Update Date: December 13, 2025
Shanghai Tower redefined Shanghai’s skyline when it topped out at 632 meters (2,073 ft) and became the tallest building in China; it opened to the public in 2015–2016 and anchors the Lujiazui financial district alongside Jin Mao and the Shanghai World Financial Center.
The project was conceived as a vertical city—stacking mixed uses, sky gardens, and sky lobbies to reduce travel distances and create social micro‑neighborhoods within a single tower.
Design and engineering innovations
The tower’s twisting form is not only aesthetic: the spiral reduces wind loads and vortex shedding, improving structural performance at extreme heights.
Its double‑skin curtain wall creates thermal buffer zones and sky gardens that help moderate temperature and reduce HVAC loads, contributing to the tower’s sustainability credentials.
The building houses 128 above‑ground floors and 5 below ground, with a total floor area of roughly 380,000 m² of usable space.
Structural systems and materials
The core uses high‑strength concrete and a composite mega‑frame to resist lateral loads; outriggers and belt trusses tie the core to perimeter columns, enabling open floor plates for offices and hotel spaces.
Records, performance, and visitor experience
Shanghai Tower contains one of the world’s fastest elevator systems, whisking visitors to the upper observation levels in under a minute; the main public observatory sits near 562 m offering panoramic views of the Huangpu River and the Bund.
The tower’s construction cost is commonly reported around CN¥15.9 billion (approx. US$2.4 billion) and it can accommodate thousands of occupants across offices, retail, and hospitality functions.
Visitor tips
- Buy timed tickets online to avoid queues and aim for early morning or late afternoon for best light and fewer crowds.
- Combine a visit with the Bund or a Huangpu River cruise for comparative skyline photos.
Comparative snapshot
| Attribute | Key value | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Height | 632 m | Tallest in China; global landmark |
| Floors | 128 above ground | Vertical city program; mixed uses |
| Observatory | ~562 m | One of the highest public decks worldwide |
Sources: Wikipedia China Discovery Institution of Civil Engineers (ICE).
Broader impact and sustainability
Beyond records, Shanghai Tower demonstrates how tall buildings can integrate energy performance, occupant comfort, and public amenity at scale.
Its layered façade, sky gardens, and mixed‑use planning are frequently cited in engineering and urban design literature as a model for sustainable supertall development.
External links
- Shanghai Tower — Wikipedia
- Shanghai Tower visitor guide — China Discovery
- In‑depth guide — Know Shanghai Well
- Engineering analysis — Institution of Civil Engineers (ICE)