Small plane crashes into tallest building in Beijing

Small plane crashes into tallest building in Beijing

World News

Video footage showed broken windows and debris, including what appeared to be the tail of a small aircraft, falling dozens of stories into the street below.

The surface of the Citic Tower also known as Zun Tower is damaged in Beijing, China, Friday, June 26, 2026. AP Photo/Han Guan Ng

By Keith Bradsher, Meaghan Tobin and Pei-Lin Wu, New York Times Service

June 26, 2026 | 10:55 AM

3 minutes to read

A small aircraft flew into the tallest building in Beijing on Friday, sending huge hunks of debris and plane parts plummeting onto the streets below and prompting crowds to flee.

Video shared on social media and verified by The New York Times showed debris falling from the skyscraper, as people ran to safety. The footage showed broken windows and debris, including what appeared to be the tail of a small aircraft, falling dozens of stories into the street below.

The building is in the capital’s busy central business district, which was clogged with cars at evening rush hour. It was not immediately clear how many people were injured, if any. The whereabouts and identity of the pilot were also unknown.

The surface of the Citic Tower also known as Zun Tower is damaged in Beijing, Friday, June 26, 2026. – AP Photo/Han Guan Ng

Photos posted to social media from the site showed parts of an aircraft that appeared to be a lightweight model with only a few seats, registered to the airline Shuangyue General Aviation, a regional flight training provider. Calls to the company went unanswered.

There was significant police presence near the building Friday night. Police closed at least one major road near the building, setting up a folding metal grille gate, and a police car with flashing lights was parked on the street. High above, bright lights occasionally flashed around a hole in the side of the building as repair work got underway.

The skyscraper is called the Citic Tower and is also known as China Zun. It is the headquarters of Citic Group, one of China’s biggest state-owned financial conglomerates.

An employee of a nearby gym, who identified himself by the surname Zhang, said he was walking with friends in the area when he saw an aircraft hit the tower around 6 p.m. local time. A woman with a head injury was later taken away in an ambulance, he said. A worker at a nearby restaurant reported hearing a loud noise around the same time.

The accounts of injuries could not be immediately verified. Calls to a nearby police station in Beijing rang unanswered. Social media posts about the crash and the building itself appeared to be censored online in China.

A resident of the neighborhood who gave only his surname, Wang, said that just before 6 p.m., he heard loud noises coming from the street and walked toward the tower, where he saw a hole, which was briefly on fire, in the side of the building. He also said he saw the wreckage of an aircraft, also on fire, at the base of the building. He could not determine whether there were any casualties before police hurried onlookers away, he said.

An office worker who gave only his first name, Richard, told a Times reporter that he had been in a meeting on a high floor in an office building across from the Citic Tower when he realized something had happened. “I saw some white pieces of paper fluttering through the air,” he said, though he couldn’t see or hear anything else. He said he was surprised when he emerged from his office building later to find a crowd outside.

Later in the evening, about 200 people had gathered across the street from the Citic Tower, taking pictures. Police were waving people away from entering the street on the east side. The avenue past the south side of the building remained open to pedestrians, bicyclists and motor scooters.

The iconic tower was completed in 2018 and can be seen from across the city. It is across the street from another well-known Beijing architectural landmark, the headquarters of China Central Television, where nearly 20 police cars were parked Friday night.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

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