| Skyline of Atlanta | |
|---|---|
| Midtown and Downtown Atlanta 2025 | |
| Tallest building | Bank of America Plaza (1992) |
| Tallest building height | 1,023 ft (311.8 m) |
| Major clusters | Downtown Atlanta Midtown Atlanta Buckhead |
| First 150 m+ building | State of Georgia Building (1967) |
| Number of tall buildings (2026) | |
| Taller than 100 m (328 ft) | 98 |
| Taller than 150 m (492 ft) | 18 |
| Taller than 200 m (656 ft) | 11 |
| Taller than 300 m (984 ft) | 1 |
| Number of tall buildings — feet | |
| Taller than 300 ft (91.4 m) | 125 |
Atlanta is the capital and largest city of the U.S. state of Georgia, with a metropolitan area of 6.4 million. As of 2026, Atlanta is home to 125 high-rise buildings over 300 feet (91 m) tall, and has the fifth most in the United States after New York City, Chicago, Miami, and Houston. 18 of these buildings are skyscrapers taller than 492 ft (150 m). Atlanta's skyline is the second largest in the Southern United States, after Miami. The tallest building in the city is the Bank of America Plaza between Downtown and Midtown Atlanta, the city's only supertall skyscraper.[1] It was completed in 1992 at a height of 1,023 ft (312 m). Of the 20 tallest buildings in Georgia, 18 are located in Atlanta;[2] the other two, Concourse Corporate Center V & VI, are in the neighboring city of Sandy Springs.
Early high-rises in Atlanta include the Flatiron Building, completed in 1897, five years before New York City's building of the same name; the Candler Building; and the romanesque Rhodes–Haverty Building. However, Atlanta's skyline remained short until the 1960s, with the topping out of One Park Tower. Atlanta's building boom accelerated in the 1980s, culminating in the completion of three of the city's four tallest buildings in 1992. Initially, skyscraper development in Atlanta occurred largely in Downtown. Midtown Atlanta would see increased development from the 1980s onwards.
In the early 21st century, high-rise development has continued to shift towards Midtown. The Atlantic Station project resulted in a new mixed-use high-rise neighborhood in the northwest of Midtown. This period also saw significant development in central Buckhead, including the addition of its tallest building, 3344 Peachtree, in 2008. Following a period of little high-rise construction after the Great Recession, Atlanta underwent another building boom beginning in the mid-2010s. Development mainly occurred in Midtown, where many residential towers have been built upon surface parking lots.[3][4] Between 2000 and 2023, Atlanta more than doubled its number of buildings taller than 300 ft (91 m) from 55 to 115.
Unlike many American cities where the tallest buildings are concentrated in a single area, Atlanta's skyscrapers are primarily found in three neighborhoods: Downtown Atlanta, Midtown Atlanta, and Buckhead. They form a skyline that mainly runs northwards from Downtown Atlanta to Buckhead, centered around Peachtree Street, a major thoroughfare. In Midtown, the skyline is bounded to the west by Interstate-85. Between Midtown and central Buckhead, shorter high-rises line both sides of Peachtree Street. Since the 2010s, new developments have formed small clusters of high-rises in West Midtown and Old Fourth Ward. In Metro Atlanta, the cities of Dunwoody, Sandy Springs, and Brookhaven form the northern business district of Perimeter Center, which contains a substantial number of office towers. To a lesser extent, commercial high-rises can also be found in Cumberland and Vinings; high-rises are rare in the rest of the metropolitan area, which mostly consists of single-family homes.
History
The history of skyscrapers in Atlanta began with the completion in of the eight-story Equitable Building in 1892.[5] Early high-rises include the Flatiron Building, completed in 1897, five years before New York City's building of the same name; the Candler Building; and the romanesque Rhodes–Haverty Building. However, Atlanta's skyline remained under 300 ft (91 m) until the 1960s, with the topping out of One Park Tower. The following two decades would see the construction of increasingly tall office skyscrapers, despite the city losing over 100,000 residents during this time. Atlanta's building boom accelerated in the 1980s, culminating in the completion of the city's three of the city's four tallest buildings in 1992. These were Truist Plaza, Atlanta's second-tallest building; 191 Peachtree Tower, Atlanta's fourth-tallest; and Bank of America Plaza. Initially, skyscraper development in Atlanta occurred largely in Downtown. Midtown Atlanta received its first major high-rise development, Colony Square, in 1973, and would see further development in the 1980s. One Atlantic Center, the city's third-tallest building, was completed in 1987.
Skyscraper construction slowed considerably in the mid-1990s, but resumed in the 2000s, as the city's population and economy rebounded. High-rise development shifted increasingly towards Midtown, which was undergoing a transformation into a high-density residential area; the Atlantic Station project resulted in a new mixed-use high-rise neighborhood in the northwest of Midtown, across the I-85. The decade also saw significant development in central Buckhead, including the addition of its tallest building, 3344 Peachtree, in 2008. While the Great Recession paused construction again in the early 2010s, Midtown remained a target for high-rise development. Large number of parking lots have been replaced by residential towers.[3][4] In 2023, construction began on 1072 West Peachtree Street, planned to reach a height of 749 ft (228.3 m); when completed in 2026, it will be Atlanta's tallest new building in over 30 years.[6] In Downtown, the Centennial Yards development broke ground in 2024; the project, which includes multiple towers, aims to transform the site of a former railyard into a new mixed-use district.[7]
Several of the downtown buildings were damaged in a major tornado in March 2008, scattering glass from several hundred feet. It took workers several days to clean the buildings and remove all of the loose shards of glass from the skyscrapers. No structural damage was reported, and by late 2010 each skyscraper had all of its windows replaced. Window blinds and other office objects from the tall buildings were found as far away as Oakland Cemetery.[8][9]
Cityscape
Map of tallest buildings
Downtown and Midtown Atlanta
The map below shows the location of buildings taller than 300 feet (91 m) in both Downtown Atlanta, and Midtown Atlanta directly to its north. Each marker is numbered by rank and colored by the decade of the building's completion.
Buckhead
The map below shows the location of buildings taller than 300 feet (91 m) in Buckhead, located north and northeast of Midtown Atlanta.
Tallest buildings
This list ranks Atlanta skyscrapers that stand at least 300 feet (91 m) tall as of 2026, based on standard height measurement. This includes spires and architectural details but does not include antenna masts. The "Year" column indicates the year in which a building was completed. Buildings tied in height are sorted by year of completion, and then alphabetically.
Was the tallest building in Atlanta upon completion Architecturally topped out but not yet completed| Rank | Name | Image | Location | Height ft (m) | Floors | Year | Purpose | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Bank of America Plaza | Downtown
33°46′15″N 84°23′10″W / 33.770863°N 84.38613°W / 33.770863; -84.38613 (Bank of America Plaza) | 1,023 (311.8) | 55 | 1992 | Office | 25th-tallest in the United States (8th at completion); tallest building in Georgia; tallest in the Southern United States. Tallest building constructed in the United States in the 1990s. Tallest office building in Atlanta. Tallest building in any U.S. state capital.[1][10] | |
| 2 | Truist Plaza | Downtown
33°45′46″N 84°23′12″W / 33.762696°N 84.38655°W / 33.762696; -84.38655 (SunTrust Plaza) | 867 (264.3) | 60 | 1992 | Office | 2nd-tallest building in Georgia. If the antenna spire is included, Truist Plaza's height increases to 902 ft (275 m).[11] | |
| 3 | One Atlantic Center | Midtown
33°47′13″N 84°23′15″W / 33.787081°N 84.387367°W / 33.787081; -84.387367 (One Atlantic Center) | 820 (249.9) | 50 | 1987 | Office | 3rd-tallest building in Georgia. Tallest building in Midtown Atlanta. Tallest building completed in Atlanta in the 1980s.[12][13] | |
| 4 | 191 Peachtree Tower | Downtown
33°45′32″N 84°23′12″W / 33.758995°N 84.386735°W / 33.758995; -84.386735 (191 Peachtree Tower) | 770 (234.7) | 50 | 1992 | Office | 4th-tallest building in Georgia.[14][15] | |
| 5 | 1072 West Peachtree Street | Midtown
33°47′03″N 84°23′18″W / 33.784031°N 84.388256°W / 33.784031; -84.388256 (1072 West Peachtree) | 749 (228.3) | 61 | 2026 | Mixed-use | Mixed-use residential and office building. Topped out in November 2025. Tallest building completed in Atlanta in the 2020s.[16][17] | |
| 6 | Westin Peachtree Plaza Hotel | Downtown
33°45′34″N 84°23′19″W / 33.759431°N 84.388565°W / 33.759431; -84.388565 (Westin Peachtree Plaza) | 723 (220.4) | 73 | 1976 | Hotel | 5th-tallest building in Georgia. Tallest building completed in Atlanta in the 1970s. Tallest hotel in Atlanta. Tallest hotel in the world from 1976 to 1977[18][19] | |
| 7 | Georgia Pacific Tower | Downtown
33°45′27″N 84°23′14″W / 33.757451°N 84.387222°W / 33.757451; -84.387222 (Georgia Pacific Tower) | 697 (212.5) | 51 | 1981 | Office | 6th-tallest building in Georgia.[20][21] | |
| 8 | Promenade II | Midtown
33°47′16″N 84°23′07″W / 33.787891°N 84.385142°W / 33.787891; -84.385142 (Promenade II) | 691 (210.6) | 40 | 1989 | Office | 7th-tallest building in Georgia.[22][23] | |
| 9 | Tower Square | Midtown
33°46′22″N 84°23′12″W / 33.7727537°N 84.386577°W / 33.7727537; -84.386577 (Tower Square) | 677 (206.4) | 47 | 1980 | Office | 8th-tallest building in Georgia.[24][25] | |
| 10 | 3344 Peachtree | Buckhead
33°50′50″N 84°22′07″W / 33.847087°N 84.368586°W / 33.847087; -84.368586 (3344 Peachtree) | 665 (202.7) | 48 | 2008 | Mixed-use | 9th-tallest building in Georgia. Tallest building in Buckhead. Tallest building completed in Atlanta in the 2000s. Mixed-use office and residential building. Also known by its residential portion, Sovereign.[26][27] | |
| 11 | 1180 Peachtree | Midtown
33°47′13″N 84°23′02″W / 33.786924°N 84.383857°W / 33.786924; -84.383857 (1180 Peachtree) | 657 (200.2) | 41 | 2006 | Office | 10th-tallest building in Georgia. Also known as the Symphony Tower.[28][29] | |
| 12 | GLG Grand-Four Seasons | Midtown
33°47′11″N 84°23′07″W / 33.78628°N 84.38536°W / 33.78628; -84.38536 (GLG Grand-Four Seasons) | 609 (185.6) | 53 | 1992 | Mixed-use | 11th-tallest in Georgia. Mixed-use residential and hotel building.[30][31] | |
| 13 | Waldorf Astoria Atlanta Buckhead | Buckhead | 580 (176.8) | 42 | 2008 | Mixed-use | 12th-tallest in Georgia. Previously named The Mandarin Oriental, Atlanta, and initially constructed as The Mansion on Peachtree. Mixed-use residential and hotel building.[32][33] | |
| 14 | The Atlantic | Midtown
33°47′27″N 84°23′51″W / 33.79089°N 84.397534°W / 33.79089; -84.397534 (The Atlantic) | 577 (175.9) | 46 | 2009 | Residential | 13th-tallest in Georgia. Tallest all-residential building in Atlanta. Tallest building in the Atlantic Station neighborhood.[34][35] | |
| 15 | State of Georgia Building | Downtown | 556 (169.5) | 44 | 1967 | Office | Also known as the Two Peachtree Building or 2 Peachtree Street, and previously known as the First National Bank Building. Tallest building completed in Atlanta in the 1960s.[36][37] | |
| 16 | Atlanta Marriott Marquis | Downtown
33°45′41″N 84°23′05″W / 33.7613°N 84.3847°W / 33.7613; -84.3847 (Atlanta Marriot Marquis) | 554 (168.9) | 52 | 1985 | Hotel | Contains the largest Hotel Atrium in Georgia[38][39] | |
| 17 | The Hue Midtown | Midtown
33°47′10″N 84°23′17″W / 33.78616°N 84.388085°W / 33.78616; -84.388085 (Icon Midtown) | 515 (157) | 39 | 2018 | Residential | Tallest building completed in Atlanta in the 2010s. Also known as Icon Midtown.[40] | |
| 18 | ViewPoint | Midtown
33°46′40″N 84°23′02″W / 33.77790°N 84.383862°W / 33.77790; -84.383862 (ViewPoint) | 501 (152.7) | 36 | 2008 | Residential | [41][42] | |
| 19 | TWELVE Centennial Park Tower I | Downtown | 491 (149.7) | 39 | 2007 | Residential | [43][44] | |
| 20 | 1075 Peachtree Office Tower | Midtown
33°47′02″N 84°22′58″W / 33.7838°N 84.3827°W / 33.7838; -84.3827 (1075 Peachtree Office Tower) | 488 (148.7) | 38 | 2010 | Office | Also known as the Midtown One Office Tower.[45][46] | |
| 21 | Park Avenue Condominiums | Buckhead
33°51′19″N 84°21′42″W / 33.8553°N 84.3618°W / 33.8553; -84.3618 (Park Avenue Condominiums) | 486 (148.1) | 44 | 2000 | Residential | [47][48] | |
| 22 | Terminus 100 | Buckhead
33°50′39″N 84°22′17″W / 33.8441°N 84.3715°W / 33.8441; -84.3715 (Terminus 100) | 485 (147.9) | 26 | 2007 | Office | [49][50] | |
| 23 | The Paramount at Buckhead | Buckhead | 478 (145.7) | 40 | 2004 | Residential | [51][52] | |
| 24 | The Ritz-Carlton Residences | Buckhead
33°51′16″N 84°21′30″W / 33.8544°N 84.3584°W / 33.8544; -84.3584 (The Ritz-Carlton Residences) | 469 (143) | 40 | 2010 | Mixed-use | Also known as 3630 Peachtree Road. Mixed-use residential and office building.[53][54] | |
| 25 | Signia Hilton Atlanta | Downtown
33°45′31″N 84°24′03″W / 33.758483°N 84.40081°W / 33.758483; -84.40081 (Signia Hilton Atlanta) | 463 (141) | 40 | 2024 | Hotel | [55] | |
| 26 | 101 Marietta Street | Downtown
33°45′24″N 84°23′31″W / 33.7568°N 84.3919°W / 33.7568; -84.3919 (101 Marietta Street) | 459 (140) | 36 | 1976 | Office | Formerly known as the Centennial Tower.[56][57] | |
| 27 | Equitable Building | Downtown
33°45′24″N 84°23′19″W / 33.756774°N 84.388577°W / 33.756774; -84.388577 (Equitable Building) | 453 (138.1) | 34 | 1967 | Office | [58][59] | |
| 28 | Spire | Midtown
33°46′42″N 84°23′05″W / 33.7782°N 84.3846°W / 33.7782; -84.3846 (Spire) | 453 (138) | 28 | 2005 | Residential | [60][61] | |
| 29 | Buckhead Grand | Buckhead
33°50′56″N 84°22′15″W / 33.848793°N 84.370816°W / 33.848793; -84.370816 (Buckhead Grand) | 451 (137.5) | 38 | 2004 | Residential | [62][63] | |
| 30 | One Park Tower | Downtown
33°45′17″N 84°23′22″W / 33.7547°N 84.3894°W / 33.7547; -84.3894 (One Park Tower) | 439 (133.8) | 32 | 1961 | Office | Tallest building in Atlanta from 1961 to 1967.[64][65] | |
| 31 | 1105 West Peachtree | Midtown
33°47′05″N 84°23′15″W / 33.784722°N 84.3875°W / 33.784722; -84.3875 (1105 West Peachtree) | 437 (133.2) | 32 | 2021 | Office | The shorter residential companion to this development is named 40 West 12th.[66] | |
| 32 | 1100 Peachtree | Midtown
33°47′05″N 84°23′01″W / 33.784755°N 84.38354°W / 33.784755; -84.38354 (1100 Peachtree) | 428 (130.5) | 28 | 1990 | Office | [67][68] | |
| 33 | Atlanta Plaza 1 | Buckhead
33°50′48″N 84°21′26″W / 33.8466°N 84.3571°W / 33.8466; -84.3571 (Atlanta Plaza 1) | 425 (129.5) | 32 | 1985 | Office | [69][70] | |
| 34 | Park Place | Buckhead
33°49′39″N 84°23′17″W / 33.82749°N 84.38815°W / 33.82749; -84.38815 (Park Place) | 420 (128) | 40 | 1986 | Residential | [71][72] | |
| 35 | Elora at Buckhead | Buckhead
33°50′55″N 84°22′01″W / 33.84873°N 84.36698°W / 33.84873; -84.36698 (Icon Buckhead) | 420 (128) | 35 | 2019 | Residential | Also known as Icon Buckhead.[73] | |
| 36 | 2828 Peachtree | Buckhead
33°49′59″N 84°23′07″W / 33.833007°N 84.385404°W / 33.833007; -84.385404 (2828 Peachtree) | 420 (127.9) | 33 | 2002 | Residential | [74][75] | |
| 37 | Momentum Midtown | Midtown
33°46′58″N 84°23′17″W / 33.782722°N 84.388108°W / 33.782722; -84.388108 (Momentum Midtown) | 419 (128) | 36 | 2024 | Residential | [76][77] | |
| 38 | Two Alliance Center | Buckhead
33°51′04″N 84°21′59″W / 33.851002°N 84.366501°W / 33.851002; -84.366501 (Two Alliance Center) | 411 (125) | 25 | 2009 | Office | [78][a] | |
| 39 | 1280 West | Midtown
33°47′20″N 84°23′17″W / 33.789°N 84.388°W / 33.789; -84.388 (1280 West) | 410 (125) | 38 | 1989 | Residential | [79][80] | |
| 40 | 1010 Midtown | Midtown
33°47′02″N 84°23′02″W / 33.78376°N 84.38385°W / 33.78376; -84.38385 (1010 Midtown) | 407 (124) | 36 | 2009 | Residential | [81] | |
| 41 | Peachtree Summit | Downtown
33°45′55″N 84°23′13″W / 33.7653°N 84.38707°W / 33.7653; -84.38707 (Peachtree Summit) | 406 (123.8) | 31 | 1975 | Office | [82][83] | |
| 42 | One Coca-Cola Plaza | Downtown
33°46′15″N 84°23′47″W / 33.7709°N 84.3965°W / 33.7709; -84.3965 (One Coca-Cola Plaza) | 403 (122.8) | 29 | 1980 | Office | [84][85] | |
| 43 | Tower Place 100 | Buckhead
33°50′51″N 84°22′16″W / 33.84745°N 84.37098°W / 33.84745; -84.37098 (Tower Place 100) | 401 (122.2) | 29 | 1974 | Office | [86][87] | |
| 44 | 1081 Juniper I | Midtown
33°47′03″N 84°22′55″W / 33.784096°N 84.381973°W / 33.784096; -84.381973 (1081 Juniper I) | 400 (121.9) | 36 | 2024 | Residential | Also known as The Juniper.[88] | |
| 45 | 1020 Spring | Midtown
33°46′58″N 84°23′25″W / 33.782813°N 84.390222°W / 33.782813; -84.390222 (1020 Spring) | 400 (121.9) | 25 | 2024 | Office | Also written as Ten Twenty Spring.[89][90] | |
| 46 | Kinetic | Midtown
33°46′57″N 84°23′20″W / 33.78263°N 84.38880°W / 33.78263; -84.38880 (Kinetic) | 400 (121.9) | 34 | 2024 | Residential | [91][92] | |
| 47 | 999 Peachtree | Midtown
33°46′52″N 84°23′01″W / 33.781151°N 84.383636°W / 33.781151; -84.383636 (999 Peachtree) | 396 (120.7) | 28 | 1987 | Office | Also known as Wachovia Plaza or First Union Plaza.[93] | |
| 48 | Mayfair Renaissance | Midtown
33°47′09″N 84°22′52″W / 33.785725°N 84.381096°W / 33.785725; -84.381096 (Mayfair Renaissance) | 395 (120.4) | 35 | 2002 | Residential | [94] | |
| 49 | 171 17th Street | Midtown
33°47′30″N 84°23′38″W / 33.791534°N 84.393875°W / 33.791534; -84.393875 (171 17th Street) | 394 (120) | 23 | 2004 | Office | Also known as Atlantic Station Office Building One, Southtrust Tower, or Wachovia Atlantic Station[95] | |
| 50 | Coda at Tech Square | Midtown
33°46′32″N 84°23′16″W / 33.775517°N 84.387672°W / 33.775517; -84.387672 (Coda at Tech Square) | 390 (118.9) | 21 | 2019 | Residential | [96] | |
| 51 | Sam Nunn Atlanta Federal Center | Downtown | 388 (118.3) | 24 | 1997 | Office | [97] | |
| 52 | Loews Midtown | Midtown
33°47′00″N 84°23′00″W / 33.783314°N 84.383286°W / 33.783314; -84.383286 (Loews Midtown) | 388 (118.2) | 39 | 2010 | Mixed-use | Mixed-use residential and hotel building.[98] | |
| 53 | Monarch Tower | Buckhead
33°51′06″N 84°21′52″W / 33.851715°N 84.364365°W / 33.851715; -84.364365 (Monarch Tower) | 387 (118) | 24 | 1997 | Office | [99] | |
| 54 | Atlanta Hilton Hotel | Downtown
33°45′41″N 84°23′01″W / 33.761524°N 84.383522°W / 33.761524; -84.383522 (Atlanta Hilton Hotel) | 383 (116.7) | 30 | 1974 | Hotel | [100] | |
| 55 | Richard B. Russell Federal Building | Downtown | 383 (116.7) | 26 | 1978 | Office | [101] | |
| 56 | 230 Peachtree Building | Downtown
33°45′37″N 84°23′17″W / 33.760143°N 84.388115°W / 33.760143; -84.388115 (230 Peachtree Building) | 382 (116.4) | 29 | 1965 | Mixed-use | Also known as the Peachtree Center Tower. Mixed-use hotel and office building.[102] | |
| 57 | Harris Tower | Downtown
33°45′39″N 84°23′11″W / 33.760719°N 84.386459°W / 33.760719; -84.386459 (Harris Tower) | 382 (116.4) | 31 | 1975 | Office | [103] | |
| 58 | Southern Bell Telephone Company Building | Downtown | 380 (115.8) | 14 | 1963 | Office | Also known as the AT&T Communications Building. Originally completed in 1929 with six stories. Additions in 1947, 1948 and 1963 brought it to its present 14 stories.[104] | |
| 59 | 1081 Juniper II | Midtown
33°47′01″N 84°22′55″W / 33.783504°N 84.382042°W / 33.783504; -84.382042 (1081 Juniper II) | 380 (115.8) | 33 | 2024 | Residential | Also known as The Reserve at Juniper.[105] | |
| 60 | Marquis I | Downtown
33°45′40″N 84°23′08″W / 33.761192°N 84.385597°W / 33.761192; -84.385597 (Marquis I) | 378 (115.2) | 30 | 1985 | Office | [106] | |
| 61 | Marquis II | Downtown
33°45′43″N 84°23′08″W / 33.761986°N 84.385582°W / 33.761986; -84.385582 (Marquis II) | 378 (115.2) | 30 | 1986 | Office | [107] | |
| 62 | 25 Park Place | Downtown
33°45′19″N 84°23′16″W / 33.755199°N 84.387779°W / 33.755199; -84.387779 (25 Park Place) | 377 (114.9) | 28 | 1971 | Education | Tallest educational building in Atlanta. Formerly known as the Trust Company of Georgia Building and later the SunTrust Bank Building. Acquired by Georgia State University in 2007. Currently houses many departments in the College of Arts and Science. | |
| 63 | Coastal States Insurance Building | Downtown | 377 (114.9) | 27 | 1971 | Office | [108] | |
| 64 | Peachtree Center International Tower | Downtown | 376 (114.6) | 30 | 1972 | Office | [109] | |
| 65 | BB&T Tower | Midtown
33°47′30″N 84°23′45″W / 33.791576°N 84.395721°W / 33.791576; -84.395721 (BB&T Tower) | 375 (114.3) | 25 | 2009 | Office | [110] | |
| 66 | Midtown Union Office Building | Midtown | 374 (114)[b] | 26 | 2022 | Office | [111] | |
| 67 | Realm | Buckhead
33°50′45″N 84°22′10″W / 33.845917°N 84.369331°W / 33.845917; -84.369331 (Realm) | 373 (113.7) | 29 | 2006 | Mixed-use | Mixed-use office and residential building.[112] | |
| 68 | One Georgia Center | Downtown
33°46′15″N 84°23′16″W / 33.77079°N 84.387901°W / 33.77079; -84.387901 (One Georgia Center) | 371 (113.1) | 24 | 1968 | Office | [113] | |
| 69 | Mayfair Tower Condominiums | Midtown | 370 (112.8) | 34 | 1990 | Residential | [114] | |
| 70 | Terminus 200 | Buckhead
33°50′46″N 84°22′19″W / 33.846001°N 84.37188°W / 33.846001; -84.37188 (Terminus 200) | 370 (112.7) | 25 | 2009 | Office | [115] | |
| 71 | The Campanile | – | Midtown
33°47′10″N 84°22′57″W / 33.785995°N 84.382553°W / 33.785995; -84.382553 (The Campanile) | 367 (111.9) | 20 | 1987 | Office | [116] |
| 72 | Regions Plaza | Midtown
33°47′13″N 84°23′18″W / 33.786873°N 84.388268°W / 33.786873; -84.388268 (Regions Plaza) | 367 (111.9) | 24 | 2001 | Office | Also known as Atlantic Center Plaza.[117] | |
| 73 | 10 Terminus Place | Buckhead
33°50′43″N 84°22′18″W / 33.8453°N 84.3716°W / 33.8453; -84.3716 (10 Terminus Place) | 360 (110) | 32 | 2008 | Residential | [118][c] | |
| 74 | Society Atlanta | Midtown
33°46′38″N 84°23′02″W / 33.777222°N 84.383888°W / 33.777222; -84.383888 (Society Atlanta) | 360 (109.7) | 31 | 2024 | Residential | [119] | |
| 75 | Atlantic House | Midtown
33°47′09″N 84°23′15″W / 33.785889°N 84.38739°W / 33.785889; -84.38739 (Atlantic House) | 358 (109) | 32 | 2016 | Residential | [120] | |
| 76 | The Legacy at Centennial | Downtown | 358 (109)[d] | 32 | 2023 | Residential | [121] | |
| 77 | Resurgens Plaza | Buckhead
33°50′48″N 84°21′22″W / 33.846661°N 84.35601°W / 33.846661; -84.35601 (Resurgens Plaza) | 356 (108.5) | 25 | 1988 | Office | [122] | |
| 78 | Nomia | Midtown
33°47′32″N 84°23′13″W / 33.7920987°N 84.3868587°W / 33.7920987; -84.3868587 (Nomia) | 355 (108)[d] | 32 | 2023 | Residential | [123] | |
| 79 | 903 Peachtree | Midtown
33°46′46″N 84°23′02″W / 33.7793476°N 84.3838188°W / 33.7793476; -84.3838188 (903 Peachtree) | 354 (108) | 31 | 2022 | Residential | [124] | |
| 80 | Emmi Midtown | Midtown
33°47′35″N 84°23′20″W / 33.79310°N 84.38880°W / 33.79310; -84.38880 (Emmi Midtown) | 352 (107) | 31 | 2024 | Residential | [125][126] | |
| 81 | Three Alliance Center | Buckhead
33°51′07″N 84°22′02″W / 33.852032°N 84.36731°W / 33.852032; -84.36731 (Three Alliance Center) | 351 (107) | 29 | 2017 | Office | [127] | |
| 82 | Hanover Midtown | Midtown
33°47′17″N 84°23′17″W / 33.787991°N 84.388125°W / 33.787991; -84.388125 (Hanover Midtown) | 351 (107) | 31 | 2023 | Residential | Also known by its street address, 1230 West Peachtree.[128] | |
| 83 | Sora at Spring Quarter | Midtown | 350 (107) | 30 | 2023 | Residential | 1000 Spring St [129][130] | |
| 84 | The Proscenium | Midtown
33°47′11″N 84°23′01″W / 33.786331°N 84.383698°W / 33.786331; -84.383698 (The Proscenium) | 344 (104.9) | 24 | 2001 | Office | [131] | |
| 85 | The Oaks at Buckhead | Buckhead
33°51′00″N 84°21′34″W / 33.84997°N 84.35936°W / 33.84997; -84.35936 (The Oaks at Buckhead) | 341 (104)[d] | 30 | 1991 | Residential | [132] | |
| 86 | Hyatt Regency Atlanta | Downtown
33°45′41″N 84°23′12″W / 33.761482°N 84.386795°W / 33.761482; -84.386795 (Hyatt Regency Atlanta) | 340 (103.6) | 24 | 1967 | Hotel | [133] | |
| 87 | The Pinnacle | Buckhead
33°51′03″N 84°21′39″W / 33.850915°N 84.36071°W / 33.850915; -84.36071 (The Pinnacle) | 337 (102.7) | 22 | 1998 | Office | [134] | |
| 88 | Twelve Atlantic Station | Midtown | 336 (102.4) | 26 | 2005 | Mixed-use | Mixed-use residential and hotel building.[135] | |
| 89 | The Connector | Midtown
33°46′25″N 84°23′18″W / 33.77370°N 84.38843°W / 33.77370; -84.38843 (The Connector) | 336 (102)[d] | 27 | 2021 | Residential | Located on 699 Spring Street.[136] | |
| 90 | The Grandview | Buckhead
33°50′57″N 84°21′26″W / 33.849121°N 84.357086°W / 33.849121; -84.357086 (The Grandview) | 335 (102) | 36 | 1990 | Residential | [137] | |
| 91 | Peachtree Center South | Downtown
33°45′36″N 84°23′13″W / 33.760136°N 84.387062°W / 33.760136; -84.387062 (Peachtree Center South) | 332 (101.2) | 27 | 1969 | Office | [138] | |
| 92 | Georgia Power Company Headquarters | Downtown | 332 (101)[e] | 24 | 1981 | Office | Headquarters of Georgia Power.[139] | |
| 93 | Gallery | Buckhead
33°49′51″N 84°23′07″W / 33.83091°N 84.38541°W / 33.83091; -84.38541 (Gallery) | 331 (101)[d] | 26 | 2007 | Residential | [140] | |
| 94 | The St. Regis Atlanta | Buckhead
33°50′24″N 84°22′57″W / 33.83993°N 84.38259°W / 33.83993; -84.38259 (The St. Regis Atlanta) | 331 (101)[d] | 26 | 2009 | Hotel | [141] | |
| 95 | Peachtree Center North | Downtown
33°45′38″N 84°23′13″W / 33.760498°N 84.387047°W / 33.760498; -84.387047 (Peachtree Center North) | 331 (100.9) | 27 | 1967 | Office | [142] | |
| 96 | W Downtown Atlanta Hotel & Residences | Downtown | 331 (100.9) | 28 | 2009 | Mixed-use | Mixed-use residential and hotel building[143] | |
| 97 | The Dagny Midtown | Midtown
33°46′43″N 84°23′00″W / 33.778724°N 84.383204°W / 33.778724; -84.383204 (The Dagny Midtown) | 330 (101)[d] | 29 | 2019 | Residential | [144] | |
| 98 | Modera Midtown | Midtown
33°46′48″N 84°23′24″W / 33.780056°N 84.390129°W / 33.780056; -84.390129 (Modera Midtown) | 328 (100) | 29 | 2017 | Residential | [145] | |
| 99 | Ascent Peachtree | Downtown
33°45′34″N 84°23′07″W / 33.75936°N 84.385333°W / 33.75936; -84.385333 (Ascent Peachtree) | 325 (99)[b] | 29 | 2020 | Residential | [146] | |
| 100 | Mira at Midtown Union | Midtown
33°47′25″N 84°23′21″W / 33.79038°N 84.38905°W / 33.79038; -84.38905 (Mira at Midtown Union) | 323 (98)[d] | 26 | 2022 | Residential | [147] | |
| 101 | NCR Global Headquarters | Midtown
33°46′45″N 84°23′24″W / 33.77930°N 84.39013°W / 33.77930; -84.39013 (NCR Global Headquarters) | 318 (97)[d] | 21 | 2018 | Office | Headquarters of NCR Voyix.[148] | |
| 102 | Colony Square 100 | Midtown
33°47′13″N 84°22′58″W / 33.786956°N 84.38272°W / 33.786956; -84.38272 (Colony Square 100) | 315 (96) | 24 | 1969 | Office | [149] | |
| 103 | Crown Plaza & Staybridge Suites Atlanta Midtown | Downtown | 315 (96)[b] | 25 | 1972 | Hotel | Previously known as Penta Hotel, Stouffer's Atlanta Inn, and Renaissance Atlanta Downtown.[150] | |
| 104 | Modera Parkside | Midtown
33°46′56″N 84°22′53″W / 33.7821973°N 84.381335°W / 33.7821973; -84.381335 (Modera Parkside) | 315 (96) | 32 | 2025 | Residential | [151] | |
| 105 | Norfolk Southern Headquarters | Midtown | 315 (96)[d] | 17 | 2021 | Office | [152] | |
| 106 | Phipps Tower | Buckhead
33°51′10″N 84°21′51″W / 33.85282°N 84.36405°W / 33.85282; -84.36405 (Phipps Tower) | 315 (96)[f] | 20 | 2010 | Office | [153][154] | |
| 107 | The Mark at Atlanta | Midtown
33°46′52″N 84°23′19″W / 33.7810463°N 84.388689°W / 33.7810463; -84.388689 (The Mark at Atlanta) | 315 (96)[b] | 28 | 2020 | Residential | [155] | |
| 108 | Anthem Technology Center I | Midtown | 313 (95.4) | 21 | 2020 | Office | [156] | |
| 109 | 712 West Peachtree | Midtown
33°46′27″N 84°23′16″W / 33.774143°N 84.387728°W / 33.774143; -84.387728 (712 West Peachtree) | 312 (95)[d] | 21 | 2021 | Office | [157][158] | |
| 110 | The Starling | Midtown
33°47′13″N 84°22′54″W / 33.786983°N 84.381717°W / 33.786983; -84.381717 (W Atlanta-Midtown) | 310 (94.5) | 28 | 1974 | Hotel | Formerly known as W Atlanta-Midtown.[159] | |
| 111 | Omni Atlanta Hotel at Centennial Park | Downtown | 309 (94.3) | 28 | 2003 | Hotel | [160] | |
| 112 | Museum Tower at Centennial Hill | Downtown | 308 (94) | 24 | 2002 | Residential | Home to the Children's Museum of Atlanta.[161] | |
| 113 | Colony Square 400 | Midtown
33°47′15″N 84°22′59″W / 33.787632°N 84.382957°W / 33.787632; -84.382957 (Colony Square 400) | 308 (93.9) | 22 | 1973 | Office | [162] | |
| 114 | One Alliance Center | Buckhead
33°51′08″N 84°21′59″W / 33.85209°N 84.36638°W / 33.85209; -84.36638 (One Alliance Center) | 307 (94)[d] | 22 | 2001 | Office | [163] | |
| 115 | Vireo | Midtown
33°47′07″N 84°22′51″W / 33.78519°N 84.38094°W / 33.78519; -84.38094 (Vireo) | 307 (94)[f] | 27 | 2019 | Residential | [164] | |
| 116 | The Concorde | Buckhead
33°50′02″N 84°23′09″W / 33.833794°N 84.385742°W / 33.833794; -84.385742 (The Concorde) | 307 (93.5) | 31 | 1987 | Residential | [165] | |
| 117 | Ascent Midtown | Midtown
33°47′34″N 84°23′17″W / 33.7928253°N 84.38817°W / 33.7928253; -84.38817 (Ascent Midtown) | 304 (93)[f] | 28 | 2019 | Residential | [166][167] | |
| 118 | MAA Midtown | Midtown
33°46′58″N 84°23′12″W / 33.7828576°N 84.386733°W / 33.7828576; -84.386733 (MAA Midtown) | 304 (93)[f] | 25 | 2017 | Residential | Formerly known as Post Midtown.[168] | |
| 119 | 270 Peachtree | Downtown
33°45′43″N 84°23′17″W / 33.76190°N 84.38793°W / 33.76190; -84.38793 (270 Peachtree) | 302 (92)[d] | 22 | 1961 | Office | Formerly known as the Southern Company Building. Current headquarters of the American Cancer Society.[169] | |
| 120 | The Huntley Buckhead | Buckhead
33°51′18″N 84°21′46″W / 33.855034°N 84.362846°W / 33.855034; -84.362846 (The Huntley Buckhead) | 302 (92)[b] | 27 | 2018 | Residential | [170] | |
| 121 | Altitude Apartments | Downtown | 301 (91.8) | 23 | 1974 | Residential | Formerly known as the Atlanta Center Building. Office building converted to residential. Shares a base with the taller Atlanta Hilton Hotel.[171] | |
| 122 | AMLI Arts Center | Midtown
33°47′20″N 84°23′18″W / 33.788757°N 84.388313°W / 33.788757; -84.388313 (AMLI Arts Center) | 301 (91.7) | 30 | 2017 | Residential | [172] | |
| 123 | Square On Fifth | Midtown
33°46′41″N 84°23′21″W / 33.77800°N 84.38922°W / 33.77800; -84.38922 (Square On Fifth) | 301 (91.7)[f] | 26 | 2015 | Residential | [173] | |
| 124 | Merchandise Mart | Downtown
33°45′38″N 84°23′19″W / 33.760612°N 84.388641°W / 33.760612; -84.388641 (Merchandise Mart) | 300 (91.4) | 22 | 1961 | Office | [174] | |
| 125 | Coca-Cola USA Building | Downtown
33°46′13″N 84°23′52″W / 33.77029°N 84.39783°W / 33.77029; -84.39783 (Coca-Cola USA Building) | 300 (91.4)[d] | 20 | 1987 | Office | Part of Coca Cola's headquarters at One Coca Cola Plaza.[175] |
Tallest buildings in Metro Atlanta
| Metro Atlanta | |
|---|---|
| Population | 6,411,149 (2024 estimate) |
| Cities included | Atlanta, Brookhaven, Dunwoody, Sandy Springs, Vinings |
| Number of tall buildings (2026) | |
| Taller than 100 m (328 ft) | 107 |
| Taller than 150 m (492 ft) | 20 |
| Taller than 200 m (656 ft) | 11 |
| Taller than 300 m (984 ft) | 1 |
| Number of tall buildings — feet | |
| Taller than 300 ft (91.4 m) | 137 |
There are 12 high-rises taller than 300 feet (91 m) in Metro Atlanta that are located outside of the city limits of Atlanta itself. Four of them are in Dunwoody, and another four in neighboring Sandy Springs. Along with Brookhaven, these three cities form the edge city of Perimeter Center. The rest are in Vinings.
| Rank | Name | Image | City | Height ft (m) | Floors | Year | Purpose | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Concourse Corporate Center V | Sandy Springs | 570 (173.7) | 34 | 1988 | Office | Tallest building in Metro Atlanta outside of Atlanta. Part of the Concourse at Landmark Center complex.[176] | |
| 2 | Concourse Corporate Center VI | Sandy Springs | 553 (168.6) | 34 | 1991 | Office | Part of the Concourse at Landmark Center complex.[177] | |
| 3 | TKE Innovation and Qualification Center Tower | Vinings | 446 (135.8) | 13 | 2022 | Mixed-use | Used mainly as an elevator test tower, but also as an office and an observation tower. Tallest building in Vinings.[178] | |
| 4 | Three Ravinia Drive | Dunwoody
33°55′15″N 84°20′06″W / 33.92072°N 84.33494°W / 33.92072; -84.33494 (Three Ravinia Drive) | 444 (135.3) | 33 | 1991 | Office | Tallest building in Dunwoody.[179] | |
| 5 | Summit One | Brookhaven
33°54′57″N 84°20′28″W / 33.91575°N 84.34105°W / 33.91575; -84.34105 (Summit One) | 381 (116.1) | 27 | 1995 | Office | Also known as the Hewlett-Packard Building.[180] | |
| 6 | Riverwood 100 Tower | Vinings
33°52′40″N 84°27′29″W / 33.87791°N 84.45806°W / 33.87791; -84.45806 (Riverwood 100 Tower) | 362 (110.3) | 26 | 1989 | Office | Tallest building in Vinings from 1989 to 2022.[181] | |
| 7 | Cox Communications Headquarters | Sandy Springs
33°55′30″N 84°20′58″W / 33.92507°N 84.34954°W / 33.92507; -84.34954 (6205 Peachtree) | 357 (109)[f] | 19 | 2015 | Office | Headquarters of Cox Enterprises.[182] | |
| 8 | CHOA Arthur M. Blank Hospital | Brookhaven | 350 (107)[d] | 19 | 2024 | Hospital | [183] | |
| 9 | Park Towers II | Sandy Springs
33°55′04″N 84°21′36″W / 33.91770°N 84.36004°W / 33.91770; -84.36004 (Park Tower II) | 350 (106.7) | 33 | 1999 | Residential | Also known as The Eve Atlanta. Tallest residential building in Sandy Springs.[184] | |
| 10 | Park Center 2 | Dunwoody
33°55′11″N 84°20′46″W / 33.91983°N 84.346163°W / 33.91983; -84.346163 (Park Center 2) | 323 (98.4) | 22 | 2020 | Office | [185] | |
| 11 | Park Center 1 | Dunwoody
33°55′12″N 84°20′40″W / 33.91993°N 84.34456°W / 33.91993; -84.34456 (Park Center 1) | 317 (96.5) | 22 | 2016 | Office | [186] | |
| 12 | The Manhattan | Dunwoody
33°55′51″N 84°20′35″W / 33.93073°N 84.34305°W / 33.93073; -84.34305 (The Manhattan) | 305 (93) | 27 | 2006 | Residential | Tallest residential building in Dunwoody.[187] |
Tallest under construction
There is one building under construction in Atlanta that is expected to be at least 300 ft (91 m) tall as of 2026.
Architecturally topped out but not yet completed| Name | Height ft (m) | Image | Floors | Year | Purpose | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1072 West Peachtree Street | 749 (228.3) | 61 | 2026 | Mixed-use | Mixed-use residential and office building. Topped out in November 2025.[188][189] |
Timeline of tallest buildings
This lists buildings that once held the title of tallest building in Atlanta.
| Name | Image | Street address | Years as tallest | Height ft (m) | Floors | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Equitable Building[g] | 30–44 Edgewood Avenue SE | 1892–1897 | 117 ft (36 m)[h] | 8 | [5] | |
| Flatiron Building | 84 Peachtree Street NW | 1897–1901 | 160 ft (49 m)[h] | 11 | [190] | |
| Empire Building[i] | 35 Broad Street NW | 1901–1905 | 185 ft (56 m)[h] | 14 | [191] | |
| Fourth National Bank Building | 14 Peachtree Street NW | 1905–1906 | N/A[h] | 16 | [192] | |
| Candler Building | 127 Peachtree Street NE | 1906–1929 | N/A[h] | 17 | [193] | |
| Rhodes-Haverty Building[j] | 134 Peachtree Street NW | 1929–1958 | 246 ft (75 m) | 21 | [194] | |
| Fulton National Bank[k] | 55 Marietta Street NW | 1958–1961 | 295 ft (90 m) | 21 | [195] | |
| One Park Tower | 34 Peachtree Street | 1961–1967 | 439 ft (134 m) | 32 | [64][65] | |
| State of Georgia Building | 2 Peachtree Street NW | 1967–1976 | 556 ft (169 m) | 44 | [36][37] | |
| Westin Peachtree Plaza Hotel | 210 Peachtree Street NW | 1976–1987 | 723 ft (220 m) | 73 | [18][19] | |
| One Atlantic Center | 1201 West Peachtree Street NE | 1987–1992 | 820 ft (250 m) | 50 | [12][13] | |
| Bank of America Plaza | 600 Peachtree Street NE | 1992–present | 1,023 ft (312 m) | 55 | [1][10] |
Skylines
Notes
- This building's height is listed as 395 ft according to the source, which excludes its architectural crown.
- This height is an estimate by the CTBUH.
- This building's height is listed as 411 ft according to the CTBUH. However, measurements on Google Earth indicate that the building is no more than 360 ft tall.
- Sources do not state the exact height of this building. This figure was determined using Google Earth by subtracting the altitude of the building's lowest main pedestrian open-air entrance from the highest architectural point.
- While sources state this building has a height of 299 ft, measurements on Google Earth indicate it is over 330 ft tall.
- Sources do not state the exact height of this building, which is on a slope. This figure was determined using Google Earth by subtracting the altitude of the building's lowest point at ground from its highest architectural point.
- This building was demolished in 1971.[5]
- Official height figures have never been released by this building's developer.
- This building was originally known as the Empire Building (from 1901 until 1920), and was the headquarters of Citizens & Southern National Bank (merged with NationsBank/merged with Bank of America) but has been known as the Georgia State University J. Mack Robinson College of Business Administration Building since 1992.[191]
- This building was originally known as the Rhodes-Haverty Building, but has since been renamed the Marriott Residence Inn-Downtown.
- This building was originally known Fulton National Bank, but has since been renamed 55 Marietta Street.
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- "Advertisement for Fourth National Bank in Atlanta Constitution, January 8, 1905". Archived from the original on June 5, 2015.
- "Candler Building". Skyscraper Source Media. Archived from the original on March 3, 2016.
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Sources
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