But long time ago, in 1890, at the very beginning of tall buildings construction, a tower from Japan was only 25 meters smaller than the world's tallest building of the time, the New York World Building, which was 94 meters tall.
Called Ryōunkaku ("Cloud-Surpassing Tower"), it was an octagonal tower built in a Western-style, brick over wooden frame, designed by the Scottish engineer W. K. Burton. Located in Asakusa, Ryōunkaku was 12 floors tall and was visible from a great distance (see here an old panorama of Asakusa, but unfortunately it was severely damaged by the 1923 Great Kanto Earthquake and was subsequently demolished.
Today, only a few old photos are reminding of this once amazing tower, and a famous woodblock print made by Utagawa Kunisada, photographed here at the Tepco Asakusakan from Tokyo. Since Tokyo Sky Tree is very close, I wonder... wouldn't it be interesting for Asakusa to have Ryōunkaku rebuilt?
EXIF info:
Nikon D90
Lens: VR 18-55mm F/3.5-5.6G
Focal Length: 18mm
Aperture: F/4.5
Shutter Speed: 1/50s
ISO Sensitivity: ISO 800