Clayton Hauck Clayton Hauck

2024 06 20

Soon, the tallest building in the United States will be in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma (pop. 700,000).

Soon, the tallest building in the world will be in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia (pop. 4,000,000), surpassing the current tallest building in the world located in Dubai, United Arab Emirates (pop. 3,400,000).

I’m not sure what, exactly, the meaning is, but there has to be a correlation between late-stage-capitalism and the rise of inequality to the locations of the world’s tallest buildings. It would be interesting to see a graph of the tallest buildings in the world per capita.

List of skyscrapers per capita, as found on a random page on reddit:

UAE - 36.09

Monaco - 25.61

Qatar - 19.58

Singapore - 16.39

Panama - 15.45

Bahrain - 12.05

Malaysia - 8.72

Australia - 5.82

South Korea - 5.37

Kuwait - 3.64

One thing I learned about the UAE by going there is that nobody wants to be outside, so it kind of makes sense to build upwards. That said, I’ll bet that within one hundred years, many of these buildings which have popped up like weeks in Dubai will need to be demolished as it will be cheaper than maintaining them.

-Clayton

Downtown Atlanta, Georgia. May, 2024. © Clayton Hauck

Soon, the tallest building in the United States will be in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma (pop. 700,000).

Soon, the tallest building in the world will be in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia (pop. 4,000,000), surpassing the current tallest building in the world located in Dubai, United Arab Emirates (pop. 3,400,000).

I’m not sure what, exactly, the meaning is, but there has to be a correlation between late-stage-capitalism and the rise of inequality to the locations of the world’s tallest buildings. It would be interesting to see a graph of the tallest buildings in the world per capita.

List of skyscrapers per capita, as found on a random page on reddit:

  1. UAE - 36.09

  2. Monaco - 25.61

  3. Qatar - 19.58

  4. Singapore - 16.39

  5. Panama - 15.45

  6. Bahrain - 12.05

  7. Malaysia - 8.72

  8. Australia - 5.82

  9. South Korea - 5.37

  10. Kuwait - 3.64

One thing I learned about the UAE by going there is that nobody wants to be outside, so it kind of makes sense to build upwards. That said, I’ll bet that within one hundred years, many of these buildings which have popped up like weeks in Dubai will need to be demolished as it will be cheaper than maintaining them.

-Clayton

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Clayton Hauck Clayton Hauck

2024 03 29

Another Tangent Idea post today inspired by Morgan Housel’s Same as Ever book. It was almost in passing, in a chapter discussing how things change and it’s harder to maintain a competitive advantage than it is to gain one, he brought up the death of Sears. Being a lifelong Chicagoan I’m very aware of Sears but even I don’t fully appreciate how big it was in its prime. It was so big they constructed a building larger than anything previously constructed to satisfy the demands of the company. Of course, things changed. Today, if you ask anyone under twenty years old, chances are they won’t even know what you’re talking about if you bring up the word Sears. Even this photo of this momentous building ended up in my scraps folder, discarded for another time, until Housel’s mention in his book passed my ears and spurred me to consider it again. It’s remarkable how such a grand idea can turn into such a monumental thing, something everyone knows, only to be completely forgotten a few decades later because the tides have turned and the wind is blowing in a new direction.

This blog post is merely me thinking out loud about a topic that would likely fascinate me for the rest of my life if I chose to really focus on it.

At it’s peak, the Sears company was so large, it owned portions of many famous American brands: from Allstate and Land’s End, to Dean Witter and Coldwell Banker. They were efficient and thought of as the gold standard in what an American corporation should aspire to be. But then they died. Globalization changed the dynamics of the world and they were forced to diversify into new business lines which they were not previously familiar with. Inequality rose and people either wanted things cheap or they wanted them luxurious. The core business of Sears, once quenching the insatiable shopping thirst of the American middle class no longer had a customer base.

Does a book exist which examines the Death of Sears in gripping detail? If not, it should! If not, maybe this is my life calling to write such a story.

-Clayton

Da Sears Tower! Da tallest building in da world! Da pinnacle of human ingenuity! …until it wasn’t. Chicago, Illinois. January, 2023. © Clayton Hauck

Another Tangent Idea post today inspired by Morgan Housel’s Same as Ever book. It was almost in passing, in a chapter discussing how things change and it’s harder to maintain a competitive advantage than it is to gain one, he brought up the death of Sears. Being a lifelong Chicagoan I’m very aware of Sears but even I don’t fully appreciate how big it was in its prime. It was so big they constructed a building larger than anything previously constructed to satisfy the demands of the company. Of course, things changed. Today, if you ask anyone under twenty years old, chances are they won’t even know what you’re talking about if you bring up the word Sears. Even this photo of this momentous building ended up in my scraps folder, discarded for another time, until Housel’s mention in his book passed my ears and spurred me to consider it again. It’s remarkable how such a grand idea can turn into such a monumental thing, something everyone knows, only to be completely forgotten a few decades later because the tides have turned and the wind is blowing in a new direction.

This blog post is merely me thinking out loud about a topic that would likely fascinate me for the rest of my life if I chose to really focus on it.

At it’s peak, the Sears company was so large, it owned portions of many famous American brands: from Allstate and Land’s End, to Dean Witter and Coldwell Banker. They were efficient and thought of as the gold standard in what an American corporation should aspire to be. But then they died. Globalization changed the dynamics of the world and they were forced to diversify into new business lines which they were not previously familiar with. Inequality rose and people either wanted things cheap or they wanted them luxurious. The core business of Sears, once quenching the insatiable-retail thirst of the American middle class no longer had a customer base.

Does a book exist which examines the Death of Sears in gripping detail? If not, it should! If not, maybe this is my life calling to write such a story.

-Clayton

Read More