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List of tallest buildings in New York City

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Tall buildings in New York City
Midtown Manhattan with the Empire State Building (center) and Lower Manhattan with One WTC (center-right)
Tallest buildingOne World Trade Center (2014)
Tallest building height1,776 ft (541 m)
First 150 m+ buildingSinger Building (1898)[1]
Number of tall buildings
Buildings above 100 m870 (2025)[2]
Buildings above 150 m317 (2025) (3rd)[3]
Buildings above 200 m98 (2025) (4th)[3]
Buildings above 300 m18 (2025) (3rd)
Buildings above 400 m6
Midtown Manhattan in September 2023 looking north from the Empire State Building's 102nd floor (1,224 feet or 373 meters)
Lower Manhattan, viewed from Jersey City, New Jersey with the World Trade Center complex in the middle

New York City is the most populous city in the United States, with a metropolitan area population of over 19 million as of 2025. Its skyline is one of the largest in the world, and the largest in the United States, in North America, and in the Western Hemisphere. Throughout the 20th century, New York City's skyline was by far the largest in the world. New York City is home to more than 7,000 completed high-rise buildings of at least 115 feet (35 m),[4] of which at least 102 are taller than 650 feet (198 m). The tallest building in New York is One World Trade Center, which rises 1,776 feet (541 m).[5][6][7] The 104-story[A] skyscraper also stands as the tallest building in the United States, the tallest building in the Western Hemisphere, and the seventh-tallest building in the world.[5][6]

The city is home to many of the earliest skyscrapers, which began to appear towards the end of the 19th century. A major construction boom in the 1920s saw the completion of some of the tallest skyscrapers in the world at the time, including the Chrysler Building in 1930 and the Empire State Building in 1931 in Midtown Manhattan. At 1,250 feet (381 m) and 102-stories, the Empire State Building stood as the tallest building in the world for almost four decades; it remains among the city's most recognizable skyscrapers today.[8] Following a lull in skyscraper development during the 1930s to 1950s, construction steadily returned. The Empire State Building was dethroned as the world's tallest building in 1970, when the 1,368-foot (417 m) North Tower of the original World Trade Center surpassed it.[9] The North Tower, along with its twin the South Tower, held this title only briefly as they were both surpassed by the Willis Tower (then Sears Tower) in Chicago in 1973. The Twin Towers remained the tallest buildings in New York City until they were destroyed in the September 11 attacks in 2001.[10][11]

Starting from the mid-2000s, New York City would undergo an unprecedented skyscraper boom. The new One World Trade Center, part of the redevelopment of the World Trade Center, began construction in 2006 and was completed in 2014. It surpassed the Empire State Building as the city's tallest, and overtook the Willis Tower to become the tallest building in the United States.[6][12] In Midtown Manhattan, a luxury residential boom led to the completion of Central Park Tower, the second-tallest building in the city at 1,550 feet (472 m), with the highest roof of any building outside Asia; 111 West 57th Street, the city's third tallest building and the world's most slender skyscraper at 1,428 feet (435 m), and 432 Park Avenue, the city's fifth tallest building at 1,397 feet (426 m). The tallest office skyscraper in Midtown, One Vanderbilt, is the fourth-tallest building in the city at 1,401 feet (427 m). New York City has the third-most supertall skyscrapers in the world.

The majority of skyscrapers in New York City are concentrated in Midtown and Lower Manhattan, although other neighborhoods of Manhattan and the boroughs of Brooklyn, Queens, and the Bronx are also home to a substantial number of high-rises. A popular misconception holds that the relative lack of skyscrapers between Lower and Midtown Manhattan is due to the depth of the bedrock beneath the two districts.[13][14] Since the 2010s, an increasing number of skyscrapers have been built in Downtown Brooklyn and Long Island City, as well as along the East River in Brooklyn and Queens.

History

[edit]

Number of buildingsYear02040608010012019001920194019601980200020202040Buildings taller than 650 ft (198 m)Supertall skyscrapersGrowth of skyscrapers in New York City by year

Early skyscrapers

[edit]
An aerial view of Lower Manhattan in 1931

The history of skyscrapers in New York City began with the construction of the Equitable Life, Western Union, and Tribune buildings in the early 1870s. These relatively short early skyscrapers, sometimes referred to as "preskyscrapers" or "protoskyscrapers", included features such as a steel frame and elevators—then-new innovations that were used in the city's later skyscrapers.[15]: 62  Modern skyscraper construction began with the completion of the World Building in 1890; the structure rose to a pinnacle of 349 feet (106 m).[16] Though not the city's first high-rise, it was the first building to surpass the 284-foot (87 m) spire of Trinity Church.[17] The World Building, which stood as the tallest in the city until 1899,[B] was demolished in 1955 to allow for the construction of an expanded entrance to the Brooklyn Bridge.[18] The Park Row Building, at 391 feet (119 m), was the city's tallest building from 1899 to 1908,[19] and the world's tallest office building during the same time span.[20] By 1900, fifteen skyscrapers in New York City exceeded 250 feet (76 m) in height.[15]: 280 

New York has played a prominent role in the development of the skyscraper. Since 1890, ten of those built in the city have held the title of world's tallest.[21][C] New York City went through a very early high-rise construction booms from the 1890s through the 1910s.[22] Notable skyscrapers completed during the first boom include the Singer Building, which was the first skyscraper in New York and the second in the world to exceed 492 feet (150 m) in height, and the Met Life Tower, which is the earliest skyscraper to reach 492 feet (150 m) that still stands today. Another notable landmark was the Woolworth Building, the first building in the world to be taller than 656 feet (200 m). All three buildings held the title of the tallest building in New York City and the world at the time.

After a lull in skyscraper construction in the mid-1910s, a second boom occurred from the mid-1920s to the early 1930s.[22] Skyscrapers reached greater heights in Lower Manhattan and especially in Midtown Manhattan. This period saw the completion of 40 Wall Street, the Chrysler Building, and the Empire State Building, partially driven by increased commercial demand and economic development during the Roaring Twenties and a desire for developers to outdo one another in height.[23] The Chrysler Building was completed in 1930, one year after the onset of the Great Depression; at a height of 1,049 feet (319 m), it became the world's first supertall skyscraper. The Empire State Building was completed one year later. In total, during the early 20th century, 44 skyscrapers over 492 feet (150 m) were built.[24] Many of the buildings during the second boom were built in the Art Deco style.[25]: 7 

1930s–1950s

[edit]
The International-style UN Secretariat Building

After the early 1930s, skyscraper construction came to a halt for over 20 years owing to economic pressures during the Depression and World War II. Many office skyscrapers in Midtown Manhattan had large amounts of vacant space years after completion.[26] A notable exception to the hiatus was the early modernist 75 Rockefeller Plaza, built as a northern extension to the Rockefeller Center in 1947.[27] Gradually, skyscraper development resumed in the 1950s.[28]: 47, 50 

Many new skyscrapers eschewed the Art Deco of the early 20th century and were built adhering to the modernist International Style. This style emphasized function over form, often involving fewer or no setbacks, and glass curtain walls.[28]: 47, 50  The most prominent of these were the Seagram Building and the United Nations Secretariat Building, the latter of which hosts the offices of the United Nations Secretariat, as New York City was chosen as the headquarters for the newly formed United Nations after the war. Other noteworthy skyscrapers built during the era include the Socony–Mobil Building, 660 Fifth Avenue, 1065 Avenue of the Americas, and 2 Broadway.

1960s–1980s

[edit]
The skyline of Lower Manhattan with the original World Trade Center complex

The New York City Zoning Resolution of 1961 incentivized the building of more office skyscrapers in Manhattan.[29] Notable buildings to go up in the 1960s include the octagonal MetLife Building[30] and the General Motors Building.[31] Some early skyscrapers, such as the Singer Building and the City Investing Building, were demolished to make way for new developments.

In 1966, construction began on the World Trade Center complex, including twin supertall skyscrapers measuring 1,368 feet (417 m) and 1,362 feet (415.1 m) in height. Known as the Twin Towers, they reshaped the Lower Manhattan skyline when they topped out in 1970, and over time, became an iconic symbol of New York City.[32] Midtown Manhattan saw increasingly tall skyscrapers like the Citigroup Center and One Penn Plaza in the 1970s; during this decade, the city surpassed 100 skyscrapers above 492 feet (100 m) in height. Another construction surge in the late 1980s increasingly embraced more postmodernist designs, such as CitySpire and 1 Worldwide Plaza.

1990s–present

[edit]
One WTC and 3 WTC under construction in 2011

After the early 1990s, skyscraper development slowed down once more, with the most significant new skyscraper during this lull being 4 Times Square. The 2000s saw the resumption of office skyscraper development, alongside an growing number of residential skyscrapers. The Bank of America Tower and the New York Times Building became the first supertall skyscrapers to be built in the city since the original Twin Towers. The mid-2010s saw an especially large surge in construction, with office and residential structures reaching new heights. While New York City had only two supertall buildings in 2010, that figure has grown to 18 by 2025.

WTC redevelopment

[edit]

In 2001, the September 11 attacks led to the collapse of the Twin Towers, and the Empire State Building regained the title of the tallest building in the city. The Twin Towers were the tallest buildings ever to have been destroyed. Plans to rebuild the site were soon proposed, and construction began for a new World Trade Center complex in 2004. The centerpiece of the redevelopment, One World Trade Center, was completed in 2014 at a height of 1,776 ft (541.3 m). The height is a symbolic reference to the year of the signing of the United States Declaration of Independence. Upon topping out, the building became the tallest building in the city and the United States. Also part of the complex is 3 World Trade Center, a supertall skyscraper completed in 2018. The site for 2 World Trade Center has been repeatedly delayed; excavation commenced in 2008 on a design from British architect Norman Foster, but works were halted in 2013, with construction only occurring up to street level. The proposal was redesigned by Bjarke Ingels of Bjarke Ingels Group in 2015, featuring a terraced, cantilevering structure. As of 2025, no work has started on the rest of the tower.

Supertall boom and Hudson Yards

[edit]
Four major peaks in Billionaire's Row. From left to right: Central Park Tower, One57, 111 West 57th Street, and 53W53

A boom in the development of supertall residential skyscrapers began with One57 and 432 Park Avenue, the latter surpassing the height of the Empire State Building to become the tallest building in Midtown Manhattan in 2015. This trend culminated with the completion of 111 West 57th Street and Central Park Tower in the early 2020s, both surpassing 1,400 feet (427 m) in height. These buildings are primarily catered towards the luxury market; their prevalence near the southern side of Central Park has led the area around them to be named "Billionaire's Row".

Two signifiant commercial supertall skyscrapers, both exceeding 1,300 feet (396 m), have topped out in the 2020s: One Vanderbilt, forming a new peak in the skyline around Grand Central Terminal; and 270 Park Avenue, which will serve as the new headquarters of JPMorgan Chase. The skyline of the western side of Midtown Manhattan was also massively transformed with the Hudson Yards development. Built on the eastern side of West Side Yard, Phase I of the development began construction in 2012 and was completed in 2019. Within the development are three supertall skyscrapers: 35 Hudson Yards, 30 Hudson Yards, and The Spiral, alongside several other skyscrapers. Additionally, located near Hudson Yards is One Manhattan West, another supertall skyscraper completed in 2019. Phase II of Hudson Yards is under planning, and could potentially include more supertall buildings and a casino.[33]

Taller residential skyscrapers also arrived at the Upper East Side and Upper West Side areas of Manhattan.[34] 520 Park Avenue became the tallest building on the Upper East Side in 2018,[35] while 200 Amsterdam became the tallest on the Upper West Side in 2021;[36] it will soon be supplanted by 50 West 66th Street, which is topped out.[37]

Beyond Manhattan

[edit]
The rapidly growing skyline of Downtown Brooklyn

Skyscraper development has also increasingly spread beyond Manhattan in the 21st century. Few tall buildings were built in Brooklyn since the completion of the Williamsburgh Savings Bank Tower in 1929, which remained the tallest building in the borough for 80 years. Since the late 2000s, a growing number of residential high-rises have been built in Downtown Brooklyn, which has since formed a significant high-rise skyline of its own.[38] As of 2025, Brooklyn is home to 17 skyscrapers taller than 492 feet (150 m). The tallest, the Brooklyn Tower, was completed in 2022 at 1,066 feet (325 m); it is the first and only supertall skyscraper in the city outside of Manhattan.[39]

The neighbourhood of Long Island City (LIC), in Queens, has also developed a sizeable skyline throughout the 2010s.[40] One Court Square, built in 1990, was the only skyscraper in Queens for over a decade, until the addition of more residential high-rises in the late 2000s; there are now 14 skyscrapers taller than 492 feet (150 m) in the borough. The tallest, The Orchard, was completed in 2024. Residential skyscrapers have also gone up on waterfront of East River in Brooklyn and Queens since the late 2010s, particularly in the Williamsburg, Greenpoint, and Hunters Point neighbourhoods. On a lesser scale, high-rises developments are also becoming more common in the areas of Flushing,[41] Gowanus,[42] Jamaica,[43] and South Bronx.[44]

Although not located in New York City, the neighborhood of Exchange Place in Jersey City has seen a similar boom in tall buildings since the 2000s.[45] More recently, in the 2020s, the area of Journal Square has also seen an influx in skyscrapers.[46]

Cityscape

[edit]
Nine-mile (14 km) high-resolution panorama of Manhattan's west side, from 115th Street to The Battery, taken from Weehawken, NJ, March 26, 2020. View of Chrysler Building blocked by One Vanderbilt.

Tallest buildings

[edit]

This list ranks completed and topped out New York City skyscrapers that stand at least 650 feet (198 m) tall based on standard height measurements. 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. The "Year" column indicates the year in which a building was completed.

  Was New York City's tallest building upon completion
  Architecturally topped out but not yet completed
Rank Name Image Location Height
ft (m)
Floors[D] Purpose Year Notes
1 One World Trade Center Lower Manhattan

285 Fulton Street 40°42′47″N 74°00′49″W / 40.713°N 74.0135°W / 40.713; -74.0135 (One World Trade Center)

1,776 (541) 94[A] Office 2014 Also known as the Freedom Tower. Tallest building in the Western Hemisphere by architectural height. Tallest building in New York City and the United States. 7th-tallest building in the world. 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 each of the Twin Towers.[47]
2 Central Park Tower Midtown Manhattan

225 West 57th Street 40°45′57″N 73°58′51″W / 40.7659°N 73.98089°W / 40.7659; -73.98089 (Central Park Tower)

1,550 (472) 98 Residential 2020 Tallest building in New York City by roof height at 1,550 feet; highest roof height of any building outside Asia, surpassing the Willis Tower by 100 feet (30 m). Also known as Nordstrom Tower. 15th-tallest building in the world. Tallest building in Midtown Manhattan. The building is also the tallest residential building in the world both by roof height and architectural height. The top floor is marketed as the 130th floor, but the building only has 98 actual floors.[48][49][50]
3 111 West 57th Street Midtown Manhattan

111 West 57th Street 40°45′52″N 73°58′40″W / 40.76455°N 73.97765°W / 40.76455; -73.97765 (111 West 57th Street)

1,428 (435) 85 Residential 2021 Also known as Steinway Tower. Second-tallest residential building in the world; the world's most slender skyscraper. 29th-tallest building in the world.[51][52]
4 One Vanderbilt Midtown Manhattan

1 Vanderbilt Avenue 40°45′11″N 73°58′43″W / 40.7530°N 73.9785°W / 40.7530; -73.9785 (One Vanderbilt)

1,401 (427) 73 Office 2020 Second-tallest office building in NYC.[53] Tallest all-office building in Midtown Manhattan. 31st-tallest building in the world. Due to floor ceilings between 14 and 20 feet in height, it has fewer stories than most buildings of similar height; its top floor is numbered 93. Has the highest panoramic elevator in the world.[54][55]
5 432 Park Avenue Midtown Manhattan

432 Park Avenue 40°45′41″N 73°58′19″W / 40.761389°N 73.971806°W / 40.761389; -73.971806 (432 Park Avenue)

1,397 (426) 85 Residential 2015 Third-tallest in NYC by roof height, third-tallest residential building in the world; 33rd-tallest building in the world.[56][57]
6 270 Park Avenue Midtown Manhattan

270 Park Avenue 40°45′21″N 73°58′31″W / 40.7558°N 73.9754°W / 40.7558; -73.9754 (270 Park Avenue)

1,388 (423) 60 Office 2025 JPMorgan Chase is replacing its headquarters;[58][59] the new tower was approved by the New York City Council in May 2019. 35th-tallest building in the world.[60][61][62]
7 30 Hudson Yards Hudson Yards

500 West 33rd Street 40°45′15″N 74°00′03″W / 40.75409°N 74.00080°W / 40.75409; -74.00080 (30 Hudson Yards)

1,270 (387) 73 Office 2019 Tallest building in Hudson Yards. 53rd-tallest building in the world. It has the highest outdoor observation deck in the Western Hemisphere and highest open-air building ascent in the world. Top floor marketed as 101.[63]
8 Empire State Building Midtown Manhattan

350 Fifth Avenue 40°44′54″N 73°59′08″W / 40.748433°N 73.985656°W / 40.748433; -73.985656 (Empire State Building)

1,250 (381) 102[E] Office 1931 First building in the world to contain over 100 floors. Built in just 13 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 New York City's tallest building after the World Trade Center was destroyed in the attacks of September 11, 2001, until 2012, when it was surpassed by One World Trade Center.[64][65] With its antenna, it is 1,454 feet (443 m) tall. 60th-tallest building in the world.
9 Bank of America Tower Midtown Manhattan

1101 Sixth Avenue 40°45′19″N 73°59′03″W / 40.755278°N 73.984167°W / 40.755278; -73.984167 (Bank of America Tower)

1,200 (366) 55 Office 2009 First skyscraper to receive a Platinum LEED certification.[66][67] Roof height is 953.5 feet (291 m). 74th-tallest building in the world.
10 3 World Trade Center Lower Manhattan

175 Greenwich Street 40°42′39″N 74°00′42″W / 40.71090°N 74.01160°W / 40.71090; -74.01160 (3 World Trade Center)

1,079 (329) 80 Office 2018 [68][69]
11 The Brooklyn Tower Downtown Brooklyn

9 DeKalb Avenue 40°41′25″N 73°58′56″W / 40.690278°N 73.982222°W / 40.690278; -73.982222 (9 DeKalb Avenue)

1,066 (325) 74[F] Residential 2022 Tallest building in Brooklyn, the tallest building in the outer boroughs, the tallest building on Long Island, and the tallest building in New York State outside Manhattan Island.[70][71][72][73]
12 53W53 Midtown Manhattan

53 West 53rd Street 40°45′42″N 73°58′42″W / 40.76160°N 73.97840°W / 40.76160; -73.97840 (53W53)

1,050 (320)[74] 77 Residential 2019 Formerly known as Tower Verre.[75]
13= Chrysler Building Midtown Manhattan

405 Lexington Avenue 40°45′06″N 73°58′31″W / 40.7517°N 73.9753°W / 40.7517; -73.9753 (Chrysler Building)

1,046 (319) 77 Office 1930 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. During construction, it and 40 Wall Street overtook the Eiffel Tower as the world's tallest human-made structures.[76][77]
13= The New York Times Building Midtown Manhattan

620 Eighth Avenue 40°45′23″N 73°59′24″W / 40.756389°N 73.99°W / 40.756389; -73.99 (The New York Times Building)

1,046 (319) 52 Office 2007 Also known as the Times Tower. The first high-rise building in the United States to have a ceramic sunscreen curtain wall.[78][79]
15 The Spiral Hudson Yards

435 Tenth Avenue 40°45′19″N 73°59′58″W / 40.75533°N 73.999568°W / 40.75533; -73.999568 (The Spiral)

1,031 (314) 66 Office 2022 34th Street and 10th Avenue, at the north end of the High Line. Almost every floor will have its own outdoor terrace.[80]
16 One57 Midtown Manhattan

157 West 57th Street 40°45′55″N 73°58′45″W / 40.7653°N 73.9791°W / 40.7653; -73.9791 (One57)

1,004 (306) 75 Residential 2014 First of the Billionaires' Row supertalls to be completed.[81][82][83]
17 520 Fifth Avenue Midtown Manhattan

520 Fifth Avenue 40°45′16″N 73°58′50″W / 40.75444°N 73.98056°W / 40.75444; -73.98056 (520 Fifth Avenue)

1,002 (305) 88 Residential 2026 Mixed-use building with office space on the lower stories and residences above.[84][85][86]
18 35 Hudson Yards Hudson Yards

532–560 West 33rd Street 40°45′16″N 74°00′09″W / 40.75455°N 74.00240°W / 40.75455; -74.00240 (35 Hudson Yards)

1,000 (305) 72 Mixed-use 2019 Tallest mixed-use skyscraper in New York City, a mixed-use office and residential skyscraper.[87][88][89]
19 One Manhattan West Hudson Yards

401 Ninth Avenue 40°45′10″N 73°59′52″W / 40.7527°N 73.9977°W / 40.7527; -73.9977 (1 Manhattan West)

996 (304) 67 Office 2019 Tallest building in the Manhattan West development.[90][91][92]
20 50 Hudson Yards Hudson Yards

504 West 34th Street 40°45′16″N 74°00′00″W / 40.754578°N 74.000119°W / 40.754578; -74.000119 (50 Hudson Yards)

981 (299) 58 Office 2022 Last tower to be built as part of Phase 1 of Hudson Yards, anchored by BlackRock.[93]
21 4 World Trade Center Lower Manhattan

150 Greenwich Street 40°42′37″N 74°00′43″W / 40.71040°N 74.01195°W / 40.71040; -74.01195 (4 World Trade Center)

977 (298) 72 Office 2014 Also known as 150 Greenwich Street, part of the rebuilding of the World Trade Center.[94][95]
22 70 Pine Street Lower Manhattan

70 Pine Street 40°42′23″N 74°00′28″W / 40.70645°N 74.00765°W / 40.70645; -74.00765 (70 Pine Street)

952 (290) 67 Residential 1932 Formerly known as the American International Building and the Cities Service Building.[96][97] 70 Pine was transformed into a residential skyscraper with 644 rental residences, 132 hotel rooms and 35,000 square feet of retail space, opening in 2015.[98] It was the third-tallest building in the world upon completion. 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.
23 220 Central Park South Midtown Manhattan

220 59th Street 40°46′02″N 73°58′49″W / 40.7671°N 73.9802°W / 40.7671; -73.9802 (220 Central Park South)

950 (290) 67 Residential 2019 [99]
24 Two Manhattan West Hudson Yards

401 West 31st Street 40°45′08″N 73°59′53″W / 40.752090°N 73.997949°W / 40.752090; -73.997949 (2 Manhattan West)

935 (285) 58 Office 2024 Construction began after law firm Cravath, Swaine & Moore signed a lease for 13 floors in October 2019. [100][101]
25 40 Wall Street Lower Manhattan

40 Wall Street 40°42′25″N 74°00′35″W / 40.706964°N 74.009672°W / 40.706964; -74.009672 (40 Wall Street)

927 (283) 71 Office 1930 Formerly known as the Bank of Manhattan Trust Building. Also known as the Trump Building, a more permanent name is 40 Wall Street. Was the world's tallest building for less than two months before being surpassed by the Chrysler Building.[102][103]
26 Four Seasons Hotel New York Downtown Lower Manhattan

27 Barclay Street 40°42′47″N 74°00′34″W / 40.713167°N 74.009311°W / 40.713167; -74.009311 (Four Seasons Hotel New York Downtown)

926 (282) 67 Mixed-use 2016 Mixed-use hotel and residential skyscraper. Also known as 30 Park Place.[104][105]
27 Citigroup Center Midtown Manhattan

601 Lexington Avenue 40°45′31″N 73°58′13″W / 40.758533°N 73.970314°W / 40.758533; -73.970314 (Citigroup Center)

915 (279) 59 Office 1977 Formerly Citicorp Center and now known as 601 Lexington Avenue.[106][107]
28 15 Hudson Yards Hudson Yards

545 West 30th Street 40°45′13″N 74°00′12″W / 40.7535°N 74.0032°W / 40.7535; -74.0032 (15 Hudson Yards)

914 (279) 70 Residential 2019 [108]
29 125 Greenwich Street Lower Manhattan

125 Greenwich Street 40°42′33″N 74°00′46″W / 40.709167°N 74.012778°W / 40.709167; -74.012778 (125 Greenwich Street)

912 (278) 72 Residential 2025 [109]
30 10 Hudson Yards Hudson Yards

501 West 30th Street 40°45′09″N 74°00′04″W / 40.7525°N 74.001°W / 40.7525; -74.001 (10 Hudson Yards)

878 (268) 52 Office 2016 First of the Hudson Yards towers to be completed.[110]
31 8 Spruce Street Lower Manhattan

8 Spruce Street 40°42′39″N 74°00′20″W / 40.710833°N 74.005556°W / 40.710833; -74.005556 (8 Spruce Street)

870 (265) 76 Residential 2011 Also known as Beekman Tower and New York by Gehry.[111]
32 Trump World Tower Midtown Manhattan

845 United Nations Plaza 40°45′08″N 73°58′04″W / 40.7523°N 73.9677°W / 40.7523; -73.9677 (Trump World Tower)

861 (262) 72 Residential 2001 Tallest residential building in the world from 2000 until 2003.[112][113]
33= 425 Park Avenue Midtown Manhattan

425 Park Avenue 40°45′38″N 73°58′16″W / 40.760542°N 73.971157°W / 40.760542; -73.971157 (425 Park Avenue)

860 (262) 44 Office 2021 [114]
33= 262 Fifth Avenue NoMad

262 Fifth Avenue 40°44′43″N 73°59′14″W / 40.7452°N 73.9872°W / 40.7452; -73.9872 (262 Fifth Avenue)

860 (262) 56 Residential 2025 Upon opening, the building will yield 26 condominium units.[115]
35 30 Rockefeller Plaza Midtown Manhattan

30 Rockefeller Plaza 40°45′32″N 73°58′44″W / 40.7590°N 73.9790°W / 40.7590; -73.9790 (30 Rockefeller Plaza)

850 (259) 70 Office 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.[116]
36= One Manhattan Square Two Bridges

250 South Street 40°42′37″N 73°59′29″W / 40.71040°N 73.99140°W / 40.71040; -73.99140 (One Manhattan Square)

847 (258) 72 Residential 2019 Also known as 250 South Street or 227 Cherry Street.[117][118][119]
36= Sutton Tower Midtown Manhattan

426–432 East 58th Street 40°45′30″N 73°57′41″W / 40.758291°N 73.961256°W / 40.758291; -73.961256 (Sutton 58)

847 (258) 65 Residential 2022 Residential tower rising in Sutton Place, also known as 3 Sutton Place.[120][121]
38 The Orchard Long Island City

27-48 Jackson Avenue 40°44′53″N 73°56′21″W / 40.7480°N 73.9392°W / 40.7480; -73.9392 (27-48 Jackson Ave)

823 (251) 69 Residential 2025 The tallest building in Queens, and the second tallest building outside of Manhattan behind The Brooklyn Tower.[122][123][124]
39 56 Leonard Street Lower Manhattan

56 Leonard Street 40°43′04″N 74°00′23″W / 40.71765°N 74.00635°W / 40.71765; -74.00635 (56 Leonard Street)

821 (250) 57 Residential 2016 The tallest structure in Tribeca.[125][126][127]
40 CitySpire Midtown Manhattan

156 West 56th Street 40°45′52″N 73°58′47″W / 40.764444°N 73.979722°W / 40.764444; -73.979722 (CitySpire Center)

814 (248) 75 Mixed-use 1987 Mixed-use office and residential building. Was NYC's tallest mixed-use building at the time of its completion.[128][129][130]
41 28 Liberty Street Lower Manhattan

28 Liberty Street 40°42′28″N 74°00′32″W / 40.707778°N 74.008889°W / 40.707778; -74.008889 (28 Liberty Street)

813 (248) 60 Office 1961 Known until sale in 2015 as One Chase Manhattan Plaza.[131][132]
42 4 Times Square Midtown Manhattan

1472 Broadway 40°45′21″N 73°59′09″W / 40.755833°N 73.985833°W / 40.755833; -73.985833 (4 Times Square)

809 (247) 48 Office 1999 Height is 809 feet to mast structure. Roof height is 701 feet. Antenna height is 1118 feet. Formerly known as the Condé Nast Building.[133][134]
43 MetLife Building Midtown Manhattan

200 Park Avenue 40°45′12″N 73°58′36″W / 40.753333°N 73.976667°W / 40.753333; -73.976667 (MetLife Building)

808 (246) 59 Office 1963 Formerly known as the Pan Am Building.[135][136]
44 731 Lexington Avenue Midtown Manhattan

731 Lexington Avenue 40°45′43″N 73°58′05″W / 40.762°N 73.968°W / 40.762; -73.968 (731 Lexington Avenue)

806 (246) 54 Office 2004 It houses the headquarters of Bloomberg L.P. and as a result, is sometimes referred to informally as Bloomberg Tower.[137][138]
45 The Madison NoMad

15 East 30th Street 40°44′44″N 73°59′07″W / 40.74566°N 73.98516°W / 40.74566; -73.98516 (15 East 30th Street)

805 (245) 56 Residential 2021 Also known as 126 Madison Avenue.[139][140][141]
46 The Centrale Midtown Manhattan

138 East 50th Street 40°45′21″N 73°58′19″W / 40.75590°N 73.97190°W / 40.75590; -73.97190 (138 East 50th Street)

803 (245) 64 Residential 2019 Also known by its address, 138 East 50th Street.[142][143][144]
47 130 William Lower Manhattan

130 William Street 40°42′23″N 74°00′28″W / 40.70645°N 74.00765°W / 40.70645; -74.00765 (130 William Street)

800 (244) 66 Residential 2022 [145][146]
48 Woolworth Building Lower Manhattan

233 Broadway 40°42′44″N 74°00′29″W / 40.712222°N 74.008056°W / 40.712222; -74.008056 (Woolworth Building)

792 (241) 58 Mixed-use 1913 Tallest building in the world from 1913 until 1930, before being surpassed by 40 Wall Street. Now a mixed-use office and residential building.[147][148]
49 111 Murray Street Lower Manhattan

111 Murray Street 40°42′56″N 74°00′46″W / 40.71555°N 74.01275°W / 40.71555; -74.01275 (111 Murray Street)

788 (240) 60 Residential 2018 [149]
50 520 Park Avenue Midtown Manhattan

520 Park Avenue 40°45′51″N 73°58′12″W / 40.764028°N 73.97°W / 40.764028; -73.97 (520 Park Avenue)

781 (238) 54 Residential 2018 [150][151]
51= 50 West Street Lower Manhattan

50 West Street 40°42′29″N 74°00′54″W / 40.70800°N 74.01505°W / 40.70800; -74.01505 (50 West Street)

779 (237) 64 Residential 2018 [152][153][154]
51= 55 Hudson Yards Hudson Yards

550 West 34th Street 40°45′19″N 74°00′06″W / 40.755229°N 74.001676°W / 40.755229; -74.001676 (55 Hudson Yards)

779 (237) 51 Office 2018 [155][156][157][158]
53= One Worldwide Plaza Hell's Kitchen

825 Eighth Avenue 40°45′45″N 73°59′16″W / 40.7624°N 73.9877°W / 40.7624; -73.9877 (One Worldwide Plaza)

778 (237) 47 Office 1989 [159][160]
53= Madison Square Park Tower Flatiron District

45 East 22nd Street 40°44′24″N 73°59′14″W / 40.7399°N 73.9872°W / 40.7399; -73.9872 (Madison Square Park Tower)

778 (237) 61 Residential 2017 [161][162]
55 50 West 66th Street Upper West Side

50 West 66th Street 40°46′22″N 73°58′49″W / 40.7728°N 73.9803°W / 40.7728; -73.9803 (50 West 66th Street)

775 (236) 52 Residential 2025 Will become the tallest building on the Upper West Side upon completion.[163]
56 Skyline Tower Long Island City

23-15 44th Drive 40°45′02″N 73°56′10″W / 40.7505°N 73.9362°W / 40.7505; -73.9362 (Skyline Tower)

763 (233) 67 Residential 2021 The second tallest building in Queens, and the third-tallest in the outer boroughs.[164][165]
57 19 Dutch Lower Manhattan

19 Dutch Street 40°42′35″N 74°00′35″W / 40.7098°N 74.0096°W / 40.7098; -74.0096 (19 Dutch)

758 (231) 63 Residential 2018 Also called 118 Fulton Street.[166][167][168]
58 Carnegie Hall Tower Midtown Manhattan

152 West 57th Street 40°45′53″N 73°58′47″W / 40.7648°N 73.9797°W / 40.7648; -73.9797 (Carnegie Hall Tower)

757 (231) 60 Office 1991 The main shaft is a mere 50 feet (15 m) wide.[169][170]
59= 383 Madison Avenue Midtown Manhattan

383 Madison Avenue 40°45′20″N 73°58′37″W / 40.75560°N 73.97705°W / 40.75560; -73.97705 (383 Madison Avenue)

755 (230) 47 Office 2001 Formerly known as Bear Stearns World Headquarters.[171][172]
59= Sven Long Island City

29–37 41st Avenue 40°45′00″N 73°56′11″W / 40.750063°N 73.936507°W / 40.750063; -73.936507 (Queens Plaza Park)

755 (230) 67 Residential 2021 Third-tallest building in Queens after Skyline Tower and The Orchard.[173][174]
61 1717 Broadway Midtown Manhattan

1717 Broadway 40°45′52″N 73°58′57″W / 40.76435°N 73.98260°W / 40.76435; -73.98260 (1717 Broadway)

753 (230) 68 Hotel 2013 It houses the Courtyard & Residence Inn Manhattan/Central Park hotel. Tallest hotel-only skyscraper in New York City. Tallest hotel in the Western Hemisphere.[175][176][177]
62 Axa Equitable Center Midtown Manhattan

787 Seventh Avenue 40°45′42″N 73°58′54″W / 40.76170°N 73.98160°W / 40.76170; -73.98160 (AXA Equitable Center)

752 (229) 51 Office 1985 Formerly known as the Equitable Building and Equitable Center West.[178][179]
63= 1251 Avenue of the Americas Midtown Manhattan

1251 Sixth Avenue 40°45′36″N 73°58′53″W / 40.76005°N 73.98135°W / 40.76005; -73.98135 (1251 Avenue of the Americas)

750 (229) 54 Office 1972 Formerly known as the Exxon Building.[180][181]
63= One Penn Plaza Midtown Manhattan

250 West 34th Street 40°45′05″N 73°59′35″W / 40.751389°N 73.993056°W / 40.751389; -73.993056 (One Penn Plaza)

750 (229) 57 Office 1972 Tallest building in the Penn Plaza complex.[182][183]
63= Deutsche Bank Center North Tower Midtown Manhattan

10 Columbus Circle 40°46′08″N 73°58′59″W / 40.76890°N 73.98305°W / 40.76890; -73.98305 (Deutsche Bank Center North Tower)

750 (229) 55 Office 2004 Tallest twin buildings in the United States. Originally constructed as the AOL Time Warner Center; in 2021 the complex was renamed the Deutsche Bank Center.[184][185]
63= Deutsche Bank Center South Tower Midtown Manhattan

10 Columbus Circle 40°46′06″N 73°59′01″W / 40.76830°N 73.98365°W / 40.76830; -73.98365 (Deutsche Bank Center South Tower)

750 (229) 55 Office 2004
63= 200 West Street Lower Manhattan

200 West Street 40°42′53″N 74°00′51″W / 40.71480°N 74.01425°W / 40.71480; -74.01425 (200 West Street)

750 (229) 44 Office 2010 Also known as Goldman Sachs World Headquarters.[186][187]
68= One Astor Plaza Midtown Manhattan

1515 Broadway 40°45′29″N 73°59′11″W / 40.75800°N 73.98645°W / 40.75800; -73.98645 (One Astor Plaza)

745 (227) 54 Office 1972 Located on the site formerly occupied by the Hotel Astor. Houses the world headquarters of Paramount Global.[188][189]
68= 60 Wall Street Lower Manhattan

60 Wall Street 40°42′23″N 74°00′30″W / 40.70635°N 74.00845°W / 40.70635; -74.00845 (60 Wall Street)

745 (227) 55 Office 1989 Also known as Deutsche Bank Building.[190][191]
70= One Liberty Plaza Lower Manhattan

165 Broadway 40°42′35″N 74°00′41″W / 40.709722°N 74.011389°W / 40.709722; -74.011389 (One Liberty Plaza)

743 (226) 54 Office 1972 Formerly known as the U.S. Steel Building.[192][193]
70= 7 World Trade Center Lower Manhattan

250 Greenwich Street 40°42′48″N 74°00′43″W / 40.7133°N 74.0120°W / 40.7133; -74.0120 (7 World Trade Center)

743 (226) 49 Office 2006 First tower in the new World Trade Center complex to be completed.[194][195]
72 20 Exchange Place Lower Manhattan

20 Exchange Place 40°42′20″N 74°00′35″W / 40.705556°N 74.009722°W / 40.705556; -74.009722 (20 Exchange Place)

741 (226) 57 Residential 1931 Formerly known as the City Bank-Farmers Trust Building. Was the fourth-tallest building in New York City when it was finished, behind Chrysler, 40 Wall, and Woolworth Bldgs.[196][197]
73 200 Vesey Street Lower Manhattan

200 Vesey Street 40°42′49″N 74°00′53″W / 40.713611°N 74.014722°W / 40.713611; -74.014722 (200 Vesey Street)

739 (225) 51 Office 1986 Formerly known as Three World Financial Center and American Express Tower.[198][199]
74 ARO Midtown Manhattan

242 West 53rd Street 40°45′49″N 73°59′03″W / 40.76365°N 73.98409°W / 40.76365; -73.98409 (ARO)

738 (225) 54 Residential 2018 [200] Also known as 242 West 53rd Street and Roseland Tower.[201]
75 1540 Broadway Midtown Manhattan

1540 Broadway 40°45′29″N 73°59′05″W / 40.758135°N 73.984853°W / 40.758135; -73.984853 (1540 Broadway)

733 (223) 42 Office 1990 Also known as the Bertelsmann Building.[202][203]
76 Lumen Long Island City

43-30 24th Street 40°44′56″N 73°56′38″W / 40.749°N 73.944°W / 40.749; -73.944 (43-30 24th Street)

731 (223) 66 Residential 2026 Foundation work began in December 2022, and the building rose above street level in March 2023 and topped off in July 2024. The building will be residential, with 921 units and ground-floor commercial space.[204]
77 The Eugene Hudson Yards

401 West 31st Street 40°45′08″N 73°59′56″W / 40.7523°N 73.9990°W / 40.7523; -73.9990 (The Eugene)

730 (223) 64 Residential 2017 [205][206]
78 Times Square Tower Midtown Manhattan

7 Times Square 40°45′20″N 73°59′12″W / 40.7555°N 73.9867°W / 40.7555; -73.9867 (Times Square Tower)

726 (221) 47 Office 2004 [207][208]
79 Brooklyn Point Downtown Brooklyn

138 Willoughby Street 40°41′31″N 73°58′59″W / 40.69185°N 73.98299°W / 40.69185; -73.98299 (Brooklyn Point)

723 (220) 57 Residential 2020 Second-tallest building in the borough of Brooklyn.[209]
80 Metropolitan Tower Midtown Manhattan

146 West 57th Street 40°45′54″N 73°58′45″W / 40.76495°N 73.9791°W / 40.76495; -73.9791 (Metropolitan Tower)

716 (218) 68 Mixed-use 1985 Mixed-use residential and office building. Immediately adjacent to Carnegie Hall Tower, separated by the Russian Tea Room.[210][211]
81 252 East 57th Street Midtown Manhattan

252 East 57th Street 40°45′34″N 73°57′59″W / 40.759306°N 73.966389°W / 40.759306; -73.966389 (252 East 57th Street)

715 (218) 65 Residential 2016 [212]
82 Selene Midtown Manhattan

100 East 53rd Street 40°45′30″N 73°58′17″W / 40.758333°N 73.971389°W / 40.758333; -73.971389 (100 East 53rd Street)

711 (217) 61 Residential 2018 Also known by its address, 100 East 53rd Street, or 610 Lexington Avenue.[213][214]
83 General Motors Building Midtown Manhattan

767 Fifth Avenue 40°45′50″N 73°58′21″W / 40.763889°N 73.9725°W / 40.763889; -73.9725 (General Motors Building)

705 (215) 50 Office 1968 Occupies a full city block.[215][216]
84 25 Park Row Lower Manhattan

25 Park Row 40°42′41″N 74°00′26″W / 40.711361°N 74.007306°W / 40.711361; -74.007306 (25 Park Row)

702 (214) 54 Mixed-use 2020 Mixed-use office and residential skycraper. Also known as 23 Park Row.[217][218][219]
85 Metropolitan Life Insurance Company Tower Flatiron District

1 Madison Avenue 40°44′28″N 73°59′15″W / 40.741239°N 73.9874°W / 40.741239; -73.9874 (Metropolitan Life Insurance Company Tower)

700 (213) 50 Mixed-use 1909 Tallest building in the world from 1909 until 1913 before being surpassed by the Woolworth Building. Currently a mixed-use office and hotel building.[220][221]
86 500 Fifth Avenue Midtown Manhattan

500 Fifth Avenue 40°45′14″N 73°58′53″W / 40.7538°N 73.9813°W / 40.7538; -73.9813 (500 Fifth Avenue)

697 (212) 59 Office 1931 Became a city landmark in 2010.[222][223]
87 Americas Tower Midtown Manhattan

1177 Sixth Avenue 40°45′26″N 73°58′58″W / 40.7572°N 73.9827°W / 40.7572; -73.9827 (Americas Tower)

692 (211) 48 Office 1992 Also known as 1177 Avenue of the Americas.[224][225]
88 Solow Building Midtown Manhattan

9 West 57th Street 40°45′50″N 73°58′29″W / 40.763861°N 73.974794°W / 40.763861; -73.974794 (Solow Building)

689 (210) 49 Office 1974 [226][227]
89 140 Broadway Lower Manhattan

140 Broadway 40°42′31″N 74°00′36″W / 40.708611°N 74.01°W / 40.708611; -74.01 (140 Broadway)

688 (210) 52 Office 1967 Also known as Marine Midland Building, HSBC Bank Building.[228][229]
90= 277 Park Avenue Midtown Manhattan

277 Park Avenue 40°45′20″N 73°58′31″W / 40.75551°N 73.9752°W / 40.75551; -73.9752 (277 Park Avenue)

687 (209) 50 Office 1963 [230][231]
90= 55 Water Street Lower Manhattan

55 Water Street 40°42′12″N 74°00′33″W / 40.7032°N 74.0091°W / 40.7032; -74.0091 (55 Water Street)

687 (209) 53 Office 1972 [232][233]
90= 5 Beekman Street Lower Manhattan

5 Beekman Street 40°42′40″N 74°00′25″W / 40.7111°N 74.0070°W / 40.7111; -74.0070 (5 Beekman Street)

687 (209) 47 Mixed-use 2017 Mixed-use hotel and residential building. Also known as The Beekman Hotel & Residences.[234][235]
93 Morgan Stanley Building Midtown Manhattan

1585 Broadway 40°45′37″N 73°59′08″W / 40.760386°N 73.985678°W / 40.760386; -73.985678 (Morgan Stanley Building)

685 (209) 42 Office 1989 Also known as 1585 Broadway. It houses the Morgan Stanley World Headquarters.[236][237]
94 Random House Tower Midtown Manhattan

1745 Broadway 40°45′55″N 73°58′57″W / 40.7653°N 73.9825°W / 40.7653; -73.9825 (Penguin Random House Tower)

684 (208) 52 Mixed-use 2003 Mixed-use office and residential building.[238][239]
95 Four Seasons Hotel New York Midtown Manhattan

57 East 57th Street 40°45′44″N 73°58′17″W / 40.762222°N 73.971389°W / 40.762222; -73.971389 (Four Seasons Hotel New York)

682 (208) 52 Hotel 1993 [240]
96 Sky Hell's Kitchen

605 West 42nd Street 40°45′41″N 73°59′55″W / 40.7614°N 73.9986°W / 40.7614; -73.9986 (Sky)

676 (206) 61 Residential 2015 Also known as 605 West 42nd Street and Atelier II. Largest single tower residence in New York City.[241] Sky comprises 1,175 luxury units and includes more than 70,000 sq ft of amenity space.[242]
97 1221 Avenue of the Americas Midtown Manhattan

1221 Sixth Avenue 40°45′33″N 73°58′54″W / 40.759167°N 73.981667°W / 40.759167; -73.981667 (1221 Avenue of the Americas)

674 (205) 51 Office 1972 Formerly known as the McGraw-Hill Building.[243][244]
98 One Grand Central Place Midtown Manhattan

60 East 42nd Street 40°45′08″N 73°58′44″W / 40.7522°N 73.9788°W / 40.7522; -73.9788 (One Grand Central Place)

673 (205) 53 Office 1930 Formerly known as the Lincoln Building.[245][246]
98= One Court Square Long Island City

2501 Jackson Avenue 40°44′49″N 73°56′38″W / 40.747083°N 73.943889°W / 40.747083; -73.943889 (One Court Square)

673 (205) 50 Office 1990 Tallest building in the Borough of Queens from 1990 to 2021. Formerly known as the Citigroup Building.[247][248]
98= Barclay Tower Lower Manhattan

10 Barclay Street 40°42′44″N 74°00′33″W / 40.712194°N 74.009083°W / 40.712194; -74.009083 (Barclay Tower)

673 (205) 56 Residential 2007 [249][250]
98= 277 Fifth Avenue NoMad

277 Fifth Avenue 40°44′44″N 73°59′11″W / 40.745661°N 73.986275°W / 40.745661; -73.986275 (277 Fifth Avenue)

673 (205) 55 Residential 2018 [251]
102 Paramount Plaza Midtown Manhattan

1633 Broadway 40°45′44″N 73°59′04″W / 40.7621°N 73.98445°W / 40.7621; -73.98445 (Paramount Plaza)

670 (204) 48 Office 1970 Formerly the Uris Building.[252][253]
103 200 Amsterdam Avenue Upper West Side

200 Amsterdam Avenue 40°46′36″N 73°59′00″W / 40.7768°N 73.9833°W / 40.7768; -73.9833 (200 Amsterdam)

668 (204) 55 Residential 2021 Tallest building on the Upper West Side.[254][255][256]
104 Trump Tower Midtown Manhattan

725 Fifth Avenue 40°45′45″N 73°58′26″W / 40.7625°N 73.9738°W / 40.7625; -73.9738 (Trump Tower)

664 (202) 58 Mixed-use 1982 Mixed-use office and residential tower.[257]
105 1 Wall Street Lower Manhattan

1 Wall Street 40°42′26″N 74°00′42″W / 40.707222°N 74.011667°W / 40.707222; -74.011667 (1 Wall Street)

654 (199) 50 Residential 1932 Originally an office tower. It was formerly called Bank of New York Building and Irving Trust Building.[258][259]
106= 599 Lexington Avenue Midtown Manhattan

599 Lexington Avenue 40°45′28″N 73°58′15″W / 40.7578°N 73.9707°W / 40.7578; -73.9707 (599 Lexington Avenue)

653 (199) 51 Office 1986 [260][261]
106= Silver Towers I Hell's Kitchen

620 West 42nd Street 40°45′39″N 73°59′56″W / 40.760742°N 73.99884°W / 40.760742; -73.99884 (Silver Towers I)

653 (199) 58 Residential 2009 Also known as River Place I, or Silver Towers East.[262][263]
106= Silver Towers II Hell's Kitchen

620 West 42nd Street 40°45′39″N 73°59′58″W / 40.760743°N 73.99953°W / 40.760743; -73.99953 (Silver Towers II)

653 (199) 58 Residential 2009 Also known as River Place II, or Silver Towers West.[264][265]
109 712 Fifth Avenue Midtown Manhattan

712 Fifth Avenue 40°45′44″N 73°58′30″W / 40.7622°N 73.975°W / 40.7622; -73.975 (712 Fifth Avenue)

650 (198) 53 Office 1990 [266][267]

Tallest buildings by pinnacle height

[edit]
Tallest buildings in NYC, by pinnacle height, including all masts, antennae, poles, etc., whether architectural or not.

This list 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.

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[A] 2014 [5][47]
2 2 Central Park Tower 1,550 (472) 1,550 (472) 98 2020 [268]
3 8 Empire State Building 1,454 (443)[G] 1,250 (381) 102[E] 1931 [270][271][269]
4 3 111 West 57th Street 1,428 (435) 1,428 (435) 84 2021 [51]
5 4 One Vanderbilt 1,401 (427) 1,401 (427) 59 2020 [53][272]
6 5 432 Park Avenue 1,397 (426) 1,397 (426) 85 2015 [56][57]
7 6 270 Park Avenue 1,388 (423) 1,388 (423) 60 2025 [78]
8 7 30 Hudson Yards 1,270 (387) 1,270 (387) 73 2019 [273]
9 9 Bank of America Tower 1,200 (366) 1,200 (366) 55 2009 [66][67]
10 39 Condé Nast Building 1,118 (341) 809 (247) 48 1999 [133][134]

Tallest buildings in each borough

[edit]

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 428 (130) 44 1975 [274]
Brooklyn The Brooklyn Tower 1,066 (325) 73 2022 [73]
Manhattan One World Trade Center 1,776 (541) 104 2014 [47]
Queens The Orchard 823 (251) 69 2024 [122]
Staten Island Old Church of St. Joachim and St. Anne 225 (69) 1 1891 [275][276]

Tallest under construction or proposed

[edit]

Under construction

[edit]

This lists buildings that are currently under construction in New York City and are expected to rise to a height of at least 650 feet (198 m). Buildings under construction that have already been topped out are included in the table above. The "year" column indicates the expected year of completion. A dash "–" indicates information about the building is unknown or not publicly available. 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
(est.)
Address Coordinates Notes
41–47 West 57th Street 1,100 (335) 63 41–47 West 57th Street 40°45′52″N 73°58′35″W / 40.7644266°N 73.9765122°W / 40.7644266; -73.9765122 (41-47 West 57th Street) Proposed by developer Sedesco with a design by OMA.[277] Demolition work was completed on the site as of August 2021.[278] Demolition is underway as of 2025.[279]
740 Eighth Avenue 1,067 (325) 52 2027 740 Eighth Avenue 40°45′34″N 73°59′16″W / 40.7595°N 73.9877°W / 40.7595; -73.9877 (740 Eighth Avenue) Also known as "The Torch". Approved by the city in December 2021.[280] Excavation underway as of October 2022.[281] Plans call for a hotel, with a "vertical-drop" ride and observation tower.[282][283]
343 Madison Avenue 844 (257) 40 2026 343 Madison Avenue 40°45′16″N 73°58′40″W / 40.7543145°N 73.9777973°W / 40.7543145; -73.9777973 (343 Madison Avenue) Under-construction office tower developed by Boston Properties to replace the former Metropolitan Transportation Authority headquarters across from Grand Central Terminal.[284] Demolition was completed in March 2023.[285] Norges Bank Investment Management has invested in the building.[286]
80 Flatbush 840 (256) 74 2027 80 Flatbush Avenue 40°41′09″N 73°58′46″W / 40.6859216°N 73.9795206°W / 40.6859216; -73.9795206 (80 Flatbush) Approved by the New York City Council in September 2018.[287][288] The development will have two buildings; excavation on the site of the shorter building began in late 2021.[289]
111 Washington Street 789 (240) 64 2026 111 Washington Street 40°42′32″N 74°00′50″W / 40.7088118°N 74.0139991°W / 40.7088118; -74.0139991 (111 Washington Place) Excavation work on the site was first reported in June 2023 and was still underway as of October 2023.[290][291] The building will include 462 residential units, 7,000 square feet of commercial space, and a 60-foot-long rear yard.[291]
Casoni 743 (226) 68 2026 989–993 Sixth Avenue 40°45′06″N 73°59′13″W / 40.7516031°N 73.9869091°W / 40.7516031; -73.9869091 (Casoni) Demolition began in 2023.[292] Construction is underway as of 2025.[293] The building will be residential, with 300 condominiums.[294]
70 Hudson Yards 717 (219) 45 517 West 35th Street 40°45′22″N 73°59′58″W / 40.75600°N 73.99944°W / 40.75600; -73.99944 (70 Hudson Yards) Excavation began in June 2025.[295]

On hold

[edit]

This lists buildings that were previously under construction in New York City that were expected to reach a height of 650 feet (198 ft) where work has stopped.

Name Height
ft (m)
Floors Year Address Coordinates Notes
2 World Trade Center 1,230 (375) 62 200 Greenwich Street 40°42′43″N 74°00′40″W / 40.7120°N 74.0110°W / 40.7120; -74.0110 (2 World Trade Center) Would become the second-tallest building in the new World Trade Center complex upon completion. As of June 2020, construction is on hold after the completion of foundation work due to a lack of tenants. Both Bjarke Ingels and Norman Foster have proposed designs for the building, the final design will depend upon a prospective tenant's needs.[296][297][298][299]
45 Broad Street 1039

(317)

68 45 Broad Street 40°42′20″N 74°00′41″W / 40.705556°N 74.011389°W / 40.705556; -74.011389 (3 Hudson Boulevard) Would become the tallest residential building in Downtown Manhattan if completed; has been on hold since 2020.[300][301]
3 Hudson Boulevard 987 (301) 56 555 West 34th Street 40°45′20″N 74°00′06″W / 40.755646°N 74.001638°W / 40.755646; -74.001638 (3 Hudson Boulevard) Formerly known as GiraSole.[302] The project remains on hold, though the developer's head of commercial leasing said in November 2021 that he is "hopeful that we'll have more significant news in the next six months or so" about the status of the project.[303]
161 Maiden Lane 670 (204) 60 161 Maiden Lane 40°42′20″N 74°00′17″W / 40.70556°N 74.0048°W / 40.70556; -74.0048 (161 Maiden Lane) On hold since 2018 due to issues with the building's foundation.
45 Park Place 667 (203) 43 45 Park Place 40°42′50″N 74°00′35″W / 40.71378°N 74.00982°W / 40.71378; -74.00982 (45 Park Place) On hold since 2019.[304]

Approved

[edit]

This table lists buildings that are approved for construction in New York City and are expected to rise at least 650 feet (198 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
350 Park Avenue 1,585 (483) 62 2032 350 Park Avenue has been quietly proposed by Vornado Realty Trust after a marketing brochure leaked renderings; the Foster and Partners-designed building would replace BlackRock's current headquarters after the company moves to 50 Hudson Yards in 2022.[305] In January 2023, Bloomberg reported that Citadel intended to occupy roughly half the building's office space.[306] In December 2023, the developer bought the air rights from the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York.[307]
175 Park Avenue 1,581 (482) 85 2030 An Environmental Assessment Statement for 109 East 42nd Street in Midtown East reveals details for a proposed development called Project Commodore, a 1,581-foot-tall skyscraper on the site currently occupied by the Hyatt Grand Central New York. The building will be developed by RXR Realty and TF Cornerstone to designs by architectural firm Skidmore, Owings & Merrill.[308] Some images of plans for the new structure were released by SOM in early 2021.[309] Scott Rechler, CEO of RXR, anticipates the building will be complete by 2030.[310]
360 Tenth Avenue 1,000 (305) Class A office building proposed by property owner McCourt Global and designed by Skidmore, Owings & Merrill. Construction was planned to commence in 2024.[311]
5 World Trade Center 917 (280) 80 2029 New design unveiled in February 2021.[312][313] Construction was anticipated to begin in 2025.[314]
260 South Street Tower I 798 (243) 73 Approved by the City Planning Commission in December 2018.[315][316]
260 South Street Tower II 748 (228) 67 Approved by the City Planning Commission in December 2018.[315][316]
259 Clinton Street 730 (223) 62 Approved by the City Planning Commission in December 2018.[315][317][318]
One Third Avenue 725 (221) 63 Approved by the City Council in 2018 and part of the Alloy Block development, One Third Avenue will include 583 apartments, retail, and office space. Upon completion, it will be the tallest Passive House in the world.[319]
10 West 57th Street 672 (205) 52 Ultra-luxury condominium tower proposed by Sheldon Solow; the former buildings on the site were under demolition as of May 2020.[320]

Proposed

[edit]

This table lists buildings that are proposed for construction in New York City and are expected to rise at least 650 feet (198 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 Notes
80 South Street 1,438 (438) 113 As of June 2019, the site is for sale after Chinese developer Oceanwide Holdings ran into financial difficulties.[321]
265 West 45th Street 1,312 (400) 98 Redevelopment of a Midtown address for a possible supertall office building.[322][323]
Wynn New York City 1,189 (362) 80 Wynn New York City was a proposed integrated resort and casino which had been proposed as part of the Hudson Yards development. Proposed by Related and Wynn Resorts, construction would only have occurred if Wynn was awarded a casino license for downstate New York. The resort would have featured 1,750 rooms and suites, making it one of the largest hotels in New York City.[324] Wynn Resorts withdrew their proposal in May 2025.[325][326]
247 Cherry 1,013 (309) 78 SHoP Architects building being developed by JDS Development Group. Initial plans revealed in April 2016 and approved by the City Planning Commission in December 2018.[315][327][328] As of 2022, the developer is facing legal challenges to the site.[329]
PENN15 1,000 (305) 50 Initially proposed by Vornado prior to the 2008 financial crisis; as of 2024 the developer is still seeking an anchor tenant to justify construction.[330] Demolition work was underway in 2023, although, since early 2024, Vornado is still proposing covering the site the site with tennis courts and an event space. Its height has been reduced from 1270 to 1000 feet, but no construction date is certified. The building's location is only 2 blocks away from the Empire State Building.[331][332][333][334]
HDSN 984 (300) 72 David Adjaye designed a proposal for the site, at 418 11th Avenue, for developer Don Peebles, referred to as the "Affirmation Tower".[335] The request for proposal for which the plan was submitted was later revised by New York governor Kathy Hochul and now requires affordable housing.[336][337][338] In 2024, a revised plan for the site from a partnership that does not include Peebles was submitted and approved.[339] The newly proposed development, called HDSN, would include two towers with 1,349 residential units, a hotel, and retail space.[339]
100 Gold Street 891 (272) A rendering of a 2000-unit residential skyscraper at this site was presented by Mayor Eric Adams as part of his State of the City address.[340]
321 East 96th Street 760 (232) 68 Proposed by AvalonBay Communities, would become the tallest building in East Harlem.[341][342]
205 Montague Street 672 (205) 47 Permits filed in March 2024.[343]

Tallest destroyed or demolished

[edit]

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.

  Was the world's tallest building upon completion
Name Image Height
ft (m)
Floors Year completed Year demolished Notes
1 World Trade Center (original) 1,368 (417) 110 1972 2001 Destroyed in the September 11 attacks; stood as the tallest building in the world from 1972 until 1974.[10][344]
2 World Trade Center (original) 1,362 (415) 110 1973 2001 Destroyed in the September 11 attacks.[345][346]
270 Park Avenue 707 (215) 52 1960 2021 Also known as JPMorgan Chase Tower and formerly the Union Carbide Building.[347][348] Demolition of the current building started in 2019, making it the tallest building in the world to be voluntarily demolished. The JPMorgan Chase Building topped out on the site in 2023 as the sixth tallest building in New York.[62]
Singer Building 612 (187) 41 1908 1968 Demolished to make room for One Liberty Plaza; stood as tallest building in the world from 1908 until 1909.[349][350] Tallest building ever to be demolished until the September 11 attacks,[351] and tallest voluntarily demolished building in the world until 2019.[352]
7 World Trade Center (original) 570 (174) 47 1987 2001 Destroyed in the September 11 attacks.[353][354]
Deutsche Bank Building 517 (158) 39 1974 2011 Deconstructed due to damage sustained in the September 11 attacks.[355][356]

Timeline of tallest buildings

[edit]

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 upon completion[21]
Name Image Address Years as
tallest
Height
ft (m)
Floors Notes
Collegiate Reformed Protestant Dutch Church Fort Amsterdam 1643–1846 Unknown 1 Demolished[357]
Trinity Church 79 Broadway 1846–1853 279 (85) 1 [358]
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[359]
Trinity Church 79 Broadway 1854–1890 279 (85) 1 [358]
World Building
(1890–1955)
73 Park Avenue 1890–1894 309 (94) 20[H] Demolished in 1955[16]
Manhattan Life Insurance Building
(1894–1964)
64–70 Broadway 1894–1899 348 (106) 18 Demolished in 1964[361]
Park Row Building 13–21 Park Row 1899–1908 391 (119) 30 [362]
Singer Building
(1908–1968)
149 Broadway 1908–1909 612 (187) 47 Demolished in 1968[350]
Metropolitan Life Insurance Company Tower 1 Madison Avenue 1909–1913 700 (213) 50 [221]
Woolworth Building 233 Broadway 1913–1929 792 (241) 57 [148]
Bank of Manhattan Trust Building[I] 40 Wall Street 1929-1930 927 (283) 71 [103]
Chrysler Building 405 Lexington Avenue 1930–1931 1,046 (319) 77 [77]
Empire State Building 350 Fifth Avenue 1931–1971 1,250 (381) 102 [270]
1 World Trade Center
(1971–2001)
1 World Trade Center 1971–2001 1,368 (417) 110 Destroyed in the September 11, 2001, attacks[344]
Empire State Building 350 Fifth Avenue 2001–2012 1,250 (381) 102[E] [270]
One World Trade Center 1 World Trade Center 2012–present 1,776 (541) 104[A] [47]

Map of tallest buildings

[edit]

The map below shows the location of every building taller than 650 feet (198 m) in New York City. Each marker is colored by the decade of the building's completion.

Map
About OpenStreetMaps
Maps: terms of use
850m
927yds
109
109  712 Fifth Avenue
109  712 Fifth Avenue
108
108  Silver Towers II
108  Silver Towers II
107
107  Silver Towers I
107  Silver Towers I
106
106  599 Lexington Avenue
106  599 Lexington Avenue
105
105  1 Wall Street
105  1 Wall Street
104
104  Trump Tower
104  Trump Tower
103
103  200 Amsterdam
103  200 Amsterdam
102
102  Paramount Plaza
102  Paramount Plaza
101
101  277 Fifth Avenue
101  277 Fifth Avenue
100
100  Barclay Tower
100  Barclay Tower
99
99  One Court Square
99  One Court Square
98
98  One Grand Central Place
98  One Grand Central Place
97
97  1221 Ave. of the Americas
97  1221 Ave. of the Americas
96
96  Sky
96  Sky
95
95  Four Seasons Hotel New York
95  Four Seasons Hotel New York
94
94  Random House Tower
94  Random House Tower
93
93  Morgan Stanley Building
93  Morgan Stanley Building
92
92  5 Beekman Street
92  5 Beekman Street
91
91  55 Water Street
91  55 Water Street
90
90  277 Park Avenue
90  277 Park Avenue
89
89  140 Broadway
89  140 Broadway
88
88  Solow Building
88  Solow Building
87
87  Americas Tower
87  Americas Tower
86
86  500 Fifth Avenue
86  500 Fifth Avenue
85
85  Metropolitan Life Insurance Company Tower
85  Metropolitan Life Insurance Company Tower
84
83
83  General Motors Building
83  General Motors Building
82
82  Selene
82  Selene
81
81  252 East 57th Street
81  252 East 57th Street
80
80  Metropolitan Tower
80  Metropolitan Tower
79
79  Brooklyn Point
79  Brooklyn Point
78
78  Times Square Tower
78  Times Square Tower
77
77  The Eugene
77  The Eugene
76
76  Lumen
76  Lumen
75
75  1540 Broadway
75  1540 Broadway
74
74  ARO
74  ARO
73
73  200 Vesey Street
73  200 Vesey Street
72
72  20 Exchange Place
72  20 Exchange Place
71
71  7 World Trade Center
71  7 World Trade Center
70
70  One Liberty Plaza
70  One Liberty Plaza
69
69  60 Wall Street
69  60 Wall Street
68
68  One Astor Plaza
68  One Astor Plaza
67
67  200 West Street
67  200 West Street
66
66  Deutsche Bank Center (S)
66  Deutsche Bank Center (S)
65
65  Deutsche Bank Center (N)
65  Deutsche Bank Center (N)
64
64  One Penn Plaza
64  One Penn Plaza
63
63  1251 Ave. of the Americas
63  1251 Ave. of the Americas
62
62  Axa Equitable Center
62  Axa Equitable Center
61
61  1717 Broadway
61  1717 Broadway
60
60  Sven
60  Sven
59
59  383 Madison Avenue
59  383 Madison Avenue
58
58  Carnegie Hall Tower
58  Carnegie Hall Tower
57
57  19 Dutch
57  19 Dutch
56
56  Skyline Tower
56  Skyline Tower
55
55  50 West 66th Street
55  50 West 66th Street
54
54  Madison Square Park Tower
54  Madison Square Park Tower
53
53  One Worldwide Plaza
53  One Worldwide Plaza
52
52  55 Hudson Yards
52  55 Hudson Yards
51
51  50 West Street
51  50 West Street
50
50  520 Park Avenue
50  520 Park Avenue
49
49  111 Murray Street
49  111 Murray Street
48
48  Woolworth Building
48  Woolworth Building
47
47  130 William
47  130 William
46
46  The Centrale
46  The Centrale
45
45  The Madison
45  The Madison
44
44  731 Lexington Avenue
44  731 Lexington Avenue
43
43  MetLife Building
43  MetLife Building
42
42  4 Times Square
42  4 Times Square
41
41  28 Liberty Street
41  28 Liberty Street
40
40  CitySpire
40  CitySpire
39
39  56 Leonard Street
39  56 Leonard Street
38
38  The Orchard
38  The Orchard
37
37   Sutton Tower
37   Sutton Tower
36
36  One Manhattan Square
36  One Manhattan Square
35
35  30 Rockefeller Plaza
35  30 Rockefeller Plaza
34
34  262 Fifth Avenue
34  262 Fifth Avenue
33
33  425 Park Avenue
33  425 Park Avenue
32
32  Trump World Tower
32  Trump World Tower
31
31  8 Spruce Street
31  8 Spruce Street
30
30  10 Hudson Yards
30  10 Hudson Yards
29
29  125 Greenwich Street
29  125 Greenwich Street
28
28  15 Hudson Yards
28  15 Hudson Yards
27
27  Citigroup Center
27  Citigroup Center
26
26  Four Seasons Hotel New York Downtown
26  Four Seasons Hotel New York Downtown
25
25  40 Wall Street
25  40 Wall Street
24
24  Two Manhattan West
24  Two Manhattan West
23
23  220 Central Park South
23  220 Central Park South
22
22  70 Pine Street
22  70 Pine Street
21
21  4 World Trade Center
21  4 World Trade Center
20
20  50 Hudson Yards
20  50 Hudson Yards
19
19  One Manhattan West
19  One Manhattan West
18
18  35 Hudson Yards
18  35 Hudson Yards
17
17  520 Fifth Avenue
17  520 Fifth Avenue
16
16  One57
16  One57
15
15  The Spiral
15  The Spiral
14
14  The New York Times Building
14  The New York Times Building
13
13  Chrysler Building
13  Chrysler Building
12
12  53W53
12  53W53
11
11  The Brooklyn Tower
11  The Brooklyn Tower
10
10  3 World Trade Center
10  3 World Trade Center
9
9  Bank of America Tower
9  Bank of America Tower
8
8  Empire State Building
8  Empire State Building
7
7  30 Hudson Yards
7  30 Hudson Yards
6
6  270 Park Avenue
6  270 Park Avenue
5
5  432 Park Avenue
5  432 Park Avenue
4
4  One Vanderbilt
4  One Vanderbilt
3
3  111 West 57th Street
3  111 West 57th Street
2
2  Central Park Tower
2  Central Park Tower
1
1  One World Trade Center
1  One World Trade Center
Buildings taller than 650 ft (198 m) in New York City
  •  1950s and before 
  •  1960s 
  •  1970s 
  •  1980s 
  •  1990s 
  •  2000s 
  •  2010s 
  •  2020s 
1
 One World Trade Center
2
 Central Park Tower
3
 111 West 57th Street
4
 One Vanderbilt
5
 432 Park Avenue
6
 270 Park Avenue
7
 30 Hudson Yards
8
 Empire State Building
9
 Bank of America Tower
10
 3 World Trade Center
11
 The Brooklyn Tower
12
 53W53
13
 Chrysler Building
14
 The New York Times Building
15
 The Spiral
16
 One57
17
 520 Fifth Avenue
18
 35 Hudson Yards
19
 One Manhattan West
20
 50 Hudson Yards
21
 4 World Trade Center
22
 70 Pine Street
23
 220 Central Park South
24
 Two Manhattan West
25
 40 Wall Street
26
 Four Seasons Hotel New York Downtown
27
 Citigroup Center
28
 15 Hudson Yards
29
 125 Greenwich Street
30
 10 Hudson Yards
31
 8 Spruce Street
32
 Trump World Tower
33
 425 Park Avenue
34
 262 Fifth Avenue
35
 30 Rockefeller Plaza
36
 One Manhattan Square
37
  Sutton Tower
38
 The Orchard
39
 56 Leonard Street
40
 CitySpire
41
 28 Liberty Street
42
 4 Times Square
43
 MetLife Building
44
 731 Lexington Avenue
45
 The Madison
46
 The Centrale
47
 130 William
48
 Woolworth Building
49
 111 Murray Street
50
 520 Park Avenue
51
 50 West Street
52
 55 Hudson Yards
53
 One Worldwide Plaza
54
 Madison Square Park Tower
55
 50 West 66th Street
56
 Skyline Tower
57
 19 Dutch
58
 Carnegie Hall Tower
59
 383 Madison Avenue
60
 Sven
61
 1717 Broadway
62
 Axa Equitable Center
63
 1251 Ave. of the Americas
64
 One Penn Plaza
65
 Deutsche Bank Center (N)
66
 Deutsche Bank Center (S)
67
 200 West Street
68
 One Astor Plaza
69
 60 Wall Street
70
 One Liberty Plaza
71
 7 World Trade Center
72
 20 Exchange Place
73
 200 Vesey Street
74
 ARO
75
 1540 Broadway
76
 Lumen
77
 The Eugene
78
 Times Square Tower
79
 Brooklyn Point
80
 Metropolitan Tower
81
 252 East 57th Street
82
 Selene
83
 General Motors Building
84
 25 Park Row
85
 Metropolitan Life Insurance Company Tower
86
 500 Fifth Avenue
87
 Americas Tower
88
 Solow Building
89
 140 Broadway
90
 277 Park Avenue
91
 55 Water Street
92
 5 Beekman Street
93
 Morgan Stanley Building
94
 Random House Tower
95
 Four Seasons Hotel New York
96
 Sky
97
 1221 Ave. of the Americas
98
 One Grand Central Place
99
 One Court Square
100
 Barclay Tower
101
 277 Fifth Avenue
102
 Paramount Plaza
103
 200 Amsterdam
104
 Trump Tower
105
 1 Wall Street
106
 599 Lexington Avenue
107
 Silver Towers I
108
 Silver Towers II
109
 712 Fifth Avenue

Skylines

[edit]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d The building is 104 standard floors tall and most references supply this figure. However, only 94 actual, physically usable, stories are present; see the skyscraper's main article for more details.
  2. ^ As measured to its tip (or pinnacle). Five other skyscrapers in Manhattan had already surpassed its 309-foot (94 m) architectural height by then, starting with the Manhattan Life Insurance Building in 1894. For more on the different criteria used see List of tallest buildings and structures#Tallest buildings
  3. ^ This considers only skyscrapers by architectural height. It was not until the completion of the Singer Building in 1908 that a skyscraper surpassed the spire of the tallest building constructed using conventional methods. Only the Chrysler and Empire State Buildings held the title of world's tallest overall structure, the latter of which maintained this title for more than two decades until surpassed by Oklahoma's Griffin Television Tower in 1954.
  4. ^ Floor counts often vary among sources, this list uses the number most widely reported in reference. Read the FAQ on the talk page for details.
  5. ^ a b c References typically use the 102 floors figure, however some state a value of 103 floors instead due to the presence of an encircling balcony above the 102nd floor. See Empire State Building#Opening and early years and Empire State Building#Above the 102nd floor for a detailed explanation.
  6. ^ The highest floor is numbered 93.
  7. ^ Prior to 1985, the pinnacle height was 1,472 feet (449 m). This was reduced to the current value when the original antenna was replaced by a shorter one.[269]
  8. ^ 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.[360]
  9. ^ 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

[edit]

Citations

[edit]
  1. ^ "New York City - The Skyscraper Center". www.skyscrapercenter.com. Retrieved June 12, 2025.
  2. ^ "New York City - SkyscraperPage.com". skyscraperpage.com. Retrieved June 15, 2025.
  3. ^ a b "Cities by Number of 150m+ Buildings - The Skyscraper Center". www.skyscrapercenter.com. Retrieved June 12, 2025.
  4. ^ "Buildings in New York City (existing)". Archived from the original on June 12, 2020. Retrieved June 12, 2012.
  5. ^ a b c "One World Trade Center". The Skyscraper Center. CTBUH. Archived from the original on June 12, 2020. Retrieved June 12, 2020.
  6. ^ a b c Murray, Matt; Kim, Eun Kyung (May 10, 2013). "Cheers Erupt as Spire Tops One World Trade Center". CNBC. Archived from the original on June 12, 2020. Retrieved June 12, 2020.
  7. ^ "CTBUH Affirms One World Trade Center Height". Global Tall News. CTBUH. November 12, 2013. Archived from the original on November 6, 2018. Retrieved June 12, 2020.
  8. ^ "13 Iconic Buildings to Visit in New York City | Britannica". www.britannica.com. June 13, 2025. Retrieved July 10, 2025.
  9. ^ "Center of the World Timeline". PBS. Archived from the original on May 2, 2007. Retrieved June 12, 2020.
  10. ^ a b "One World Trade Center (Previous)". The Skyscraper Center. CTBUH. Archived from the original on June 12, 2020. Retrieved June 12, 2020.
  11. ^ "World Trade Center tower surpasses Empire State". CBS News. April 30, 2012. Archived from the original on June 12, 2020. Retrieved June 12, 2020.
  12. ^ "One World Trade Center To Supplant Willis Tower As Nation's Tallest Building". CBS Chicago. April 30, 2012. Archived from the original on June 12, 2020. Retrieved June 12, 2020.
  13. ^ "Why Is There A Gap in the Manhattan Skyline? Don't Blame the Bedrock; It's Location, Location, Location!". www.newark.rutgers.edu. Retrieved July 29, 2025.
  14. ^ Cohen, Michelle (March 3, 2016). "The Bedrock Myth: The Evolution of the NYC Skyline Was More About Dollars Than Rocks | 6sqft". Retrieved July 29, 2025.
  15. ^ a b Landau, Sarah; Condit, Carl W. (1996). Rise of the New York Skyscraper, 1865–1913. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-07739-1. OCLC 32819286.
  16. ^ a b "New York World Building". Skyscraper Source Media. Archived from the original on June 12, 2020. Retrieved June 12, 2020.
  17. ^ "Trinity Church History". TrinityWallStreet. Archived from the original on June 12, 2020. Retrieved June 12, 2020.
  18. ^ "New York World Building". Skyscraper Museum. Archived from the original on June 12, 2020. Retrieved June 12, 2020.
  19. ^ Gray, Christopher (March 12, 2000). "Streetscapes/The Park Row Building, 15 Park Row; An 1899 'Monster' That Reigned High Over the City". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved July 27, 2020.
  20. ^ "Historic Structures Report: Park Row Building" (PDF). National Register of Historic Places, National Park Service. November 16, 2005. p. 6.
  21. ^ a b "World's Tallest Towers: Timeline of all Skyscrapers Holding the Title of Tallest Building in the World From 1890 to the Present". Skyscraper Museum. Archived from the original on June 12, 2020. Retrieved June 12, 2020.
  22. ^ a b "New York: The Ultimate Skyscraper Laboratory" (PDF). CTBUH. Retrieved June 12, 2020.
  23. ^ Lewis, Scott (May 7, 2025). "The 'Race Into the Sky' That Built the Empire State Building". Engineering News-Record. Retrieved June 16, 2025.
  24. ^ "CTBUH Completed Buildings List". The Skyscraper Center. CTBUH. Retrieved June 12, 2020.
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  27. ^ Dunlap, David W. (September 21, 1983). "ROCKEFELLER CENTER: A 'JEWEL' BUT IS ALL OF IT A LANDMARK?". The New York Times. Retrieved July 26, 2025.
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  33. ^ Dreith, Ben (March 20, 2024). "Supertall skyscrapers and casino planned for Hudson Yards expansion". Dezeen. Retrieved June 16, 2025.
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  38. ^ Greenberg, Cara (February 6, 2025). ""Brooklyn needed the Brooklyn Tower"". Dezeen. Retrieved June 16, 2025.
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