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Skyscrapers 1181 to 1190 of 1237

Aspira
Seattle
400
feet
37
floors
2009
year built

Aspira is a 400 ft (122 m) tall skyscraper in the Denny Triangle neighborhood of Seattle, Washington. It has 37 floors, and is comprised mostly of apartments. Construction ended in late 2009.

289
feet
21
floors
1960
year built

Puget Sound Plaza is a 21-story skyscraper in the Metropolitan Tract of Seattle, Washington. The building is located on 1325 Fourth Avenue. It contains a parking garage with 334 parking stalls. The building has 271,000 rentable square feet. The lower two stories were remodeled in 1988.

573
feet
47
floors
1983
year built

Wells Fargo Center is a 573ft (175m) tall skyscraper in Seattle, Washington. It was completed in 1983 as the First Interstate Center and has 47 floors. It is the 9th tallest building in the city. The 87,386 m² was designed by McKinley Architects and owned by Equity Office Properties Trust, and has 24 elevators. The exterior façade is composed of a six-sided, steel-framed tower that features a combination of tinted continuous double-glazed glass and polished spring rose granite panels.

156
feet
11
floors
1962
year built

The Active Voice Building in Seattle, Washington is a reinforced concrete and steel-frame office building with solar bronze exterior window panels. It is located on the southwest corner of 6th Avenue and Lenora Street and abuts the Westin Building to the south, providing direct connections to the Westin's meet-me rooms and colocation facilities. Constructed in 1962, originally for the Internal Revenue Service, the building was named United Airlines Building until 2001.

410
feet
36
floors
??
year built

Candela Hotel & Residences is an approved 410 ft (125 m) tall skyscraper in Seattle, Washington. It will have 36 floors, and will be located near the historic Pike Place Market at the intersection of 2nd Avenue and Pike Street. The architecture of the building is particularly interesting as it is significantly smaller in the middle than the top and the bottom. Construction is set to be complete in 2012.

462
feet
38
floors
1931
year built

The Smith Tower, located in Pioneer Square, is the oldest skyscraper in Seattle, Washington, USA. Completed in 1914, the tower is named after its builder, firearm and typewriter magnate Lyman Cornelius Smith. Containing 38 floors, it was the tallest office building west of the Mississippi River until the Kansas City Power & Light Building was built in 1931. It remained the tallest building on the West Coast until the Space Needle overtook it in 1962.

580
feet
44
floors
1987
year built

US Bank Centre is a 580ft (177m) tall skyscraper in Seattle, Washington. It was constructed from 1987 to 1989 and has 44 floors. It is the 8th tallest building in Seattle and was designed by Callison Architecture. It opened as the Pacific First Centre and has 288,973 m² of office space.

660
feet
43
floors
2011
year built

Fifth and Columbia Tower is a 660ft (201m) tall skyscraper approved for construction in Seattle, Washington. It will be completed in 2011 and have 43 floors. It was designed by Zimmer Gunsul Frasca and is being developed by Daniels Development Company. When the building is completed it will be the seventh tallest building in Seattle, and the tallest building completed since 2006.

AVA
Seattle
445
feet
39
floors
??
year built

AVA is an approved 445 ft (136 m) tall skyscraper in Seattle, Washington. The building, designed by Weber + Thompson, will have 39 floors, and will be located at 8th Avenue and Pine Street. There will be a luxury hotel on floors 10 through 17, with 200 condominiums comprising the upper floors. Construction is set to complete in 2010, however it has been postponed until the economy recovers.

598
feet
42
floors
2006
year built

WaMu Center is a skyscraper built in Seattle, Washington. On its completion, it was the largest skyscraper to mark Downtown Seattle's skyline in nearly 15 years, and is the city's 6th tallest building, at 182 meters (598 ft), with 42 floors. Major construction ended in early 2006, with minor construction continuing into the fall, and tenants from Washington Mutual (WaMu) began to move in to the tower in March 2006.

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