Rising higher than the Eiffel Tower and twice the height of the Statue of Liberty, Pyongyang’s Ryugyong Hotel is one of the world’s tallest abandoned skyscrapers — and it has never hosted a single guest. Conceived as a grand symbol of national pride, the 105-story pyramid was plagued by delays, financial collapse, and decades of eerie emptiness. Erased from official photographs and shrouded in secrecy, the hotel remains a haunting monument to unfulfilled ambition.
Taller than the Eiffel Tower, more than twice the height of the Statue of Liberty, and yet completely empty. No guests, no glowing windows, no signs of life. Just a cold, glassy shell rising over North Korea’s capital like a ghost of ambition.
The Ryugyong Hotel is one of the tallest buildings in the world that has never hosted a single guest. Built with grand promises, abandoned for years, and oddly erased from official photos, like North Korea itself was trying to forget it ever existed.
Why build a skyscraper no one can use? What went wrong? And why does this place feel like it belongs in a dystopian sci-fi movie?
Strap in. We’re heading into the world’s strangest hotel, where the only thing thicker than its 105 floors of concrete is the mystery behind them.