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Skyscrapers

The 10 tallest buildings that were never finished

Some buildings were just never meant to be…

10 tallest building never built Business Insider Business Insider

MANY BUILDING NEVER get completed. Sometimes the construction phase burns out the fund, and the bricklayers have to halt. Other times an event like a war or a political shift stops the work halfway.

The chart below, published by the Council on Tall Building and Urban Habitat (CTBUH), shows the 10 tallest buildings in which construction began but was never completed.

CTBUH reports that “a building is considered to be ‘Never Completed’ when site works had begun, but were completely halted, and no reports indicate that construction will continue.”

The top spot goes to the gigantic Nakheel Tower in Dubai, which would have stood as high as one kilometre (3,300 feet).

screen shot 2014-11-26 at 1.13.35 pm Business Insider Business Insider

Launched in 2008, it was put on hold in 2009 when the builder went bust. The proposed relaunch of the construction never happened, and the building yard is still untouched after five years.

Three more projects that make the list also come from Dubai, with one more from neighbour Doha. Clearly, the Emirates have a passion for tall towers, but sometimes the projects don’t go to plan.

The Chicago Spire, the fourth-tallest project on the list, went bust because of the financial crisis, leading to a $77 million lawsuit against its developer Garrett Kelleher.

screen-shot-2014-11-26-at-10438-pm Business Insider Business Insider

World War II halted the construction of the Palace of the Soviets (image above), a gigantic bureaucratic behemoth that Joseph Stalin wanted to build in Moscow. The dictator specifically required that it would top the Eiffel tower in Paris.

Started in 1937, it would have been the tallest building on the planet at that time, but the Nazi invasion of the USSR stopped its construction in 1941.

Not a bad result, considering that the skyscraper would have been topped with a statue of Stalin himself, overseeing the Russian capital from 450 metres up.

The Palace and its creator are also the subject of a dedicated video on YouTube.

Nigel Fowler Sutton / YouTube

The more recent Russia Tower, on which construction stopped in 2008 and that is now due to become a car park, shows that mega buildings are still much appreciated around the Kremlin.

The report concludes that 50 buildings taller than 150 metres (500 feet) are on hold in the world.

Read: Here’s everything that’s going to happen in 2015…>

Read: Grand mild out, isn’t it? … Well, here’s what Dublin looked like — four years ago>

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