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Why this 2,073-foot Chinese building could be an omen of economic doom
Auditorium (1889) and New York World (1890)
British Banking Crisis, 1890
Chicago's 269-foot-tall Auditorium building, completed in 1889, and the 309-foot-tall New York World building, completed in 1890, coincided with the British banking crisis of 1890 and a world recession.
Source: Barclays
Masonic Temple, Manhattan Life Building, and Milwaukee City Hall (1893)
U.S. panic marked by the collapse of railroad overbuilding, 1893
Chicago's 302-foot-tall Masonic Temple, the 348-foot-tall Manhattan Life Building, and the 353-foot-tall Milwaukee City Hall coincided with the U.S. panic of 1893 marked by the collapse of railroad overbuilding.
It also overlapped with a string of bank failures and a run on gold.
Source: Barclays
Park Row Building and Philadelphia City Hall (1901)
First stock market crash on the NYSE, 1901
The construction of the 391-foot-tall Park Row Building presaged the U.S. stock market crash and panic of 1901, as did the completion of Philadelphia City Hall, which stood at a height of 511 feet.
Source: Barclays
Singer Building and MetLife Building (1907)
The Bankers' Panic and U.S. economic crisis, 1907–1910
The construction of New York's 612-foot-tall Singer building and the 700-foot-tall Metropolitan Life Building corresponded with the panic of 1907.
The Bankers' Panic was a financial crisis that occurred after the NYSE fell nearly 50% from its peak, and reflected a monetary expansion brought about by the establishment of trust companies.
Source: Barclays
40 Wall Street (1929), Chrysler (1930), and Empire State Building (1931)
The Great Depression, 1929–1933
The construction of three record-breaking buildings coincided with the onset of the Great Depression.
40 Wall Street, which on completion in 1929 reached 927 feet, followed by the 1,046-foot-tall Chrysler building in 1930, and the Empire State building in 1931, which towered over the others at 1,250 feet.
Source: Barclays
World Trade Center (1972-1973) and Sears Tower (1974)
U.S. and worldwide economic crisis, 1973–1975
The 1972 construction of One World Trade Center, the 1973 completion of Two World Trade Center, and the 1974 construction of the Sears Tower in Chicago coincided with a period of speculation in monetary expansion from foreign lending.
It also coincided with the collapse of the Bretton Woods system, a rise in oil prices that caused a global economic crisis, and speculation in stocks, property, ships, and aircraft.
Source: Barclays
Petronas Towers (1997)
Asian economic crisis, 1997–1998
The Asian economic crisis, currency devaluation, and speculation in stock and property coincided with the completion of the Petronas Towers in 1997.
At 1,483 feet, the Petronas Towers were the tallest buildings in the world and heralded a crisis in that region.
Source: Barclays
Taipei 101 (1999)
Dot-com bubble, 2000–2003
The construction of the 1,671-foot-tall Taipei 101 began in 1999 and was completed in 2004.
The duration coincided with the tech bubble and the recession in the early 2000s.
Source: Barclays
Burj Khalifa (2010)
The Great Recession, 2007–2010
The 2010 completion of the tallest building in the world, the Burj Khalifa, which towers at 2,717 feet, coincided with the current global financial crisis.
The building surpassed Taipei 101's height on July 21, 2007.
Source: Barclays
Construction on Sky City in China is underway
Sky City, outside of Changsha, China, is expected to be around 2,749 feet tall. The 220-story building is expected to take seven months to build at a cost of $628 million. However, its construction has been been halted by authorities.
This building's (possible) construction comes right when everyone's worried about China's economic and political stability.
That being said, we won't know for several years if this recording breaking skyscraper coincides with an economic bust...
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