Those big fans are indeed incredible. I doubt that any modern buildings use anything like them; certainly I've not seen fans so large. Generally with an older or tall large building you'll have a chiller/boiler system to pipe hot and cold water through the building with small fan-coil units supplying localized forced air systems. Shopping centers, in particular single story centers, usually use rooftop package units supplying the duct systems. That way the building owners can separately meter gas and electrical use for tenants. It also prevents a huge systemwide shutdown if a chiller or boiler fails, and provides some zoning.
One neat bit of modern technology I like is computer controlled damper units. I remodeled a house last year that sits on a hilltop not too far from the ocean but it can still get plenty hot and cold. It's about 3000 sq. ft, (about 285 sq. meters), but there are four very distinct exposures for the house: the living room has huge glass walls on two sides (very mid-century), the master bedroom has a glass wall on one side, the secondary bedrooms have little glass, but are on the top level under a flat roof, while the den is on a lower level and very well protected.
The house is too small for more than two systems, so we used one three ton system for the living room and kitchen and a four ton system with the computer damper for the rest of the house. This allows having three zones, each with its own thermostat. In the morning, if the master bedroom gets hot that thermostat can call for cooling, so the system will turn the a/c on and shunt all the air into that area. If the den is still cold and that thermostat calls for heat, the system will satisfy the master bedroom, turn off the a/c, blow ambient air throught the damper to get the cold air out, and then fire the heater and send that output into the den. By this method it can provide for both heating and cooling almost at the same time. Combined with a variable output compressor and multi-speed blower it can increase comfort and save energy as well.