List of largest buildings in the world

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This following is a List of largest buildings in the world by usable space (volume), mass and area.


Contents

The Palace of the Parliament in Bucharest, Romania
The Palace of the Parliament in Bucharest, Romania
At 13.3 million (470 million cu ft), Boeing claims that its Everett Plant is the largest building in the world by volume. This claim is supported by the Guinness Book of Records. Originally, the plant encompassed 5.64 million m³ (200 million cu ft). The building is used to assemble the company's 747, 767, 777 and 787 aircraft.[1]
A hangar for a never-constructed, giant airship, built by Cargolifter AG. The hangar has a volume of 5.2 million m³ (184 million cu ft), is 107 m (350 ft) tall, 360 m (1,180 ft) long and 210 m (690 ft) wide. The area is now used for Tropical Islands, an indoor, artificial tropical resort. It is the world's largest hall without pillars.
NASA's Vehicle Assembly Building ranks third.
NASA's Vehicle Assembly Building ranks third.
Originally used to assemble the Saturn V rocket for the Apollo program, the building encloses 3.66 million m³ (130 million cu ft) of space.
Has a total of 2.55 million m³ (90 million cu ft), and a floor area of 350,000 (3.8 million sq ft). The building ranks second in the world in total office space, by floor space[2].


Great Wall of China holds several world records such as longest, largest in terms of footprint, volume, mass, etc.[citation needed]
Great Wall of China holds several world records such as longest, largest in terms of footprint, volume, mass, etc.[citation needed]
Interior view from check-in hall towards departure gates of Hong Kong International Airport.
Interior view from check-in hall towards departure gates of Hong Kong International Airport.
The Chicago Merchandise Mart
The Chicago Merchandise Mart

The chiefly one-story building has 990,000 (10.6 million sq ft) of floor space, and is the world's largest building in terms of both footprint and floor area. The Guinness Book of Records records it as the largest commercial building in the world. Around 20 million flowers are sold in the building every day.

Opened in 2007, the casino claims to have 10.5 million sq ft (980,000 m²) of floorspace, giving it the largest floor area of any building.[3]
The container freight station of Asia Container Terminals Ltd. is the largest multistorey industrial building in one discrete structure. It measures 109.5 m (359 ft 3 in) tall and has 15 stories. It has 866,000 m² (9.3 million sq ft) in floor area.
With a floor area of 700,000 m² (7.5 million sq ft), it is the world's largest building ever built in a single phase.
Headquarters of the US Department of Defense, it measures 610,000 m² (6.6 million sq ft) by floor area and 2 million m³ (77 million cu ft) by volume.
The terminal building of the airport is the world's largest airport terminal building with an area of 564,000 m² (6.1 million sq ft), and is 1.3 km (0.8 miles) long. The previous record holder was the Suvarnabhumi Airport in Bangkok, which has an area of 563,000 m² (6 million sq ft).
The 5.3 million sq ft facility on a 504 acre (204 ha) site houses engineering, design, manufacturing and corporate offices, as well as a great number of living amenities.
A 5,740,200 sq ft facility that houses the University of Washington medical school, nursing school, dental school, as well as many research projects.
Claims to be the largest commercial building in the world, but at 390,000 m² (4.2 million sq ft), it is considerably smaller than the Aalsmeer Flower Auction. However, it is likely the largest multi-story commercial building in the world.
While the building was never completed, it is also one of the world's largest buildings with 360,000 m² (3.9 million sq ft) of gross floor area and is the world's largest, and tallest, unoccupied building.
Contains 350,000 m² (3.8 million sq ft) of floor area.
World's second largest administrative building, with a floor area of 330,000 m². It is also the world's third largest building with a volume of 2,550,000 m3. [4]
Along with the Palace of the Parliament in Romania, this building has the most floor space in Europe, at 350,000 m². The building consists of a number of towers which share a common basement.
The largest building in Washington, D.C. at 288,000 m² (3.1 million sq ft). It is owned by the U.S. General Services Administration, and it is the first and only federal building dedicated to both government and private use.
The main building has more than 290,000 m² (3.13 million sq ft) of floor space. General Services Administration owned space is approximately 126,000 m² (1.36 million sq ft), and an additional 165,000 m² (1.78 millioin sq ft) is under National Nuclear Security Administration control. The total area of all buildings in the complex is more than 464,000 m² (5 million sq ft).
The 1,200 m (3,900 ft) long building, with 284,000 m² (3.05 million sq ft) of floor space, was the world's largest building when constructed (completed in 1941).

The heaviest conventional building[5]in the world is made of 1 million m³ (35.3 million cu ft) of marble from Transylvania and 700,000 tonnes of steel and bronze. The building also features 3,500 metric tons of crystal glass and 900,000 m³ (31.7 million cu ft) of wood. It measures 270 m by 240 m (885 ft by 787 ft), 86 m (282 ft) high, and extends 92 m (300 ft) below ground.
This is the largest pyramid, and largest individual structure by volume of material, with an estimated volume of 3.3 million m³ (116.5 million cu ft).
The pyramid of Khufu is estimated to weigh approximately 6 million tonnes[6][7] with a volume of 2.6 million m3

The SnowCastle of Kemi is the world's biggest snow castle, built yearly in Kemi, Finland since 1996. The area covered by the snow castle has varied from 13,000 to over 20,000 m² (140,000–215,000 sq ft).

The world's largest Christian church is Basilica of Our Lady of Peace of Yamoussoukro in Yamoussoukro, Côte d'Ivoire. Completed in 1989, it surpassed the previous record holder, St. Peter's Basilica in Vatican City. The title of largest cathedral (and largest Protestant church) is hotly debated between the Cathedral of Saint John the Divine in New York City, United States, and the Liverpool Anglican Cathedral in England, the former remaining unfinished, whereas the latter is a completed structure.

The Guinness Book of Records lists the Finger Wharf in Woolloomooloo, Sydney, Australia, as the largest wooden structure in the world. Blimp Hangar 2, at the Tillamook Air Museum, in Tillamook, Oregon, is also thought by some to be the world's largest wooden structure.

The Todaiji temple in Nara, Japan, is called the largest wooden temple in the world, though this is disputed. Other candidates include three temples: Nanyue Temple on Henshan Mountain, China; Xiantong Temple in Shanxi Province, China; and Zhebang Temple in Tibet (the current temple is 30% smaller than its predecessor, which was destroyed in a fire). The Kerimäki Church in Kerimäki, Finland, is the world's largest wooden church.


The Forbidden City in Beijing, China is considered as the largest palace in the world, with a claimed 8,886 rooms and 720,000 m² (7.75 million sq ft) of space.

The Great Wall of China is the longest man-made structure (excluding infrastructure items such as cables, roads and railways) in the world with a length of over 6,352 km (3,948 miles).

The Karl-Marx-Hof in Vienna, Austria holds the distinction of being the longest single residential building in the world, at 1,100 m (3,600 ft) long, and spanning four tram stops. The former seaside resort Prora on the island of Rügen, Germany has a length of almost 5 km (3.1 mi); however, it is divided into eight single buildings standing in a row.

The Stockholm Globe Arena in Stockholm, Sweden, is the largest hemispherical building, with a total volume of 600,000 m³ (21 million cu ft).

The largest slaughterhouse in the world is the Smithfield Packing Company in Tar Heel, North Carolina, United States.

The Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC of Stanford University) in the San Francisco Bay Area of California, USA, is the world's longest building at over 2 miles.

A dome is not a building but a part of a building. Buildings with domes make up a large amount of the world's largest buildings.

This is a list of the world's largest shopping malls, based on gross leasable area (GLA) rather than total area.[5]

Mall Location GLA
(millions ft²)
GLA
(m²)
Total Area
(millions ft²)
Total Area
(m²)
1 South China Mall Dongguan, China 7.1 660,000 9.6 892,000
2 City Stars Cairo, Egypt 8.1 750,000
3 Jin Yuan, (Golden Resources Mall) Beijing, China 6.0 560,000 7.3 680,000
4 SM Mall of Asia Pasay City, Metro Manila, Philippines 4.2 386,224
5 SM City North EDSA Quezon City, Metro Manila, Philippines 3.8 351,872
6 West Edmonton Mall Edmonton, Alberta, Canada 3.8 350,000 5.3 570,000
7 Cevahir Mall Istanbul, Turkey 3.8 348,000 4.5 420,000
8 SM Megamall Mandaluyong City, Metro Manila, Philippines 3.6 331,679
9 Berjaya Times Square Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia 3.4 320,000 7.5 700,000
10 Beijing Mall Beijing, China 3.4 320,000 4.7 440,000
11 Zhengjia Plaza (Grandview Mall) Guangzhou, China 3.0 280,000 4.5 420,000
12 Sambil (Centro Sambil Caracas) Caracas, Venezuela 3.0 280,000
13 Dream Mall Kaohsiung, Taiwan 4.2
14 King of Prussia Mall King of Prussia, Pennsylvania, USA 2.8 260,000
15 South Coast Plaza Costa Mesa, California, USA 2.7 250,000
16 Central World Plaza Bangkok, Thailand 2.6 244,000
17 Aricanduva Mall Sao Paulo, Brazil 2.6 242,000 3.7 342,000
18 Chia Tai Square Shanghai, China 2.6 240,000
19 Dongfang Xin Tiandi (Oriental Plaza) Foshan, Guangdong, China 2.5 230,000 8.6 800,000
20 Mall of America Bloomington, Minnesota, USA 2.5 230,000 4.2 390,000
21 Sawgrass Mills Sunrise, Florida, USA 2.5 230,000 4.2 390,000
22 Siam Paragon Bangkok, Thailand 2.5 230,000 4.1 377,000
23 Panda Mall Chengdu, Sichuan, China 2.5 230,000 3.9 360,000
24 Mall of the Emirates Dubai, UAE 2.4 225,000 6.5 600,000
25 Bahrain City Center Manama, Bahrain 2.4 225,000 6.5 600,000
26 Core Pacific City Taipei, Taiwan 204,190

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