 541 meters (1,776 feet) it's the highest building in the western hemisphere, and cost $3.9 billion according to Forbes. The building was designed by Skidmore, Owings & Merrill.
Taiwan Tourism
The first skyscraper to break the half-kilometer mark, Taipei 101 stands at 508 meters (1,667 feet) tall. Designed by C.Y. Lee & Partners 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.
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 was completed in 2008. At 492 meters (1,614 feet) tall, the Kohn Pederson Fox building's residents include the Park Hyatt Shanghai and offices for Ernst & Young, Morgan Stanley, and BNP Paribas.
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 484 meter (1,588 feet) tall International Commerce Center is marketed as a 118-story skyscraper. The building was designed by 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 at 451.9 meters (1,483 feet). 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. It was designed by Cesar Pelli.
Teddy Cross
Completed in March 2016, the Lotte World Tower is Seoul's first supertall skyscraper, and currently the sixth tallest building in the world. At 556 meters (1,824 feet) tall, the building was designed by Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates.

Story highlights

A new report identifies the 28 tallest twisted towers in the world

Advances in design and construction have made these often spectacular buildings increasingly popular

CNN  — 

They are some of the most eye-catching buildings in the world: spiraling skyscrapers that twist and turn as they extend into the sky. And it’s a sight that’s becoming more common, according to a new report that ranks the world’s 28 twisted tall towers by height.

Defined as a building higher than 90 meters that “progressively rotates its floor plates or façade as it gains height”, the report – “Twisting Tall Buildings” by the Chicago-based Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat (CTBUH) – says 15 spiraled skyscrapers now exist, with a further 13 under construction.

“A stunning variety of textures, view angles and ripple effects result from these manipulations, making these ‘twisters’ some of the world’s most iconic buildings,” says the report from CTBUH, which is a non-profit organization that researches tall buildings and urban design.

Skyscrapers rethought

Twisted skyscrapers are a recent phenomenon. The first specimen – the Turning Torso, by Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava – was built just 11 years ago in Malmo, Sweden.

via getty images
The Turning Torso building was completed in 2005.

Advances in construction, engineering and architectural computer programs have enabled this type of architecture to flourish, but it has required a fundamental rethink of tall buildings, Shawn Ursini, CTBUH’s Skyscraper Database Editor, tells CNN.

While most tall buildings are made up of floor plates stacked on top of each other, which enables a standard design for components such as vertical columns and structural walls, Ursini says that in a twisted skyscraper even simple things like the dimensions of the windows need to be entirely revisited.

“The unconventional form of a twisting building means every component of tall-building design must be rethought, from the effects of wind on the structure, the forces and loads on the interior columns, the design differences in the shape of floors as the building rises, and so forth,” he explains. 

“All of these factors have rippling effects which must be considered in the overall design.”

Buildings of the future

The growing number of completed twisted towers prompted CTBUH to compile its comprehensive list, but only one building – Diamond Tower, a 432 meter (1,417 feet) skyscraper designed by Buruoj that is under construction in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia – twists a full 360 degrees along its height, according to the report.

courtesy Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat

Shanghai Tower, designed by Gensler and completed in 2015 in Shanghai, China, is easily the tallest twisted skyscraper, of any built or planned. Twirling 632 meters (2,073 feet) into the air, it’s the tallest building in China, and the second tallest in the world after the famous Burj Khalifa in Dubai.

The two next tallest twisted buildings in existence – Ocean Heights, designed by Andrew Bromberg of Aedas, and Cayan Tower, by Skidmore, Owings and Merrill, both of which are in Dubai – stretch a little above a more modest 300 meters (984 feet). Their places in the top three, however, are under threat.

02:18 - Source: CNN
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Lakhta Center, a building in St Petersburg, Russia, designed by British architect Tony Kettle, will stretch to 462 meters (1,516 feet) upon its expected completion in 2018, making it the second-tallest twister in the world, while Diamond Tower, if completed as expected in 2019, will come in third at 432 meters. And it may not be too long before Shanghai Tower’s twirling heights are topped, thanks to the visual and engineering appeal of this type of architecture.

Connie Zhou/courtesy gensler
The Shanghai Tower was completed in 2015.

This type of design can make a building more aerodynamic and energy efficient, leading to an increasing number of twisted tall buildings entering the planning stages throughout the world.

“The unique form of the twisting tall building makes them very noticeable and allows them to stand out against the more typical forms found in high-rise buildings,” says Ursini. “There are two twisting towers now underway in Canada, known as Vancouver House and Telus Sky, as well as a handful of others planned around the globe. “

Take a look at some of the world’s tallest twisted towers in the photo gallery above.