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When was the first 10 story building built?

The First Skyscraper The Home Insurance Building was completed in 1885; it originally had 10 stories and stretched 138 feet in the air. During its construction, city authorities were so worried that the building would topple over that they halted construction for a period of time so that they could ensure its safety.



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American Surety Building (New York City): At 300 feet tall, this 20-story building broke Chicago's height record when it was completed in 1896.

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While it didn't take Manhattan long to claim the steel-framed high-rise as its own, the skyscraper boom began in the capital of the American Midwest in 1885 with William Le Baron Jenney's Home Insurance Building, which rose to its then-impressive height of 10 storeys (and, after an 1890 addition, 12) by means of metal, ...

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The term skyscraper originally applied to buildings of 10 to 20 stories, but by the late 20th century the term was used to describe high-rise buildings of unusual height, generally greater than 40 or 50 stories. Empire State Building in Midtown Manhattan.

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The shortest of the 100-story buildings in the exhibition is Chicago's John Hancock Center at 1127 ft. (344 meters). The tallest with 100 stories is KK 100 in Shenzhen, China at 1,449 ft. / 442 meters.

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Some famous buildings buck the trend, however: New York City's Flatiron Building, Empire State Building, Waldorf Astoria Hotel, and all Hilton International hotels all have 13th floors.

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Opened in Rotterdam, 1898. The architect was Willem Molenbroek. The first modern skyscraper in Europe was built in the year 1898. Its name was The Witte Huis or The White House and the place where it was built is Rotterdam (Netherlands).

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The earliest stage of skyscraper design encompasses buildings built between 1884 and 1945, predominantly in the American cities of New York and Chicago.

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China. With a whopping 3090 skyscrapers that are over 150 metres tall, China occupies the first position in this list.

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