This week we revealed the world's longest cantilever
This week on Dezeen, Japanese studio Nikken Sekkei unveiled a skyscraper in Dubai that includes the world's longest cantilever.
Measuring 67.5 metres, the cantilever projects out from a link connecting two skyscrapers at the One Za'abeel development in Dubai.
The cantilever is one metre longer than the 66.5-metre-long observation deck at Marina Bay Sands in Singapore, making it the longest in the world.
In New York, two skyscrapers were in the news with Skidmore, Owings & Merrill's 285-metre-high Two Manhattan West skyscraper completing in Midtown Manhattan.
KPF, meanwhile, released images of the 520 Fifth Avenue supertall skyscraper (above), which is under construction nearby and will be wrapped in arched windows.
In design news, NASA and Lockheed Martin presented its "quiet supersonic" jet for the first time.
Designed to have a cruising speed of 925 miles per hour, the distinctive form of the X-59 supersonic jet was created to reduce the noise created by sonic booms.
Also this week, the first full-height timber wind turbine, which has a tower built by wood technology company Modvion, started turning in Sweden.
At 105 metres tall, the tower was made from a type of mass-timber called laminated veneer lumber (LVL), while its rotor blades and generator hub were made of conventional materials.
In China, architect Junya Ishigami revealed a one-kilometre-long museum that extends across a lake in Rizhao, Shandong Province.
Following the opening we rounded up 10 buildings in China that interact with dramatic landscapes.
Popular projects this week included an infinity pool designed by Herzog & de Meuron in Lake Como, a bamboo pavilion in the northeast of India and a green-terrazzo flat extension.
Our latest lookbooks featured New York City loft interiors and living rooms where vintage furniture adds an "unknown history".
This week on Dezeen
This week on Dezeen is our regular roundup of the week's top news stories. Subscribe to our newsletters to be sure you don't miss anything.