 Print
 Print  Mail
 Mail  Large Medium  Small
 Large Medium  Small
|  | 
| An undated design sketch of H700 Shenzhen Tower. [Photo from Shenzhen's Luohu urban renewal planning website] | 
Move aside Shanghai Tower, there's a new big boy in the town. Shenzhen, China's southern city neighboring Hong Kong, has announced a plan to build a skyscraper as high as 739 meters on the old site of Huanyu Tower in the newly designed Caiwuwei central financial district.
If the plan goes through it means the new skyscraper over overtake 632-meter-tall Shanghai Tower to become the tallest building in China and the second-tallest in the world, according to the website of Luohu district of Shenzhen on Aug 9.
With 74 percent of banking institutions, 80 percent insurance companies, 40 percent securities institutions as well as 90 percent foreign banks of the city located in Caiwuwei, it’s the Wall Street of Shenzhen.
The planned skyscraper will have 169 floors and called H700 Shenzhen Tower, according its builder's proposal.
China has several skyscrapers in the pipeline. According to a list of top 10 skyscrapers to be completed this year reviewed by the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat of the US, six will rise in China. The tallest of them, Ping An Finance Center with height of 599 meters, is also in Shenzhen.
 
 
 73rd Venice Film Festival opens in Italy
73rd Venice Film Festival opens in Italy 
 
 Children wearing Hanfu attend writing ceremony
Children wearing Hanfu attend writing ceremony 
 
 Children explore science and technology at museum
Children explore science and technology at museum 
 
 Korean ethnic dance drama shines in Beijing
Korean ethnic dance drama shines in Beijing 
 
 Goodies for journalists attending G20 summit
Goodies for journalists attending G20 summit 
 
 Top 10 Chinese private enterprises in 2016
Top 10 Chinese private enterprises in 2016 
 
 Quadruplets ready for school in Changsha
Quadruplets ready for school in Changsha 
 
 'World's most dangerous village' draws visitors
'World's most dangerous village' draws visitors