Dezeen Magazine

The Link at One Za'abeel seen from below

One Za'abeel voted best skyscraper of the past year by Dezeen readers

Japanese studio Nikken Sekkei's skyscraper in Dubai with a 230-metre-long skybridge has pipped BIG's first supertall to be named Dezeen readers' favourite new skyscraper.

To mark World Skyscraper Day today, we invited readers to vote for the best tall building completed in the past year from a shortlist of 10 that included projects by Snøhetta, Pelli Clarke & Partners and Kohn Pedersen Fox.

With more than 1,500 total votes cast, One Za'abeel in Dubai has emerged as the winner, receiving 26 per cent of the vote.

One Za'abeel by Nikken Sekkei
Nikken Sekkei's One Za'abeel was voted the world's best new skyscraper by Dezeen readers. Photo by Hufton + Crow (also top)

Designed by Nikken Sekkei, the dramatic project consists of two skyscrapers – the largest of which is 305 metres tall – holding up a 230-metre-long horizontal structure known as The Link.

Suspended 100 metres above a major highway and topped with a giant infinity pool, The Link features the world's longest cantilever, jutting out 67.5 metres towards the Arabian Gulf.

Dezeen captured the cantilever in an exclusive video shot shortly after the building opened in February.

But Nikken Sekkei said that its priority for the project, which contains luxury apartments, hotels, offices, retail space and restaurants, was to make a "very simple" addition to Dubai's skyline in contrast to the city's many elaborate towers.

One Za'abeel by Nikken Sekkei
The Dubai project features The Link, a 230-metre-long skybridge suspended 100 metres above the ground. Photo by Hufton + Crow

In second place behind One Za'abeel was New York City office tower The Spiral, which received 19 per cent of the vote.

Completed in October, The Spiral is the first supertall skyscraper designed by Danish studio BIG at 314 metres in height.

Situated at the northern end of the famous High Line elevated park, the building is characterised by a series of planted terraces that wind around its exterior and mean every floor has access to outdoor space.

Skyscrapers in NYC
The Spiral (second from right) by BIG came in at number two. Photo by Laurian Ghinițoiu

Unveiling the project last autumn, studio founder Bjarke Ingels said it "combines the classic ziggurat silhouette of the premodern skyscraper with the slender proportions and efficient layouts of the modern high-rise".

"The Spiral is slowly becoming an ascending ribbon of green wrapping around the entire silhouette of the tower – like a 1,000-foot-tall vine at the scale of the city's skyline," he added.

Stepped terraces wrapped around a skyscrapers exterior
The Spiral is characterised by a series of planted terraces wrapped around its exterior. Photo by Laurian Ghinițoiu

In at third with 12 per cent of the vote was Pelli Clarke & Partners' Mori JP Tower in Tokyo, which became the tallest skyscraper in Japan upon its completion and was the tallest building on our shortlist at 330 metres.

Another BIG project in New York, One High Line, came fourth, while fifth was Jahn's 1000M in Chicago, receiving eight per cent of the vote apiece.

Japan's tallest building by Pelli Clarke & Partners
Third place in Dezeen's poll went to Pelli Clarke & Partners' Mori JP Tower in Tokyo. Photo by Jason O'Rear

Last year's World Skyscraper Day poll on Dezeen was comfortably won by SHoP Architects' Brooklyn Tower in New York City.

Other recent skyscraper coverage on Dezeen has included a roundup of nine recently completed skyscrapers in Latin America and an interview with the architect of Legends Tower, which is set to become the tallest building in USA.