Every city in the world has a unique skyline. But is it possible to say which is the best?
The international building database Emporis attempts to quantify skylines by looking at the number and height of buildings in the world's major cities. The result is an ever-changing ranking of the world's most impressive cityscapes.
To rank skylines, Emporis looks at completed skyscrapers (40 floors or more) and high-rises (12 to 39 floors), and assigns each building a point value based on its floor count. Taller buildings receive significantly higher values (see Emporis' complete methodology here). TV towers, masts, bridges, and other structures are excluded.
Moscow jumped from 11th place to fourth place year-over-year, and Shanghai (No. 8) overtook São Paulo (No. 9).
No. 25: Rio de Janeiro has 2,595 tall buildings in 1,182 square kilometers.
Methodology: Each building over 11 floors was assigned a point value based on number of floors. Measurements exclude TV towers, masts, bridges, or other structures.
Source: Emporis
No. 24: Osaka, Japan, has 1,490 tall buildings in 220 square kilometers.
Methodology: Each building over 11 floors was assigned a point value based on number of floors. Measurements exclude TV towers, masts, bridges, or other structures.
Source: Emporis
No. 23: Jakarta, Indonesia, has 443 tall buildings in 661 square kilometers.
Methodology: Each building over 11 floors was assigned a point value based on number of floors. Measurements exclude TV towers, masts, bridges, or other structures.
Source: Emporis
See the rest of the story at Business Insider