Skyscrapers Cities Philadelphia

Skyscrapers 1 to 10 of 35

1700 Market
Philadelphia
430
feet
32
floors
1968
year built

1700 Market is a high-rise building located in the Market West region of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The building stands at 430 feet (131 meters) with 32 floors, and was completed in 1968. It is currently tied with Two Logan Square as the 20th-tallest building in Philadelphia. The architect of the building was Murphy Levy Wurman. 1700 Market has the distinction of being the tallest building in Philadelphia built during the 1960s.

548
feet
40
floors
1974
year built

1818 Market Street is a 40-story skyscraper in downtown Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

425
feet
29
floors
1986
year built

1835 Market Street, formerly known as Eleven Penn Center, is a high-rise building located in the Market West region of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The building stands at 425 feet (130 meters) with 29 floors, and was completed in 1986. It is currently the 21st-tallest building in Philadelphia. The architectural firm who designed the building was the Kling Lindquist Partnership.

435
feet
29
floors
1973
year built

2000 Market Street is a high-rise building located in the Market West region of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The building stands at 435 feet (133 meters) with 29 floors, and was completed in 1973. It is currently tied with Two Logan Square as the 17th-tallest building in Philadelphia. The architect of the building was Pitcairn Properties, Inc.

510
feet
63
floors
??
year built

The American Commerce Center is a supertall skyscraper approved for construction in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. At 1,510 feet (460 m) tall with 63 floors, the building would dominate the Philadelphia skyline, standing over 500 ft (150 m) taller than Philadelphia's current tallest building, the recently completed Comcast Center.

Aramark Tower
Philadelphia
412
feet
32
floors
1984
year built

Aramark Tower, formerly known as One Reading Center, is a high-rise building located in the Center City region of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The building stands at 412 feet (126 meters) with 32 floors, and is currently the 23rd-tallest building in Philadelphia. The building was originally conceived by the Reading Company while in a state of bankruptcy as a way to capitalize on its real estate holdings in center city.

738
feet
55
floors
1991
year built

The Bell Atlantic Tower is a 53 story high-rise located in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Height to structural top is 739 ft (225 m) with construction being completed in 1991. The building encloses 1,300,000 square feet (121,000 m) of office space. The building was designed by the Philadelphia-based architecture firm Kling Lindquist. A city ordinance declared that no building within 250 feet (76 m) of the nearby Benjamin Franklin Parkway can rise higher than 250 feet (76 m).

Blue Cross Tower
Philadelphia
625
feet
45
floors
1990
year built

The G. Fred DiBona Jr. Building, formerly known as the Blue Cross-Blue Shield Tower or IBX Tower, is a skyscraper in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania housing the headquarters of Independence Blue Cross (the Blue Cross-Blue Shield affiliated organization in the five-county Philadelphia area). The tower was built between 1988 and 1990 and was designed by WZMH Architects, who also designed the CN Tower in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

Centre Square
Philadelphia
417
feet
32
floors
1973
year built

Centre Square is an office complex located in Center City, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. The complex consists of two high-rise towers: the 417 feet (127 m) Centre Square I and the 490 feet (150 m) Centre Square II. The concrete towers are the twenty-fourth and fifteenth tallest buildings in Philadelphia, respectively. Designed by Vincent Kling & Associates in the 1960s, Centre Square opened in 1973.

Cira Centre
Philadelphia
437
feet
29
floors
2005
year built

The Cira Centre is a 29-story, 437-foot (133 m) office high-rise in the University City district of West Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. Developed by Brandywine Realty Trust and designed by César Pelli, the Cira Centre sits across the street from Amtrak's 30th Street Station. The skyscraper was built on a platform over rail tracks in an area that had seen numerous development plans that had never produced anything.

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