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Book Review of The Heights: Anatomy of a Skyscraper

November 30, 2011 By Emily Hamilton

I’m reviewing The Heights: Anatomy of the Skyscraper by Kate Ascher as part of a TLC Book Tour. Other bloggers are also reviewing the book, and you can find links to their reviews here. I received a complimentary copy of the book, and I’d like to send it to a reader if anyone is interested in reading it. If you’d like it, just comment saying so by Monday, December 5th. If multiple readers would like it, I’ll pick one at random.

_______________________________

The Heights reads like a textbook for Skyscrapers 101. It’s full of interesting skyscraper facts along with diagrams and timelines. I learned a lot from the book, having no background in architecture or engineering. For someone who has studied these subjects though, I imagine that this book would be too elementary. However for me, it offered a useful overview of the history and science of skyscrapers.

Ascher details the process of planning, constructing, and owning skyscrapers, from the details of different types of foundations to building maintenance. She explains some of the challenges that skyscrapers present that I might not have thought about. For example, buildings with unusual designs that do not have straight sides must be designed with mechanisms for reaching the windows for cleaning and maintenance.

She also explores skyscraper financing. I was surprised to learn that the bulk of the cost of owning a skyscraper comes not from construction, but rather from cleaning and maintenance over the life of the building:

Although the annual cost of maintenance pales in comparison to the cost of constructing a building, over the life of a building — which can be upward of 100 years–it is much more significant. Holding aside capital replacement and reinvestment, the cost of the initial structure itself represents only about 5 to 10 percent of the total cost of owning a building over a 30-year period.

The visuals in the book were particularly well done. For example, Ascher offers visualizations of the real estate available within a skyscraper and then compares that to what the same amount of office, retail, and housing would likely look like in the suburbs. She also provides interesting diagrams that portray different elevator configurations that supertall buildings can use to maximize rentable building area and maximize elevator efficiency.

The book is also packed with trivia. I learned that today’s elevator speeds are not limited by technology, but rather by the human ear. The owners of the Sears Tower in Chicago were sued when elevator passengers suffered ear drum damage during the descent. Taipei 101, one of the world’s tallest buildings, features an air-pressurization system to protect riders’ ears. Ears adjust more easily on the ascent, so elevators can travel up more quickly than down, adding another variable to consider in the effort to move people between floors efficiently.

Ascher discusses the cultural and legal differences that shape skyscrapers around the world. In Europe, all employees must work within 25-feet of natural light, leading to smaller floor plates than we often see in Asia or the United States. While the United States dominated the first century of the skyscraper, today’s tallest buildings and the tallest proposed buildings are in Asia and the Middle East. This is due in part to American zoning restriction, but in larger part to financing opportunities.

Despite learning a lot from The Heights, I was occasionally bothered by Ascher’s tone. The textbook language at times feels condescending, and I would imagine this could be grating for someone with more of a background in this subject area than I have. Also while she spends many pages on the virtues of skyscrapers, Ascher also supports antiquated arguments against them. On New York’s 1916 Zoning Resolution she writes:

It . . . established setback rules for specific tower heights, thereby ensuring that light and air would continue to reach the street and that towering street walls like the Equitable’s could never be built again.

Of course tall buildings cast long shadows, but suggesting that skyscrapers actually block air from reaching the sidewalk is not doing this urban form any favors.

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Filed Under: Book Review, Culture & Books Tagged With: skyscrapers

About Emily Hamilton

  • breathesgelatin

    Me Me!

  • Heather J. @ TLC Book Tours

    Thanks for sharing your thoughts on this book for the tour!

  • MikeH

    I want it!  Thanks in advance if I’m the one chosen.

  • Anonymous

    I want it!

  • Mike Chlanda

    hi, I’d love to get your copy of this book – otherwise I’m buying it on Amazon! thx in advance, mike

  • Alon Levy

    Does Ascher talk about different skyscraper styles – e.g. rising straight up like the Twin Towers vs. tapering like the Empire State Building?

  • Emily Washington

    Yes, she certainly discusses various skyscraper designs, and the complications that having setbacks like the Empire State Building can cause. While she doesn’t discuss the Empire State Building specifically, I don’t believe, she does talk about how zoning in NYC has led to buildings that are shaped similarly.

  • Emily Washington

    Of the four people who were interested in The Heights, I randomly selected Mike to receive my copy. Mike, please email me at emilybwashington@gmail.com with your address, and I’ll send it off to you as soon as possible. Thanks all for your interest in the book.

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