If you don't care about authenticity, the New Century Global Center has everything you could possibly want, including an artificial sun. July 3, 2013 10:32 AM PDT The New Century Global Center (top) looms over the Export-Import Bank of China in Chengdu, in southwest China's Sichuan province. (Credit: STR/AFP/Getty Images) The international tallest building arms race has been dominated by Dubai, with its Burj Khalifa, for several years, but China has upped the ante by unveiling what it calls the world's largest building. The New Century Global Center building opened recently in Chengu, a city of more than 14 million people in southwest China's Sichuan province. It's described as the world's largest standalone structure and is 328 feet high, 1,640 feet long, and 1,312 feet wide. Almost the size of Monaco, its 420 acres of floor space could fit nearly three Pentagons, four Vatican Cities, or 20 Sydney Opera Houses. The cavernous structure will feature a mix of retail outlets, a 14-screen movie theater, a university complex, offices, hotels, a water park called Paradise Island, a skating rink that's big enough to host international competitions, a pirate ship, 15,000 parking spots, and even a fake Mediterranean village. Oh, and there's an artificial beach, too. But the ersatzery doesn't stop there. While Chengdu's factories, which include a Foxconn plant that turns out Apple gizmos, regularly contribute to the city's smog problem, visitors will enjoy an artificial sun that gives off light and heat 24 hours a day and a 164-yard-long LED screen serving as a stand-in for the horizon. The gargantuan pleasure dome took some three years to build. It has a distinct wavelike roof of girders and glass that might evoke London's Crystal Palace of yore. Built for the Great Exhibition of 1851, that august structure was only 22 acres large but was preserved in various forms for some 85 years. With China's frenetic pace of growth, one wonders if the New Century Global Center will last for even 10. Check out more pics of the complex at CBS News. (Credit: STR/AFP/Getty Images)

Posted by : Unknown Wednesday, July 3, 2013

If you don't care about authenticity, the New Century Global Center has everything you could possibly want, including an artificial sun.



July 3, 2013 10:32 AM PDT



New Century Global Center

The New Century Global Center (top) looms over the Export-Import Bank of China in Chengdu, in southwest China's Sichuan province.


(Credit: STR/AFP/Getty Images)

The international tallest building arms race has been dominated by Dubai, with its Burj Khalifa, for several years, but China has upped the ante by unveiling what it calls the world's largest building.


The New Century Global Center building opened recently in Chengu, a city of more than 14 million people in southwest China's Sichuan province. It's described as the world's largest standalone structure and is 328 feet high, 1,640 feet long, and 1,312 feet wide.


Almost the size of Monaco, its 420 acres of floor space could fit nearly three Pentagons, four Vatican Cities, or 20 Sydney Opera Houses.


The cavernous structure will feature a mix of retail outlets, a 14-screen movie theater, a university complex, offices, hotels, a water park called Paradise Island, a skating rink that's big enough to host international competitions, a pirate ship, 15,000 parking spots, and even a fake Mediterranean village.


Oh, and there's an artificial beach, too.


But the ersatzery doesn't stop there. While Chengdu's factories, which include a Foxconn plant that turns out Apple gizmos, regularly contribute to the city's smog problem, visitors will enjoy an artificial sun that gives off light and heat 24 hours a day and a 164-yard-long LED screen serving as a stand-in for the horizon.


The gargantuan pleasure dome took some three years to build. It has a distinct wavelike roof of girders and glass that might evoke London's Crystal Palace of yore.


Built for the Great Exhibition of 1851, that august structure was only 22 acres large but was preserved in various forms for some 85 years. With China's frenetic pace of growth, one wonders if the New Century Global Center will last for even 10.


Check out more pics of the complex at CBS News.


New Century Global Centre(Credit: STR/AFP/Getty Images)



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