Despite the current downsides of the global economy, several global and second-tier cities in the Western world and in Asian countries keep investing in large scale spectacular urban projects. According to policy-makers, this is due to the strive for distinction in the competition for media attention and international investments, for improving urban infrastructures and facilities, for becoming (or remaining) a destination for corporations and global tourism. Similarly, the long term shifts one can see in architectural and urban design cultures seem to parallel a stronger tendency toward spectacularization in our urban politics and society. By drawing on a set of relevant projects in Abu Dhabi, Chicago, Milan, Paris and other cities, this c...