This list of the tallest buildings in Pennsylvania includes all skyscrapers 400 feet (120 m) or taller, ranked by height. The tallest building in Pennsylvania is the 60-story Comcast Technology Center in Center City Philadelphia, which is 1,121 feet (342 m) in height. The building opened in 2018.[1][2] It is currently the 14th-tallest building in the United States.
Among Pennsylvania cities, Philadelphia has the most buildings exceeding 400 feet (120 m) in height with 34 followed by Pittsburgh with 16. Excluding buildings in these two cities, the tallest buildings elsewhere in the state are Scranton Times Tower in Scranton, PA at 385 ft (117 m)- although this is a radio tower atop a 5-story structure, 333 Market Street in Harrisburg at 341 ft (104 m), Martin Tower (recently demolished) in Bethlehem at 332 ft (101 m), PPL Building in Allentown at 322 feet (98 m), and the Berks County Courthouse in Reading, PA at 275 ft (84 m). The Comcast Technology Center is not the tallest freestanding structure in Pennsylvania as that would go to the Unit 3 original smokestack in Homer City at 1,217 feet tall.
Tallest buildings
editRank | Name | Image | Height ft / (m) |
Floors | Year | City | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Comcast Technology Center | 1,121 / 341 | 60 | 2018 | Philadelphia | Tallest building in Pennsylvania and Philadelphia; 14th-tallest building in the United States; tallest building completed in Pennsylvania and Philadelphia in the 2010s. | |
2 | Comcast Center | 975 / 297 | 58 | 2008 | Philadelphia | 28th-tallest building in the country; tallest building completed in Pennsylvania and Philadelphia in the 2000s[4][5][6] | |
3 | One Liberty Place | 945 / 288 | 61 | 1987 | Philadelphia | 33rd-tallest building in the country; tallest building completed in Pennsylvania and Philadelphia in the 1980s[7][8][9] | |
4 | Two Liberty Place | 848 / 258 | 58 | 1990 | Philadelphia | 58th-tallest building in the country; tallest building completed in Pennsylvania and Philadelphia in the 1990s[10][11][12] | |
5 | U.S. Steel Tower | 841 / 256 | 64 | 1971 | Pittsburgh | 63rd-tallest building in the country; tallest building in Pittsburgh since 1970; tallest building in the state from 1970 until the 1987 completion of One Liberty Place in Philadelphia; tallest building constructed in Pennsylvania and Pittsburgh in the 1970s; formerly known as USX Tower[13][14] | |
6 | BNY Mellon Center | 792 / 241 | 54 | 1990 | Philadelphia | 76th-tallest building in the country; also known as Nine Penn Center[15][16][17] | |
7 | Three Logan Square | 739 / 225 | 55 | 1991 | Philadelphia | 128th-tallest building in the country; formerly known as Bell Atlantic Tower and Verizon Tower[18][19][20][21] | |
8 | FMC Tower at Cira Centre South | 730 / 223 | 49 | 2016 | Philadelphia | 138th-tallest building in the country; the tallest building in Philadelphia outside Center City[22] | |
9 | BNY Mellon Center | 725 / 221 | 54 | 1984 | Pittsburgh | 143rd-tallest building in the country; tallest building constructed in Pittsburgh in the 1980s; formerly known as One Mellon Center[23][24] | |
10 | One PPG Place | 635 / 194 | 40 | 1984 | Pittsburgh | [25][26] | |
11 | G. Fred DiBona Jr. Building | 625 / 191 | 45 | 1990 | Philadelphia | Formerly known as the Blue Cross–Blue Shield Tower and the IBX Tower[27][28][29] | |
12 | The W Philadelphia and Element Philadelphia | 617 / 188 | 51 | 2020 | Philadelphia | tallest building completed in Pennsylvania and Philadelphia in the 2020s.[30][31][32] | |
13 | Fifth Avenue Place | 616 / 188 | 31 | 1988 | Pittsburgh | Also known as Highmark Place[33][34] | |
14 | One Oxford Centre | 615 / 187 | 45 | 1983 | Pittsburgh | [35][36] | |
15 | The Laurel | 604 / 184 | 50 | 2022 | Philadelphia | Tallest residential building in Philadelphia and Pennsylvania[37] | |
16 | Gulf Tower | 582 / 177 | 44 | 1932 | Pittsburgh | Tallest building constructed in Pennsylvania and Pittsburgh in the 1930s[38][39] | |
17= | One Commerce Square | 565 / 172 | 41 | 1987 | Philadelphia | [40][41] | |
17= | Two Commerce Square | 565 / 172 | 41 | 1992 | Philadelphia | [41][42] | |
19 | Philadelphia City Hall | 548 / 167 | 9 | 1901 | Philadelphia | 1901 is the official year of completion and the transfer of ownership to the city government; however, the tower had been topped out in 1894[43] and the building had been partially occupied by then,[44][45] making it the tallest habitable building in the United States and the world from 1894 until the completion of the Singer Building in 1908; tallest building completed in Pennsylvania and Philadelphia in the 1900s.[46][47] | |
20 | Tower at PNC Plaza | 545 / 166 | 33 | 2015 | Pittsburgh | Tallest building constructed in Pittsburgh in the 2010s; [48][49] | |
21 | Cathedral of Learning | 535 / 163 | 42 | 1936 | Pittsburgh | Second-tallest educational building in the world, behind the main building of Moscow State University; tallest building in the city located outside of Downtown[50][51] | |
22 | Arthaus | 528 / 161 | 47 | 2022 | Philadelphia | [52] | |
23 | 525 William Penn Place | 520 / 158 | 41 | 1951 | Pittsburgh | Tallest building constructed in Pennsylvania and Pittsburgh in the 1950s[53][54] | |
24 | The Residences at The Ritz-Carlton | 518 / 158 | 48 | 2009 | Philadelphia | [55][56][57] | |
25 | K&L Gates Center | 511 / 156 | 39 | 1968 | Pittsburgh | Tallest building constructed in Pennsylvania and Pittsburgh in the 1960s[58][59] | |
26 | 1818 Market Street | 500 / 152 | 40 | 1974 | Philadelphia | Tallest building completed in Philadelphia in the 1970s[60][61] | |
27 | The St. James | 498 / 152 | 45 | 2004 | Philadelphia | Tallest building located east of Broad Street[62][63] When constructed in 2003, the St. James was the tallest apartment building in Philadelphia.[64] | |
28 | Loews Philadelphia Hotel | 492 / 150 | 36 | 1932 | Philadelphia | Known commonly as the PSFS Building;[65] tallest hotel in the city until the Four Seasons opens in the Comcast Technology Center; tallest building completed in Philadelphia in the 1930s.[66][67][68] | |
29 | PNC Bank Building | 491 / 150 | 40 | 1983 | Philadelphia | [69][70] | |
30= | Centre Square II | 490 / 149 | 40 | 1973 | Philadelphia | [71][72] | |
30= | Five Penn Center | 490 / 149 | 36 | 1970 | Philadelphia | [73][74] | |
32 | Grant Building | 485 / 148 | 40 | 1930 | Pittsburgh | [75][76] | |
33= | Koppers Tower | 475 / 145 | 34 | 1929 | Pittsburgh | Tallest building constructed in Pennsylvania and Pittsburgh in the 1920s[77][78] | |
33= | Murano | 475 / 145 | 43 | 2008 | Philadelphia | [79][80][81] | |
35 | One South Broad | 472 / 144 | 28 | 1932 | Philadelphia | Formerly known as the PNB Building[82][83] | |
36 | Two PNC Plaza | 445 / 136 | 34 | 1975 | Pittsburgh | [84][85] | |
37= | 2000 Market Street | 435 / 133 | 29 | 1973 | Philadelphia | [86][87] | |
37= | Two Logan Square | 435 / 133 | 35 | 1987 | Philadelphia | [88][89] | |
39 | Cira Centre | 434 / 133 | 28 | 2005 | Philadelphia | [90][91] | |
40= | 1700 Market | 430 / 131 | 32 | 1968 | Philadelphia | Tallest building completed in Philadelphia the 1960s[92][93] | |
40= | EQT Plaza | 430 / 131 | 32 | 1987 | Pittsburgh | [94][95] | |
40= | Evo at Cira Centre South | 430 / 131 | 33 | 2014 | Philadelphia | [96][97][98] | |
43 | 1835 Market Street | 425 / 130 | 29 | 1986 | Philadelphia | Name was changed from Eleven Penn Center in 2003[99][100] | |
44 | One PNC Plaza | 424 / 129 | 30 | 1972 | Pittsburgh | [101][102] | |
45 | Centre Square I | 417 / 127 | 32 | 1973 | Philadelphia | [103][104] | |
46 | Jefferson Tower | 412 / 126 | 32 | 1984 | Philadelphia | Formerly known as One Reading Center[105][106] | |
47 | Regional Enterprise Tower | 410 / 125 | 30 | 1953 | Pittsburgh | [107][108] | |
48 | Wells Fargo Building | 405 / 123 | 29 | 1927 | Philadelphia | Originally the Fidelity-Philadelphia Trust Company Building; tallest building completed in Philadelphia in the 1920s[109][110] | |
49 | 1706 Rittenhouse | 401 / 122 | 33 | 2011 | Philadelphia | [111][112] | |
50 | One Logan Square | 400 / 122 | 31 | 1983 | Philadelphia | [113][114] |
Timeline of tallest buildings
editName | Image | Height | Floors | Years tallest | City |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Philadelphia City Hall | 548 / 167 | 9 | 1901-1932 31 years | Philadelphia | |
Gulf Tower | 582 / 177 | 44 | 1932-1971 39 years | Pittsburgh | |
U.S. Steel Tower | 841 / 256 | 64 | 1971-1984 13 years | Pittsburgh | |
One Liberty Place | 945 / 288 | 61 | 1987-2008 21 years | Philadelphia | |
Comcast Center | 975 / 297 | 58 | 2008-2018 10 years | Philadelphia | |
Comcast Technology Center | 1121 / 341 | 60 | 2018–present 6 years | Philadelphia |
See also
editReferences
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- ^ Lattanzio, Vince (November 30, 2017). "The Comcast Technology Center Is Philly's Tallest Building and Yes, There's a Mini Billy Penn Up There". NBC10 Philadelphia. NBCUniversal Media, LLC. Archived from the original on December 2, 2017. Retrieved December 2, 2017.
- ^ "Billy Penn no Longer the High Spot". The Philadelphia Inquirer. September 11, 1986. pp. B01.
- ^ "Comcast Center". SkyscraperPage.com. Retrieved August 4, 2009.
- ^ "Comcast Center". Emporis.com. Archived from the original on November 24, 2006. Retrieved May 12, 2008.
{{cite web}}
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- ^ "One Liberty Place". Emporis.com. Archived from the original on February 20, 2007. Retrieved August 21, 2007.
{{cite web}}
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- ^ ""History of City Hall: 1886-1890". (archive) Retrieved November 9, 2017. "1889: Mayor Fitler moves into completed offices on west side."
- ^ "History of City Hall: 1891-1901". (archive) Retrieved November 9, 2017. "1891: State Supreme Court opens in permanent courtroom."
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{{cite web}}
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{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - ^ "Cathedral of Learning". Emporis.com. Archived from the original on May 5, 2007. Retrieved December 25, 2007.
{{cite web}}
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{{cite web}}
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{{cite web}}
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{{cite web}}
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{{cite web}}
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{{cite web}}
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