The top of the spire (the very tip) is not accessible to tourists. It is accessible only to a handful of climbers per decade for maintenance. To get there, you have to climb a series of vertical ladders bolted to the inside of the steel structure. At the very top, there is a tiny service hatch.
They didn't use a helicopter. They built it from the inside out . burj khalifa spire
Imagine opening that hatch. You are standing on a platform the size of a dinner plate. The wind is screaming at 100 mph. You look down, and you cannot see the ground—only clouds. You look horizontally, and you see the curvature of the Earth. That is the reality of the Burj’s spire. So, is the spire "cheating"? The top of the spire (the very tip)
Next time you see a photo of that golden tip glinting in the Dubai sun, don't just see an antenna. See a 4,000-ton skyscraper balancing a 200-meter steel spear on its head, defying gravity and physics. At the very top, there is a tiny service hatch
That’s not cheating. That’s genius. How tall do you think a building can actually get before a steel spire isn't enough? Let me know in the comments below.
Let’s climb to the top—virtually, of course—and look at the unsung hero of the skyline: The "Fake" Floor? First, let’s bust a myth. People often claim the spire is "cheating" because it isn't a habitable floor. While it’s true you can’t rent an apartment inside the spire, calling it an antenna is like calling a Formula 1 car a lawnmower because it has an engine.