Oriental Pearl Tower | Otis Global Projects
Oriental Pearl Radio & TV Tower
Shanghai, China
Oriental Pearl Radio & TV Tower
Shanghai
With its space-age vibe, the Oriental Pearl Tower stands out even among the iconic buildings of Shanghai’s bustling Pudong District. And what better way to travel through space than the tower’s network of advanced Otis® elevators?
The tower features 11 steel spheres of different sizes, linked along three columns. The tower is supported at its base by three diagonal columns. At night, a 3-D light show illuminates the tower against the district’s celebrated skyline.
The tower draws an estimated 2.8 million visitors a year with attractions like a revolving restaurant, shopping center, a hotel, even a roller coaster.
The names of the spheres suggest interplanetary travel, befitting its futuristic architecture: The highest observation deck is the Space Module; the lowest, Space City. The hotel that occupies the five smaller spheres is the Space Hotel.
To reach Space City, the lowest observation level at 295 ft, visitors ride a circular glass Otis elevator traveling at 2.5 meters per second, a speed that gives them time to enjoy the view.
Upon opening, the tower featured China's first double-deck elevator, technology invented by Otis to increase a building’s passenger capacity using fewer hoistways to free valuable core space.
We’ve since added four elevators. As part of a modernization project, we’re converting two single-deck elevators to double decks to boost passenger capacity by nearly a third.
1,535
FEET
11
STEEL SPHERES
32
PERCENT
Shanghai history
Part of the Shanghai History Museum’s collection is housed in the exhibition room at the tower’s base. The collection charts the city’s history from its opening as an international port in 1843 to the Communist victory of 1949.
The museum currently has no permanent home and other parts of the collection can be seen at other Shanghai museums.
Shanghai history
Part of the Shanghai History Museum’s collection is housed in the exhibition room at the tower’s base. The collection charts the city’s history from its opening as an international port in 1843 to the Communist victory of 1949.
The museum currently has no permanent home and other parts of the collection can be seen at other Shanghai museums.
Quick facts about the Pearl Tower
Completed in 1994, the Oriental Pearl Tower stood as the tallest structure in China until 2007, when it was surpassed by the Shanghai World Financial Center (1,614.2 ft), another Otis project in the Pudong District.
The tower continues to operate as a radio and television tower, transmitting signals across Shanghai for around 30 television and radio stations.
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1 Completed
1994
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2 China’s tallest structure
1994-2007
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3 Architects
Shanghai Modern Architectural Design Co. Ltd. Jiang Architects & Engineers
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4 14
Otis® lifts
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5 3
Gen2® lifts