List of tallest buildings in New York City

Midtown Manhattan skyline, looking north from the Empire State Building
Lower Manhattan, viewed from Brooklyn, with One World Trade Center at right

New York City, the most populous city in the United States, is home to 6,154 completed high-rises,[1] 112 of which are 600 feet (183 m) or taller. The tallest building in New York is One World Trade Center, which rises 1,776 feet (541 m).[2][3] The 104-story skyscraper also stands as the tallest building in the United States, the tallest building in the Western Hemisphere, and the sixth-tallest building in the world.[3][4] The second tallest building in the city is 432 Park Avenue, standing at 1,396 feet (426 m), and the third tallest is the 102-story Empire State Building in Midtown Manhattan, which was finished in 1931 and rises to 1,250 feet (381 m), increased to 1,454 feet (443 m) by its antenna.[5] It also is the fifth-tallest building in the United States and the 25th-tallest building in the world.

The Empire State Building stood as the tallest building in the world from its completion until 1972, when the 110-story North Tower of the original World Trade Center was completed. At 1,368 feet (417 m), The World Trade Center briefly held the title as the world's tallest building until the completion of the 108-story Sears Tower (now known as the Willis Tower) in Chicago in 1974. The World Trade Center towers were destroyed by terrorist attacks in 2001, and the Empire State Building regained the title of tallest building in the City. It remained the tallest until April 2012, when the construction on One World Trade Center surpassed it. The fourth-tallest building in New York is the Bank of America Tower, which rises to 1,200 feet (366 m), including its spire.[6] Tied for fifth-tallest are the 1,046-foot (319 m) Chrysler Building, which was the world's tallest building from 1930 until 1931,[7] and the New York Times Building, which was completed in 2007.[8]

New York City skyscrapers are concentrated in Midtown and Lower Manhattan, although other neighborhoods of Manhattan and the boroughs of Brooklyn, Queens, and the Bronx also have a few high-rises. As of May 2016, the entire city has 241 buildings that rise at least 500 feet (152 m) in height, including those under construction,[9] more than any other city in the United States.[10]

Since 2003, New York City has seen the completion of 24 buildings that rise at least 600 feet (183 m) in height, including One World Trade Center, which became the tallest building in the country when completed. 20 more are under construction.[3][4][11] One World Trade Center is part of the redevelopment of the World Trade Center, which also includes the 975-foot (297 m) 4 World Trade Center,[12] 7 World Trade Center and the two under-construction buildings: the 1,350-foot (411 m) 2 World Trade Center and the 1,171-foot (357 m) 3 World Trade Center.[13][14]

Overall, as of April 2016, there were 494 high-rise buildings under construction or proposed for construction in New York City.[1]

History

The history of skyscrapers in New York City began with the completion of the World Building in 1890; the structure rose to 348 feet (106 m).[15] Though not the city's first high-rise, it was the first building to surpass the 284-foot (87 m) spire of Trinity Church.[16] The World Building, which stood as the tallest in the city until 1899, was demolished in 1955 to allow for the construction of an expanded entrance to the Brooklyn Bridge.[16]

New York has played a prominent role in the development of the skyscraper; since 1890, eleven structures in the city having held the title of world's tallest building.[17] New York City went through a very early high-rise construction boom that lasted from the early 1910s through the early 1930s, during which 16 of the city's 82 tallest buildings were built—including the Woolworth Building, the Bank of Manhattan Trust Building, the Chrysler Building and the Empire State Building, each of which was the tallest in the world at the time of its completion, the latter remaining so for forty years.[17]

A second skyscraper boom began in the early 1960s. Since then, the city has seen the completion of nearly 70 structures rising at least 600 feet (183 m) high, including the twin towers of the World Trade Center. One World Trade Center, also known as the North Tower, was the tallest building in the world from 1972 until 1973 and the tallest building in New York City until 2001.[18] The North Tower, as well as the other six buildings in the World Trade Center complex, were destroyed in the September 11 attacks of 2001.[19] One World Trade Center began construction in 2006 as the lead building of the new World Trade Center complex; upon its topping out in May 2013, the 1,776-foot (541 m) skyscraper surpassed the Willis Tower to become the tallest building in the United States.[3][20]

New York City's skyscrapers are almost all situated in Manhattan, seen here in this panorama viewed from Weehawken, New Jersey, in January 2015. Prominent tall buildings include One57 and 432 Park Avenue, left of center; the Empire State Building, right of center; and on the far right of the picture, One World Trade Center, the tallest skyscraper in the Western Hemisphere. Near the last mentioned, Four World Trade Center, 70 Pine Street, the Woolworth Building, and 40 Wall Street can be seen. At the center of the skyline picture, the Chrysler Building, The New York Times Building, and the Conde Nast Building can be picked out of the crowd by their spires.

Tallest buildings

This list ranks completed and topped out New York City skyscrapers that stand at least 600 feet (183 m) tall, based on standard height measurement. This includes spires and architectural details but does not include antenna masts. An equal sign (=) following a rank indicates the same height between two or more buildings. An asterisk (*) indicates that the building is still under construction, but has been topped out. The "Year" column indicates the year in which a building was completed.

  Was the world's tallest building upon completion.
Rank Name Image Height
ft (m)
Floors Year Notes
1 One World Trade Center 1,776 (541) 104 2014 Tallest building in the Western Hemisphere by architectural height. Tallest building in New York City and the United States. Roof height is 1,368 feet (417 m), the same as the original World Trade Center. Footprint of the building is 200 by 200 feet (61 by 61 m), the same as the Twin Towers. Among the tallest buildings in the world.
2 432 Park Avenue 1,396 (426) 89 2015 Second tallest building in NYC, tallest residential building in the world; 19th-tallest building in the world; 3rd-tallest building in the United States.[21][22]
3 Empire State Building 1,250 (381) 102 1931 30th-tallest building in the world, 5th-tallest in the United States; first building in the world to contain over 100 floors. Built in just 14 months during the Great Depression, it was the world's tallest building from its completion in 1931 until the World Trade Center was completed in 1972, and was again New York City's tallest building after the World Trade Center was destroyed in the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 until 2013.[5][23]
4 Bank of America Tower 1,200 (366) 54 2009 37th-tallest building in the world, 6th-tallest in the United States; first skyscraper to receive a Platinum LEED certification.[6][24] Roof height is 953.5 feet (290.6 m). Two honeybee hives are maintained on the roof of the building.
5 Three World Trade Center* 1,079 (329) 80 2018 Topped out in June 2016[25]
6 Chrysler Building 1,046 (319) 77 1930 Tied for 9th-tallest in the United States; first building in the world to rise higher than 1,000 feet (305 m); stood as the tallest building in the world from 1930 until 1931 when it was surpassed by the Empire State Building; tallest steel-framed brick building in the world. At its completion overtook the Eiffel Tower as the world's tallest man-made structure.[7][26]
7 The New York Times Building 1,046 (319) 52 2007 Tied for 9th-tallest in the United States. Also known as the Times Tower. The first high-rise building in the United States to have a ceramic sunscreen curtain wall.[27][28]
8 One57 1,005 (306) 75 2014 Tallest mixed-use (residential and hotel) skyscraper in the city, 92nd-tallest building in the world[29][30] Tallest mid-block building in the city.
9 Four World Trade Center 978 (298) 74 2013 Also known as 150 Greenwich Street, part of the rebuilding of the World Trade Center[31]
10 70 Pine Street 952 (290) 66 1932 22nd-tallest building in the United States; formerly known as the American International Building and the Cities Service Building[32][33] 70 Pine is being transformed into a residential skyscraper with 644 rental residences, 132 hotel rooms and 35,000 square feet of retail space.[34] It stood as the tallest building in Lower Manhattan from the time of its completion until the construction of the original World Trade Center towers in the 1970s, then regained that status after 9/11, holding it until the construction of the new One World Trade Center building.
11 30 Park Place 937 (286) 82 2016 Four Season Private Residences and Hotel. Topped out in March 2015.[35][36]
12 40 Wall Street 927 (283) 70 1930 24th-tallest in the United States; was world's tallest building for less than two months in 1930; formerly known as the Bank of Manhattan Trust Building; currently known as the Trump Building, a more permanent name is 40 Wall Street[37][38] Was the tallest mid-block building in the city from 1930 until the completion of One57 in 2014.
13 Citigroup Center 915 (279) 59 1977 Formerly Citicorp Center and now known as 601 Lexington Avenue[39][40]
14 10 Hudson Yards* 895 (273) 52 2016 Topped out in October 2015.[41][42]
15 8 Spruce Street 870 (265) 76 2011 Also known as Beekman Tower and New York by Gehry
16 Trump World Tower 861 (262) 72 2001 Third-tallest all-residential building in the city; tallest residential building in the world from 2000 until 2003[43][44]
17 30 Rockefeller Plaza 850 (260) 70 1933 Also known as the Comcast Building, formerly known as the GE Building, and the RCA Building before that; colloquially referred to as "30 Rock" for its address, houses NBC Studios and the Top of the Rock observation deck.
18 56 Leonard Street* 821 (250) 57 2016 The tallest structure in Tribeca; topped out in July 2015.[45][46][47]
19 CitySpire Center 814 (248) 75 1987 [48][49][50]
20 28 Liberty Street 813 (248) 60 1961 known until sale in 2015 as One Chase Manhattan Plaza[51][52]
21 Condé Nast Building 809 (247) 48 1999 Also known as Four Times Square[53][54]
22 MetLife Building 808 (246) 59 1963 Formerly known as the Pan Am Building[55][56]
23 731 Lexington Avenue 806 (246) 54 2005 [57][58]
24 Woolworth Building 792 (241) 57 1913 Tallest building in the world from 1913 until 1930[59][60]
25 50 West Street* 783 (239) 63 2016 Topped out in October 2015.[61][62][63]
26 One Worldwide Plaza 778 (237) 50 1989 Commercial office tower on Eighth Avenue[64][65]
27 45 East 22nd Street* 777 (237) 64 2017 Topped out in May 2016[66][67]
28 Carnegie Hall Tower 757 (231) 60 1991 [68][69]
29 383 Madison Avenue 755 (230) 47 2001 Formerly known as Bear Stearns World Headquarters[70][71]
30 1717 Broadway 753 (229) 68 2013 Tallest hotel in the western hemisphere[72][73][74]
31 AXA Equitable Center 752 (229) 54 1986 Formerly known as the Equitable Building and Equitable Center West[75][76]
31= One Penn Plaza 750 (229) 57 1972 [77][78]
31= 1251 Avenue of the Americas 750 (229) 54 1971 Formerly known as the Exxon Building[79][80]
31= Time Warner Center South Tower 750 (229) 55 2004 [81][82]
31= Time Warner Center North Tower 750 (229) 55 2004 [82][83]
35 200 West Street 749 (228) 44 2010 Also known as Goldman Sachs World Headquarters[84][85]
36 60 Wall Street 745 (227) 55 1989 Also known as Deutsche Bank Building[86][87]
36 One Astor Plaza 745 (227) 54 1972 [88][89]
37 7 World Trade Center 743 (226) 52 2006 [90][91]
38 One Liberty Plaza 743 (226) 54 1973 Formerly known as the U.S. Steel Building[92][93]
39 20 Exchange Place 741 (226) 57 1931 Formerly known as the City Bank-Farmers Trust Building[94][95]
41 200 Vesey Street 739 (225) 51 1986 Also known as American Express Tower[96][97]
42 Bertelsmann Building 733 (223) 42 1990 [98][99]
43 Times Square Tower 726 (221) 47 2004 [100][101]
44 Metropolitan Tower 716 (218) 77 1987 [102][103]
45 252 East 57th Street* 715 (218) 65 2016 Topped out in October 2015 [104]
46 610 Lexington Avenue* 711 (217) 63 2017 Also known as 100 East 53rd Street. Topped out in January 2016.[105][106]
47 500 Fifth Avenue 709 (216) 60 1931 [107][108]
48 JP Morgan Chase World Headquarters 707 (215) 52 1960 [109][110]
49 General Motors Building 705 (215) 50 1968 [111][112]
50 3 Manhattan West - 702 (214) 62 2017 Topped out in April 2016[113][114]
51 Metropolitan Life Insurance Company Tower 700 (213) 50 1909 Tallest building in the world from 1909 until 1913[115][116]
52 Americas Tower 692 (211) 50 1992 [117][118]
53 Solow Building 689 (210) 50 1974 [119][120]
54 Marine Midland Building 688 (210) 52 1967 Also known as HSBC Bank Building[121][122]
55= 55 Water Street 687 (209) 53 1972 [123][124]
55= 277 Park Avenue 687 (209) 50 1962 [125][126]
55= 5 Beekman 687 (209) 47 2015 [127]
58 Morgan Stanley Building 685 (209) 42 1989 Also known as the Morgan Stanley World Headquarters[128][129]
59 Random House Tower 684 (208) 52 2003 [130][131]
60 Four Seasons Hotel New York 682 (208) 52 1993 Tallest all-hotel building in the city[132][133]
61 1221 Avenue of the Americas 674 (205) 51 1969 Formerly known as the McGraw-Hill Building[134][135]
62= Lincoln Building 673 (205) 55 1930 [136][137]
62= Barclay Tower 673 (205) 56 2007 [138][139]
64 Paramount Plaza 670 (204) 48 1971 Formerly the Uris Building[140][141]
65 Trump Tower 664 (202) 58 1983 [142][143]
66 One Court Square 658 (201) 50 1990 Tallest building in New York City outside of Manhattan; tallest building on Long Island and in the Borough of Queens; formerly known as the Citigroup Building[144][145]
67 Sky 656 (200) 71 2015 Largest single tower residence in New York City.[146] Sky comprises 1,175 luxury units and includes more than 70,000 sq ft of amenity space.[147]
68 1 Wall Street 654 (199) 50 1931 [148][149]
69= 599 Lexington Avenue 653 (199) 50 1986 [150][151]
69= Silver Towers I 653 (199) 60 2009 Also known as River Place[152][153]
69= Silver Towers II 653 (199) 60 2009 Also known as River Place[154][155]
72 712 Fifth Avenue 650 (198) 52 1990 [156][157]
73 Chanin Building 649 (198) 56 1930 [158][159]
74 245 Park Avenue 648 (198) 44 1966 [160][161]
75= Sony Tower 647 (197) 37 1984 Formerly known as the AT&T Building[162][163]
75= Tower 28* 647 (197) 58 2016 Topped out in April 2016[164][165]
77 225 Liberty Street 645 (197) 44 1987 [166][167]
78= 1 New York Plaza 640 (195) 50 1969 [168][169]
78= 570 Lexington Avenue 640 (195) 50 1931 Also known as the General Electric Building[170][171]
80 MiMA 638 (195) 55 2011 [172][173]
81 345 Park Avenue 634 (193) 44 1969 [174][175]
82 400 Fifth Avenue 631 (192) 57 2010 [176][177]
83= W. R. Grace Building 630 (192) 50 1971 [178][179]
83= W. R. Grace Building 630 (192) 50 1971 [178][179]
83= Home Insurance Plaza 630 (192) 45 1966 [180][181]
83= 1095 Avenue of the Americas 630 (192) 40 1974 Also known as Verizon World Headquarters[182][183]
83= W New York Downtown Hotel and Residences 630 (192) 57 2010 [184]
88 101 Park Avenue 629 (192) 49 1982 [185][186]
89= One Dag Hammarskjold Plaza 628 (191) 49 1972 [187][188]
89= Central Park Place 628 (191) 56 1988 [189][190]
90= 888 7th Avenue 628 (191) 46 1971 [191][192]
92= Waldorf Astoria New York 625 (191) 47 1931 [193][194]
92= 1345 Avenue of the Americas 625 (191) 50 1969 [195][196]
94 Trump Palace Condominiums 623 (190) 54 1991 [197][198]
95= Olympic Tower 620 (189) 51 1976 [199][200]
95= Mercantile Building 620 (189) 48 1929 Also known as 10 East 40th Street[201][202]
97= 425 Fifth Avenue 618 (188) 55 2003 [203][204]
97= One Madison 618 (188) 51 2010 [205][206]
99= 919 Third Avenue 615 (187) 47 1971 [207][208]
99= New York Life Building 615 (187) 40 1928 [209][210]
100= 750 7th Avenue 615 (187) 40 1989 [211][212]
100= The Epic 615 (187) 58 2007 [213][214]
103= Eventi 614 (187) 54 2010 [215]
103= Tower 49 614 (187) 45 1985 [216][217]
105= 555 10th Avenue* 610 (186) 53 2016 Topped out in September 2015[218][219]
105= The Hub* 610 (190) 52 2016 Also known as 333 Schermerhorn Street. Tallest building in Brooklyn.
Topped out on December 16, 2015.[220][221][222][223]
107 Calyon Building 609 (186) 45 1964 [224][225]
108 Baccarat Hotel and Residences 606 (185) 48 2014 [226]
109 250 West 55th Street 605 (184) 39 2013 [227]
110 The Orion 604 (184) 58 2006 [228][229]
111 590 Madison Avenue 603 (184) 41 1983 Also known as the IBM Building[230][231]
112 11 Times Square 601 (183) 40 2010 Also known as Times Square Plaza[232][233]
113 1166 Avenue of the Americas 600 (183) 44 1974 [234]

Tallest buildings by pinnacle height

This lists ranks buildings in New York City based on pinnacle height measurement, which includes antenna masts. Standard architectural height measurement, which excludes non-architectural antennas in building height, is included for comparative purposes. An equal sign (=) following a rank indicates the same height between two or more buildings. The "Year" column indicates the year in which a building was completed.

Tallest buildings in NYC, by pinnacle height, including all masts, antennae, poles, etc., whether architectural or not.
Pinn.
Rank
Std.
Rank
Name Pinnacle
height
ft (m)
Standard
height
ft (m)
Floors
Year
Sources
1 1 One World Trade Center 1,792 (546) 1,776 (541) 104 2014 [4][235]
2 3 Empire State Building 1,454 (443) 1,250 (381) 102 1931 [236][237][238]
3 2 432 Park Avenue 1,396 (426) 1,396 (426) 96 2015 [21][22]
4 4 Bank of America Tower 1,200 (366) 1,200 (366) 55 2009 [6][24]
5 17 Condé Nast Building 1,118 (341) 809 (247) 48 1999 [53][54]
6= 5= Chrysler Building 1,046 (319) 1,046 (319) 77 1931 [7][26]
6= 5= New York Times Building 1,046 (319) 1,046 (319) 52 2007 [27][28]
8 7 One57 1,005 (306) 1,005 (306) 75 2014 [29][30]
9 8 4 World Trade Center 977 (298) 977 (298) 72 2013 [12][31]
10 9 70 Pine Street 952 (290) 952 (290) 66 1932 [32][33]
11 19 Bloomberg Tower 941 (287) 806 (246) 54 2005 [57][58]

Tallest buildings in each borough

This lists the tallest building in each borough of New York City based on standard height measurement. The "Year" column indicates the year in which a building was completed.

Borough Name Height
ft (m)
Floors
Year
Source
Bronx Harlem River Park Towers I & II 404 (123) 44 1975 [239][240]
Brooklyn The Hub* 610 (190) 52 2016 [223]
Manhattan One World Trade Center 1,776 (541) 104 2014 [235]
Queens One Court Square 658 (201) 50 1990 [144]
Staten Island Church at Mount Loretto 225 (69) 1 1894 [241][242]

Tallest under construction or proposed

Under construction

This lists buildings that are currently under construction in New York City and are expected to rise to a height of at least 600 feet (183 m). Buildings under construction that have already been topped out are also included, as are those whose construction has been suspended. For buildings whose heights have not yet been released by their developers, this table uses a floor count of 50 stories as the cutoff.

Name Image Height*
ft (m)
Floors Year (est.)
Central Park Tower 1,550 (472) 99[243] 2019 The building will also be the tallest residential building in the world both by roof height and architectural height.[244][244]
111 West 57th Street 1,438 (438) 82 2017 Would become the world's skinniest skyscraper upon completion.[245]
One Vanderbilt 1,401 (427) 57 2020 As of August 2016, excavation is underway.[246] Would become one of the tallest buildings in midtown east as part of the Vanderbilt Corridor rezoning.[247]
125 Greenwich Street 1,358 (414) 77 2017
Two World Trade Center 1,323 (410) 81 2021 Would become the second-tallest building in the new World Trade Center complex upon completion; construction on hold as of January 2012 due to a lack of tenants. As of April 2015, Larry Silverstein was in talks with 21st Century Fox and News Corp to anchor the building. Bjarke Ingels has replaced Norman Foster as architect for the building as the deal has been made.[13][248][249][250]
30 Hudson Yards 1,296 (392) 92 2018-2019 Tallest building in the Hudson Yards project.
53W53 1,050 (320) 82 2018 As of March 2015, piling is ongoing and caissons are being placed for the tower as foundation work continues. The tower was formerly known as the MoMa expansion tower and as Tower Verre.
3 Hudson Boulevard 1,034 (315) 66 2019 Formerly known as GiraSole [251]
220 Central Park South 951 (290) 65 2017 [251]
15 Hudson Yards 912 (278) 70 2018 [252]
One Manhattan Square 850 (259) 80 2019 Also known as 252 South Street.[253]
111 Murray Street 792 (241) 58 2018 [254]
520 Park Avenue 780 (238) 51 2017 [255]
200 Amsterdam Avenue 666 (203) 51 Would become the tallest building in the Upper West Side upon completion. Completion date yet to be announced but demolition of previous occupant is in full swing.[256]
42-12 28th Street 647 (197) 58 2017 Would become the tallest residential building in Queens upon completion.[257][258]

* Table entries with dashes (—) indicate that information regarding expected building heights or dates of completion has not yet been released.

Proposed

This table lists buildings that are proposed for construction in New York City and are expected to rise at least 600 feet (183 m) in height. For buildings whose heights have not yet been released by their developers, this table uses a floor count of 50 stories as the cutoff.

Name Height*
ft (m)
Floors Year* Notes
80 South Street 1,436 (438) 113 [259]
666 5th Avenue (reconstruction) 1,400 (426) Zaha Hadid prepared a plan that would restack the current 41-story building into a slender, super-tall hotel and residential tower[260]
15 Penn Plaza 1,216 (371) 68 Vornado Realty Trust has resurrected plans to erect this previously approved tower in Midtown.[261]
1 Park Lane 1,210 (368) 88 2020 Helmsley Park Lane Hotel will be dismantled and replaced by a 1,210 foot tower likely designed by Rafael Viñoly.[262]
520 West 41st Street 1,100 (335) 106 2020 Will surpass all other skyscrapers on the island by floor-count[263][264]
45 Broad Street 1,100 (335) 86 2019 Plans were first released in February 2016[265]
50 Hudson Yards 1,068 (326) 62 2019 [266][267]
9 DeKalb Avenue 1,066 (325) 73 2019 Upon completion, 9 DeKalb Avenue will become the New York City’s tallest building outside of Manhattan, and give Brooklyn its first supertall skyscraper.[268]
3 Hudson Boulevard 1,034 (315) 66 2019 [269]
42 Trinity Place 1,015 (309) 80 [270]
35 Hudson Yards 1,009 (308) 79 2018 [271]
The Spiral (66 Hudson Boulevard) 1,005 (305) 34th Street and 10th avenue, at the beginning of the High Line. Almost every floor will have an its own outdoor terrace.[272]
335 Madison Avenue 1,000+ (305+) [273]
One Manhattan West 995 (303) 66 2020 Ground broken[274]
Two Manhattan West 995 (303) 66 2020 [275]
Court Square City View Tower 984 (300) 80 [276]
520 Fifth Avenue 920 (280) 71 There is a possibility that a crown element could bump the project above the 1,000′ mark.[277]
Queens Plaza Park 915 (279) 77 2019 Also known as 29-37 41st Avenue. Would become the tallest building in Queens, tallest building in New York City outside of Manhattan and New York state when completed.[278]
426 East 58th Street 900+ (274+) Also known as Sutton Place Tower.[279]
247 Cherry 900 (274) 77 SHoP Architects building being designed by JDS Development Group. Initial plans revealed in April 2016.[280]
138 East 50th 803 (245) 64 [281]
West 30th Street 800 (244) 64 [282]
75 Nassau Street 800 (244) [283]
111 Murray Street 792 (241) 58 2018 [284][285]
55 Hudson Yards 780 (238) 51 2018 [286][287][288]
5 World Trade Center 743 (226) 42 Considered to be a stale proposal; also known as 130 Liberty Street[289][290]
126 Madison Avenue 730 (223) 48 2018 [291]
470 11th Avenue 720 (220) 52 2017 [292]
281 Fifth Avenue 705 (215) 52 Expected to start construction by the end of 2015.[293]
118 Fulton Street 700 (213) 63 [294][295]
12 East 37th Street 700 (213) 65 2017 [296]
425 Park Avenue 687 (209) 41 2017 [297][298]
242 West 53rd Street 675 (206) 62 2017 Also known as Roseland Tower.[299]
45 Park Place 667 (203) 43 2017 Demolition of the site’s buildings is nearly complete, and ground breaking is expected before 2016.[300]
303 East 44th Street 600 (183) 41 2017 Construction will start in September. This ODA-designed building will feature outdoor gardens spaced throughout the tower.[301]
420 Albee Square 600 (183) 40 2018 The project is slated to break ground in 2016. Upon completion it will become the second tallest building in Brooklyn, and the tallest office building in the borough.[302]

* Table entries with dashes (—) indicate that information regarding building heights or dates of completion has not yet been released.

A panoramic view of Midtown Manhattan during midday, taken from the Empire State Building

Tallest destroyed

This table lists buildings in New York City that were destroyed or demolished and at one time stood at least 500 feet (152 m) in height.

Name Image Height
ft (m)
Floors Com-
pleted
in
Des-
troyed
in
Notes
1 World Trade Center (original) 1,368 (417) 110 1972 2001 Destroyed in the September 11, 2001, attacks; stood as the tallest building in the world from 1972 until 1974[18][303]
2 World Trade Center (original) 1,362 (415) 110 1973 2001 Destroyed in the September 11 attacks[304][305]
Singer Building 612 (187) 47 1908 1968 Demolished to make room for One Liberty Plaza; stood as tallest building in the world from 1908 until 1909[306][307]
7 World Trade Center (original) 570 (174) 47 1987 2001 Destroyed in the September 11 attacks[308][309]
Deutsche Bank Building 517 (157.6) 39 1974 2011 Deconstructed due to damage sustained in the September 11 attacks[310][311]

Timeline of tallest buildings

This lists buildings that once held the title of tallest building in New York City. Both Trinity Church and the Empire State Building have held the title twice, the latter following the destruction of the World Trade Center in the September 11 attacks. The Empire State Building was surpassed by One World Trade Center in 2012.

  Was also the world's tallest building during at least some of its period as New York City's tallest building[17]
Name Image Street address Years as
tallest
Height
ft (m)
Floors Notes
Collegiate Reformed Protestant Dutch Church Fort Amsterdam 1643–1846 Unknown 1 Demolished[312]
Trinity Church 79 Broadway 1846–1853 279 (85) 1 [313]
Latting Observatory
(1853–1856)
42nd Street and Fifth Avenue 1853–1854 315 (96) 3 Height reduced by 75 feet (23 m) in 1854;
burned down in 1856[314]
Trinity Church 79 Broadway 1854–1890 279 (85) 1 [313]
World Building[A]
(1890–1955)
Frankfort Street 1890–1899 348 (106) 20[B] Tied for tallest building in the city from 1894 to 1899;
demolished in 1955[15]
Manhattan Life Insurance Building
(1894–1930)[A]
64–70 Broadway 1894–1899 348 (106) 18 Tied for tallest building in the city from 1894 to 1899;
demolished in 1963-64[315]
Park Row Building 13–21 Park Row 1899–1908 391 (119) 30 [316]
Singer Building
(1908–1968)
149 Broadway 1908–1909 612 (187) 47 Demolished in 1968[317]
Metropolitan Life Insurance Company Tower 1 Madison Avenue 1909–1913 700 (213) 50 [116]
Woolworth Building 233 Broadway 1913–1930 792 (241) 57 [60]
Bank of Manhattan Trust Building[C] 40 Wall Street 1930 927 (283) 70 [38]
Chrysler Building 405 Lexington Avenue 1930–1931 1,046 (319) 77 [26]
Empire State Building 350 Fifth Avenue 1931–1972 1,250 (381) 102 [236]
1 World Trade Center
(1972–2001)
1 World Trade Center 1972–2001 1,368 (417) 110 Destroyed in the September 11, 2001, attacks[303]
Empire State Building 350 Fifth Avenue 2001–2013 1,250 (381) 102 [236]
One World Trade Center 1 World Trade Center 2013–present 1,776 (541) 104 [235]
New York Skyline at Twilight Hour

See also

Notes

A. ^ a b The Manhattan Life Insurance Building, completed in 1894, tied the height of the World Building. The city therefore had two tallest buildings for a period of five years, until the Park Row Building was completed in 1899.
B. ^ The floor count of the World Building has been disputed. Upon construction, the building was said to contain up to 26 floors, but in recent years the building has been said to contain as few as 16 floors.[16]
C. ^ This building was constructed as the Bank of Manhattan Trust Building, but is now more commonly known as 40 Wall Street and officially known as the Trump Building.

References

Citations

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Sources

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