List of tallest buildings in Buffalo, New York

This list of the tallest buildings in Buffalo, New York, ranks skyscrapers in Buffalo by height. The tallest building in Buffalo is currently the Seneca One Tower, which stands 529 feet (161 m) tall. As of 2017, Buffalo has 17 structures taller than 250 ft (76 m).

Downtown Buffalo looking down Main Street

Buffalo has a rich tradition for architecture. Among the first true skyscrapers built in the city were the Prudential (Guaranty) Building and the Ellicott Square Building, both being built in the 1890s. A number of the tallest municipal buildings in the country were also built in the city, such as Buffalo City Hall, which continues to dominate the skyline. The city is also home to a large collection of large grain elevators, many of which rise above 150 ft (46 m). Construction of high rise buildings has increased in recent years after decades of relative dormancy, in addition to the retro-fitting of many old structures.

Tallest buildings

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This lists ranks Buffalo buildings that stand at least 128 feet (39 m) tall, based on standard height measurement. This includes spires and architectural details but does not include antenna masts. Existing structures are included for ranking purposes based on present height.

 
Skyline of Buffalo from the Niagara River, 2015
Rank Name Image Height
feet / m
Floors Year Notes
1 Seneca One Tower   529 / 161 40 1972 Tallest building in the city. Tallest building constructed in the 1970s.[1][2] Previously known as One Seneca Tower (2013–2017), One HSBC Center (1999–2013), Marine Midland Center (1972–1999).
2 Rand Building   405 / 123 29 1929 Tallest building constructed in the 1920s.[3][4]
3 Buffalo City Hall   398 / 121 32 1931 Tallest building constructed in the 1930s.[5][6][7]
4 Main Place Tower   350 / 107 26 1969 Tallest building constructed in the 1960s.[8][9]
5 Liberty Building   345 / 105 23 1925 [10][11]
6 One M&T Plaza   317 / 97 21 1966 [12][13]
7 Electric Tower   294 / 90 14 1912 Also known as the Niagara Mohawk Building. Tallest building constructed in the 1910s.[14][15]
8 Saint Paul's Episcopal Cathedral   275 / 84 1851 Tallest building constructed in the 1850s
9 50 Fountain Plaza   275 / 84 17 1990 Tallest building constructed in the 1990s. Formerly known as Key Center North Tower.
10 Buffalo Central Terminal   271 / 83 20 1929 Also known as the New York Central Terminal Complex.[16][17]
11 Erie County Hall   270 / 82 1876 Tallest building constructed in the 1870s.[18]
12 Statler Hotel   265 / 81 19 1923 Also known as the Statler Towers.[19][20]
13 10 Lafayette Square   263 / 80 23 1959 Tallest building constructed in the 1950s.[21][22]
14 Verizon/AT&T Building   258 / 79 16 1913 [21][23]
15 Robert H. Jackson United States Courthouse   255 / 78 10 2011 Tallest building constructed in the 2010s.[24]
16 John R. Oishei Children's Hospital   252 / 77 (est) 12 2017
17 The Marin   250 / 76 17 1913 Formerly known as the Marine Trust Company Building; Main Seneca Building.[25]
18 Genesee Building/Hyatt Regency Hotel   249 / 76 16 1923 [26]
19 Saint Louis Roman Catholic Church   246 / 75 1889 Tallest building constructed in the 1880s
20 Old Post Office   244 / 74 1901 Now Erie Community College City Campus [27][28]
21 LECOM Harborcenter   240 / 73 (est) 20 2015 [29] Connected to KeyBank Center
22 Saint Mary of Sorrows Roman Catholic Church   241 / 72 1891 Now King Urban Life Center
23 The Avant   225 / 69 15 1973 / 2009 Former Thaddeus J. Dulski Federal Building[30]
24 40 Fountain Plaza   225 / 69 13 1990 Formerly known as Key Center South Tower
25 Edward A. Rath County Office Building   223 / 68 16 1969 [31]
26 Church of St. Stanislaus, Bishop and Martyr   217 / 66 1886
27 Buffalo General Hospital Building A   213 / 65 16 1986 Tallest building constructed in the 1980s.[32]
28 Wheeler Elevator   207 / 63 13 Also known as Buffalo RiverWorks; Agway/GLF East Work House[33]
29 Concrete-Central Elevator   207 / 63 7 1915 [34]
30 Erie County Medical Center   195 / 59 13[35] 1978 [36]
31 Delaware North Building   194 / 59* 12 2015 *Height: 174/53 to roof level, 194/59 to top of mechanicals (Source: Developer)
32 Standard Elevator   194 / 59 1928 Also known as Pillsbury Elevator.[37]
33 Kaleida Health Gates Vascular Institute   190 / 58 10 2011 [38]
34 Marine A Elevator   190 / 58 11 1925 [39]
35 Superior Elevator   189 / 58 1925 Also known as Cargill "S" or Cargill Superior Elevator.[40]
36 Main Court Building   188 / 57 13 1963 [41]
37 Asbury Delaware Avenue United Methodist Church   184 / 56 1876 [42]
38 Westminster Presbyterian Church   184 / 56 1859 [43]
39 Scott Bieler Clinical Sciences Center   182 / 56 [44] 11 2015 Part of Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center.[45]
40 Church of the Transfiguration   180 / 55 1896
41 City Centre Condominiums   180 / 55 14 1993 [46]
42 Buffalo VA Medical Center   177 / 54 14 1950 [47]
43 Kreiner Malting Grain Elevator   177 / 54 1925 Also known as the Buffalo Malting Elevator.[48]
44 Corpus Christi Roman Catholic Church   175 / 53 1907 [49]
45 Connecting Terminal   174 / 53 1915 [50]
46 Cargill Pool Elevator   174 / 53 1925 Also known as the Saskatchewan Cooperative Elevator.[51]
47 The Pasquale   173 / 53 (est.) 13 2009 Tallest building constructed in the 2000s. Luxury condos.[52]
48 10 Hertel Avenue   173 / 53 (est.) 13 1972 Part of the Marina Vista Apartments complex. Formerly known as Watergate II Apartments 1. Public housing.[53]
49 12 Hertel Avenue   173 / 53 (est.) 13 1972 Part of the Marina Vista Apartments complex. Formerly known as Watergate II Apartments 2. Public housing.[54]
50 Assumption Roman Catholic Church   170 / 52 1915 [55]
51 Prudential/Guaranty Building   167 / 51 13 1896 [56]
52 AM&A Building   166 / 51 12 1948 Tallest building constructed in the 1940s.[57]
53 Ellicott Square Building   164 / 50 10 1896 [58]
54 First Presbyterian Church   164 / 50 1891 [59]
55 Olympic Towers   161 / 49 11 1903 Also known as the Young Men's Christian Association Central Building.[60]
56 Richardson Olmsted Complex   161 / 49 4 1871 [61]
57 General Mills Plant   161 / 49 12 Also known as the Frontier Elevator.[62]
58 800 West Ferry Street   161 / 49 (est.) 12 1929 High-rise condominium tower.[63]
59 The Admiral   160 / 49 (est.) 12 1952 Part of the Marine Drive Apartments complex. Public housing.[64]
60 The Bayshore   160 / 49 (est.) 12 1952 Part of the Marine Drive Apartments complex. Public housing.[65]
61 The Coastline   160 / 49 (est.) 12 1952 Part of the Marine Drive Apartments complex. Public housing.[66]
62 The Driftwood   160 / 49 (est.) 12 1952 Part of the Marine Drive Apartments complex. Public housing.[67]
63 The Ebbtide   160 / 49 (est.) 12 1952 Part of the Marine Drive Apartments complex. Public housing.[68]
64 Elmwood Square Apartments   160 / 49 (est.) 12 1973 Section 8 public housing for senior citizens.[69]
65 The Flagstaff   160 / 49 (est.) 12 1952 Part of the Marine Drive Apartments complex. Public housing.[70]
66 The Gulfstream   160 / 49 (est.) 12 1952 Part of the Marine Drive Apartments complex. Public housing.[71]
67 M&T Center (Buffalo Savings Bank extension)   160 / 49 (est.) 1985 The building is a north side addition to the Buffalo Savings Bank[72]
68 Marguerite Hall   160 / 49 (est.) 12 1966[73] [74] D'Youville College dormitory
69 Riverview Manor   160 / 49 (est) 12 1977 Also known as Riverview Apartments. Apartment building for senior citizens.[75]
70 Buffalo City Court Building   154 / 47 (est.) 10 1974 [76]
71 St. Mary's Cement Storage Tanks   154 / 47 1910 Also known as the Spencer Kellogg Elevator[77]
72 American Grain Complex   151 / 46 10 1933 Also known as the Perot Malting Elevator; Genesee Brewing Elevator.[78]
73 500 Pearl Street   151 / 46 12 2019 [79]
74 Lake & Rail Grain Elevator   151 / 46 9 1927 [80]
75 Saint Adalbert's Basilica   151 / 46 1886 [81]
76 Swan Tower   148 / 45 10 1902 Also known as the Fidelity Trust Building.[82]
77 Admiral's Walk Condominiums   147 / 45 (est.) 11 1990 Luxury condos.[83]
78 Churchill Academic Tower   147 / 45 (est.) 11 1971 Houses Canisius University classrooms and lecture halls.[84]
79 PSG Residences   147 / 45 (est.) 11 1978 Also known as Piotr Stadnitski Gardens. Apartment building for senior citizens.[85]
80 Santa Maria Towers   147 / 45 (est.) 11 1984[86] Apartment building for senior citizens.[87]
81 Women and Children's Hospital of Buffalo   145 / 44 (est.) 11 1956 [88]
82 The Delaware Tower   142 / 43 (est.) 17 1962 [89]
83 Buffalo Athletic Club   141 / 43 (est.) 12 1922 [90]
84 Cathedral Place   140 / 43 (est.) 10 1906 Also known as the White Building.[91]
85 St. Francis de Sales Roman Catholic Church   140 / 43 (est.) 1928 [92]
86 42 Delaware Avenue   136 / 41 (est.) 11 1929 [93]
87 12 Fountain Plaza   133 / 41 (est.) 10 1983 Also known as the Norstar Building.[94]
88 Lyndon B. Johnson Apartments   133 / 41 (est.) 10 1973 [95] Apartment building for senior citizens.[96]
89 Mary Agnes Manor   133 / 41 (est.) 10 1965 Apartment building for senior citizens.[97]
90 Roswell Park Cancer Institute   133 / 41 (est.) 10 1998 [98]
91 Baptist Manor Apartments   133 / 41 (est.) 16 1976 [99]
92 Goodyear Hall   133 / 41 11 1960 Residence hall at the University at Buffalo's South Campus.[100]
93 Kimball Tower   133 / 41 11 1957 Houses the University at Buffalo's School of Public Health and Health Professions.[101][102]
94 Dun Building   130 / 40 10 1895 [103]
95 Erie County Court Building   130 / 40 (est) 8 1965 [104]
96 Larkin @ Exchange   130 / 40 (est) 8 1912 Also known as the Larkin Building, Graphic Controls Corporation Building, Larkin Terminal Warehouse.[105]
97 One Canalside   129 / 39 8 1962 / 2013 Formerly General William J. Donovan State Office Building.[106]
98 Buffalo General Hospital Building D   128 / 39 8 1901[107] Also known as Buffalo General Hospital Administration Building;[108] Buffalo General Hospital East Wing.[107]
99 Convention Tower   128 / 39 (est.) 12 1924 Also known as the Walbridge Building.[109][110]

Tallest proposed or under construction

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This lists buildings (greater than 12 floors) that have been proposed in Buffalo.

Name Height
feet / m
Floors Year Proposed Status Notes
Marine Drive Apartments Building A +160/+49m 12 2023 proposed Planned main building for redeveloped Marine Drive Apartments.[111][112]

Tallest cancelled and stale proposals

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This section denotes proposals that are now cancelled or the proposal has sat longer than 2 years.

Name Height
feet / m
Floors Year Proposed Status Notes
Unity Tower at Cobblestone Place +656/+200m 55 2020 Stale proposal Proposed tongue-in-cheek by owner at the time of Cobblestone buildings. Nothing ever materialized from this plan.[113]
Buffalo City Tower 600 / 183 40 2006 cancelled This project was cancelled due to the financial woes of the developer, BSC Group
Apartments at Queen City Landing 324 / 99 20 2016 cancelled Proposed height later reduced from 23 to 20 stories. Project was repeatedly stymied by litigation due to environmental concerns, "suspended indefinitely" in 2020 due to the developer's inability to secure financing from the city,[114] and definitively cancelled in 2021 when the property was put up for sale.[115]
33 Gates Circle 297 / 85 23 2006 cancelled Project "fell through when the economy tanked in 2008", according to the Buffalo News. As of 2018, the developer proposes a series of three-story, 12-unit townhouses for the site.[116]
Seneca Buffalo Creek Casino Hotel Tower 220 / 67 22 2010 cancelled The Seneca Buffalo Creek Casino was completed in 2013 without the hotel tower
Adelphia Tower 220 / 67 15 2004 cancelled The project size and scope was altered several times (40 floors, 38 floors, 22 floors and finally 15 floors) before being cancelled
The Carlo 186 / 57 (est) 14 2012 Stale Proposal

Tallest destroyed buildings

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This lists buildings in the city of Buffalo that once existed and rose at least 150 ft (46 m) but have since been destroyed.

Name Image Height
feet / m
Floors Year built Year destroyed Notes
Electric Tower (Pan-American Exposition)   389 / 119 1901 1902 Intended to be temporary and to be destroyed after conclusion of Pan-American Exposition. Not to be confused with the present-day Electric Tower at Washington and East Huron Streets. Tallest building ever destroyed in Upstate New York.[117]
St. Joseph's New Cathedral   240 / 73 1913 1976 [118]
St. Ann's Roman Catholic Church   225 / 69 1885 1964 (partially) Spires removed due to structural damage after a windstorm, remainder of the building still extant. St. Ann's parish dissolved in 2011 and the building is now vacant.[119]
D. S. Morgan Building   221 / 67 12 1895 1965 The Edward A. Rath County Office Building now occupies the site.[120]
Great Northern Elevator   188 / 57 1897 2023 [121]
A. Victor & Company Department Store   186 / 57 11 1928 1981 [122][123]
50 High Street   173 / 53 13 1965 2007 Also known as the General Towers Medical Building or Erie Medical Center.[124] Oishei Children's Hospital now occupies the site.
Iroquois Hotel   166 / 51 11 1890 1940 Also known as the Gerrans building. One M&T Plaza now occupies the site.[125]
St. Stephen's Evangelical Church   164 / 50 1874 1923 (partially) Spire removed in 1923, remainder of the building still extant. Most recently home to Emmanuel Temple Seventh Day Adventist Church; now vacant.[126]
Chamber of Commerce Building   161 / 49 13 1905[127] 1986 [128]
Millard Fillmore Gates Circle Hospital   160 / 49 12 1941 2015 [129]
Ford Hotel Upload image 151 / 46 13 1922 2000 Hampton Inn and Suites Hotel now occupies the site.[130]
Hotel Buffalo   150 / 46 12 1908 1967 Sahlen Field now occupies the site.[131]

Timeline of tallest buildings

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This section lists buildings that once held the title of tallest building in Buffalo. Saint Paul's Episcopal Cathedral held the title twice, both before the construction and after the demolition of the original Electric Tower, which was designed as a temporary building that would only last the length of the Pan-American Exposition.

Years as
tallest
Name Image Height
feet / m
Floors Notes
1827–1851 First Presbyterian Church   unknown N/A Demolished in 1890. Not to be confused with the current First Presbyterian Church building on Symphony Circle, erected in 1897 to a height of 164 feet (50 m). Main Place Tower occupies the site today.
1851–1901 Saint Paul's Episcopal Cathedral   275 / 84 N/A Tallest building in Upstate New York during this time.
1901–1902 Electric Tower (Pan-American Exposition)   389 / 119 N/A Demolished shortly after the close of the Pan-American Exposition. Not to be confused with the present-day Electric Tower at Washington and East Huron Streets, listed below. Tallest building in Upstate New York and also second-tallest building in New York State at the time of its construction, only two feet (61 cm) shorter than the Park Row Building in New York City.
1902–1912 Saint Paul's Episcopal Cathedral   275 / 84 N/A Tallest building in Upstate New York during this time.
1912–1925 Electric Tower   294 / 90 14 Tallest building in Upstate New York 1912–1914.
1925–1929 Liberty Building   345 / 105 23 Tallest building in Upstate New York 1925–1928.
1929–1972 Rand Building   405 / 123 29 Tallest building in Upstate New York 1929–1966. First building to exceed the height of the original Electric Tower, demolished 27 years earlier.
1972- Seneca One Tower   529 / 161 40

See also

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References

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General
Specific
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