When you look at a picture of the Burj Khalifa, your eye naturally travels up the sleek, stepped façade until it pierces the clouds. We all know the number: 828 meters (2,717 feet) . But here is a truth that surprises most people: without its spire, the Burj Khalifa would barely be taller than the Empire State Building.
The Burj’s spire is technically a sitting on top of the concrete core. burj khalifa spire
Imagine opening that hatch. You are standing on a platform the size of a dinner plate. The wind is screaming at 100 mph. You look down, and you cannot see the ground—only clouds. You look horizontally, and you see the curvature of the Earth. That is the reality of the Burj’s spire. So, is the spire "cheating"? When you look at a picture of the
Next time you see a photo of that golden tip glinting in the Dubai sun, don't just see an antenna. See a 4,000-ton skyscraper balancing a 200-meter steel spear on its head, defying gravity and physics. The Burj’s spire is technically a sitting on
While we call it a spire, it is functionally a 200-meter communications mast. It houses over a dozen TV, radio, and mobile network transmitters. Without it, your cell phone would drop the call the moment you walked into downtown Dubai. The View From Hell You might think the observation deck (At The Top) is high enough. That sits at 555 meters. The spire starts above that.