Guinness World Records Five Best Architectural Achievements

Guinness World Records Five Best Architectural Achievements

These are the five greatest achievements in architectural world records.

The Guinness World Records is the official association in control of recording world records. They have been publishing a book yearly since August of 1954. Ever since then the book releases every October in attempt to keep up with the records. Here are five of the records for the best architectural achievements.

  1. The Largest Solar Energy Roof

    …has an area of 281,045 ft2. It is located on the roof of the exposition hall of the Floriade in Haarlemmermeer, Netherlands.. The record was set on April 8th 2002. It has a generating capacity of 2.3 MW, and was designed by Nuon Renewables.

  2. The Largest Self-Supporting Igloo

    …was constructed by twenty-nine of the employees from the Hydro-Quebec LG-3 power station in Quebec, Canada on February 22, 2005. It took eighteen days to complete the igloo which had an internal diameter of twenty four feet two inches and an internal height of twelve and a half feet.

  3. The Heaviest Building to be Relocated While Still Fully Intact

    …was the Fu Gang Building at West Bank Road Wuzhou, in the Guangxi Province of China. It was successfully located on November 10th, 2004. It had a weight of 33.3 million pounds. With a height of 111 feet it was not easy task. They moved it one hundred fourteen feet horizontally. They successfully moved it in only eleven days.

  4. The World’s Largest Offshore Gas Platform

    …was The Troll Offshore Gas Platform. It is located just outside of Norway in the North Sea. It is also the heaviest man made mobile object ever to be made. It weighs 656,000 tons, and stands 1210 feet tall. It uses enough steel to create fifteen Eiffel towers, ad enough concrete to make foundations for 215,000 ordinary homes. It was built in 1996 by the Shell Oil Company at the cost of $150 million.

  5. The Biggest Swimming Pool in the World Ever Built

    …was created by San Alfonso del Mar in Algarrobo, Chile. It is 3,324 feet long, and has an area of 19.77 acres. It was successfully completed in December of 2006. Why would somebody need this much room?

All of the following are records according to the Guinness World Records. To see these, and many more interesting world records visit the Guinness World Records website.

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15 Comments

lonely (Mustafa Alkan), posted this comment on Jan 11th, 2008

Thank you for this good article..

Anne Lyken-Garner, posted this comment on Jan 11th, 2008

I know it’s true, but I can’t beleive number 3

Darlene McFarlane, posted this comment on Jan 11th, 2008

There is a lot of good stuff here, Jared. I found the one about the
heaviest building to be relocated to the most fascinating.

Great job!

Dee Huff, posted this comment on Jan 11th, 2008

Quite simply amazing, and are all very good examples of human ingenuity.

Alexa Gates, posted this comment on Jan 11th, 2008

very interesting…

Judy Sheldon-Walker, posted this comment on Jan 11th, 2008

Jared, good job, as usual. You always provide us with interesting pictures and text. Thank you.

Ruby Hawk, posted this comment on Jan 11th, 2008

Wow I can’t get over the swimming pool. I would call it a lake.

IcyCucky, posted this comment on Jan 11th, 2008

The swimming pool is amazing, and I agree with Ruby.
Very interesting.

Liane Schmidt, posted this comment on Jan 12th, 2008

What an incredibly interesting article Jared! Great idea! I gave it a StumbleUpon thumbs up as well!

Best wishes.

Sincerely,

-Liane Schmidt.

Lucy Lockett, posted this comment on Jan 12th, 2008

This was fascinating and a good read.

Francie, posted this comment on Jan 12th, 2008

Amazing, another thumbs up. Good job!

Joe50342, posted this comment on Jan 25th, 2008

This is pretty neat!

Ron, posted this comment on Jan 27th, 2008

meh. not too original. like your other articles tho

WTF, posted this comment on Jul 23rd, 2008

That cannot be the heavest object ever made. Pyramids, Great Wall of China, Panama Canal…?

Jared Stenzel, posted this comment on Jul 26th, 2008

That’s not the heaviest ever made. It’s the heaviest ever relocated.

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