| Skyline of Miami | |
|---|---|
| The Miami skyline as seen from Watson Island | |
| Tallest building | Panorama Tower (2017) |
| Tallest building height | 826 ft (252 m) |
| First 150 m+ building | One Biscayne Tower (1973)[1] |
| Number of tall buildings (2026) | |
| Taller than 100 m (328 ft) | 147[2] |
| Taller than 150 m (492 ft) | 69 + 8 T/O[i] |
| Taller than 200 m (656 ft) | 9 + 1 T/O |
| Number of tall buildings — feet | |
| Taller than 300 ft (91.4 m) | 164[3] |
Miami is the second-most populous city in the U.S. state of Florida, while its metropolitan area, with a population of 6.4 million, is the largest in the state. Miami has the third-largest skyline in the United States, after New York City and Chicago, and the fourth largest in North America, trailing behind Toronto.[4] It has over 400 high-rises, 69 of which are taller than 492 feet (150 m) as of 2026, with eight more that are topped out. The tallest building in the city is the 85-story Panorama Tower, completed in 2017, which rises 868 feet (265 m) in Miami's Brickell district. The top ten tallest buildings in Florida are located in Miami, and the top twenty are all in the city's metropolitan area.
The first significant tall building in Miami is considered to be the six-story Burdine's Department Store, built in 1912, while the 17-story, Mediterranean Revival Freedom Tower, completed in 1925, is the city's best-known early skyscraper. For much of the 20th century, Miami had a relatively modest skyline compared to other major American cities. Beginning in the mid-1990s, Miami underwent a large residential high-rise boom that transformed its skyline, and expanded it to the Brickell and Edgewater neighborhoods. Development accelerated in the mid-2000s, until the Great Recession brought an end to the boom. The skyscraper boom resumed in the mid-2010s, owing to the city's continued population growth and investment, with Miami overtaking Houston as the city with the largest skyline in the southern United States, and has continued into the 2020s.
The rate of construction in Miami has been cited as an example of Manhattanization.[5] Of the over 78 completed and topped out skyscrapers taller than 492 ft (150 m) in Miami, only five—less than one twelfth—were built before 2000. Miami is among the fastest-growing skylines in the United States and in North America. Due to the proximity and alignment of the runways of Miami International Airport, there is a height limit of 1,049 feet (320 m) above sea level in the city. The under construction Waldorf Astoria Miami will meet this limit when it is completed in 2028. The 100-story hotel is one of several supertall skyscrapers, buildings taller than 984 ft (300 m), that are approved in Miami, which are all bounded by the limit.
The city's main skyline is located in Greater Downtown Miami which runs north to south along the city's coast on Biscayne Bay, originating from the Central Business District along the Miami River and extending to Brickell in the south, and northwards to the Park West, Arts & Entertainment, and Edgewater districts. It also includes the small triangular island of Brickell Key, just off the coast from Brickell. The skyline is mostly bound to the west by Interstate 95. Unlike many American cities, Miami's skyline is dominated by residential, hotel, and mixed-use towers. Another cluster of high-rises sits in Coconut Grove, southwest of downtown. Several high-rise clusters have risen throughout the metropolitan area, notably around Douglas Road station, and in the nearby cities of Coral Gables, Dadeland, Pompano Beach, Fort Lauderdale, West Palm Beach, Hallandale Beach, Hollywood, Dania Beach, Bal Harbour, North Bay Village, Miami Beach, North Miami Beach, North Miami, Aventura and Sunny Isles Beach, the latter of which has 17 skyscrapers taller than 492 ft (150 m) itself.[6]
History
20th century–2000s
Miami's skyscraper history began in 1912 with the six story Burdine's Department Store, becoming the first skyscraper in Miami. The McAllister Hotel later opened on December 31, 1919, becoming the largest building in Miami located at Flagler Street and Biscayne Blvd, holding the title of tallest building until 1925. The Freedom Tower, built in 1925, is Miami's best-known early skyscraper and remains an icon of the city. From the mid-1990s through the late 2000s, Miami went through the largest building boom in the city's history. In what was dubbed a "Manhattanization wave", there were nearly 60 structures proposed, approved or under construction in the city that were planned to rise over 492 feet (150 m) in height. As a result of the construction boom, only two of the city's 25 tallest buildings were completed before the year 2000, and the city has the third-largest skyline in the United States, generally ranking only behind New York City and Chicago.[7]
The boom, however, ended abruptly around 2008 when the real estate market crashed and the late-2000s recession began. By 2011 the market began to return, with new office and condominium projects such as Brickell House announced for construction beginning in 2012.[8] This was followed by a second boom that is currently active as of January 2019. This second boom has more proposed towers for the region than were built in the first boom from 2003 to 2010.[9] Only 10 buildings out of 80 on the list were built before 2000, and only 18 were built before 2005.
2010s–present
The tallest completed structure is Panorama Tower in Brickell. It reached the height taller than any other building in Miami in August 2017. The auger cast pile deep foundation system for Panorama Tower was installed by HJ Foundation, a subsidiary of Keller Group.[10] Currently under construction are three buildings that are estimated to surpass the Panorama Tower upon completion: Waldorf Astoria Miami, Cipriani Residences Miami, and Okan Tower.
Additionally, the tallest active proposals include One Bayfront Plaza (OBP)[11] and One Brickell City Centre (OBCC),[12] both of which may rise over 1,000 feet (305 m).[13] One Bayfront Plaza is a mixed-use building proposed for 100 South Biscayne Boulevard, approved for construction since 2007, and scheduled to be completed as early as 2018. Since then, it has gone through several design changes and does not have a reliable construction date. By the end of 2016, there were about ten proposals for supertall buildings in downtown and Brickell. In addition to OBCC and OPB, these included The Towers by Foster + Partners, One MiamiCentral, World Trade Center of the Americas, Skyrise (tower), as well as the more speculative Sky Plaza and One Fifth.[14][15]
Tallest buildings
There have been several buildings in Miami that have held the title as the tallest building in the city. While the 5-story Burdine's Department Store was the first high-rise building in the city, the Freedom Tower is generally regarded as Miami's first skyscraper, when it was completed in 1925. The Dade County Courthouse was completed in 1928 and held the title as the tallest building in Miami for 44 years until the completion of One Biscayne Tower in 1972. Southeast Financial Center became the tallest building in 1984. From 2003 to 2008, and again in the late 2010s and early 2020s, the Manhattanization of the city led to a huge amount of new development. Several buildings were constructed, with the Four Seasons Hotel Miami overtaking the Southeast Financial Center when it was completed in 2003. In 2017, Panorama Tower overtook the Four Seasons as the tallest in the city and the state. In a second building boom from 2014 to 2017, many more skyscrapers in excess of 800 feet (240 m) were approved by the FAA, including several 1,000-foot (300 m) supertalls. Many of these were among the top ten tallest buildings in the city. In 2022, the Waldorf Astoria Miami began construction as the city's first supertall building, exceeding 1000 ft.
FAA height limits
Due to the proximity and alignment of the runways of Miami International Airport, the Federal Aviation Administration imposes strict height limits in the downtown Miami area. One Bayfront Plaza[16] was for many years the tallest building ever to be approved for construction in the city, at the maximum FAA height limit of 1,049 feet (320 m), though several other buildings were approved at similar heights since then. It was later reduced and is expected to rise 1,010 feet (308 m), with 80 floors.[17] It also has the distinction of being the first skyscraper over 1,000 feet (305 m), known as a "supertall", to be approved in Miami. Several other buildings have been proposed to rise over 1,000 feet (305 m), including One Brickell City Centre, but have been reduced by the FAA.
Approvals for comparably tall buildings in Miami are very rare due to the proximity of Miami International Airport (MIA). The main runways of MIA align planes taking off and landing directly over the greater downtown area, and for this reason the Federal Aviation Administration sets precise height limits for construction in Downtown Miami. The fate of high rise construction in Miami was greatly threatened by a "One Engine Inoperative" (OEI) policy proposed by the FAA in 2014. This proposal would drastically reduce the maximum permitted height of structures around 388 airports in the country, even causing existing structures to be modified.[18] In the end, the FAA did not go forward with the extreme limitations and even began giving quicker approvals to buildings with heights up to 1,049 feet (320 m), leading to many proposed and approved supertall projects.[14]
Cityscape
Map of tallest buildings
This map shows the location of skyscrapers taller than 492 feet (150 m) in Miami. Each marker is colored by the decade of the skyscraper's completion.
Tallest buildings
This lists ranks the tallest buildings in Miami that stand at least 492 ft (150 m) tall as of 2026, based on standard height measurement. This includes spires and architectural details but does not include antenna masts.[A] Due to strict zoning in the City of Miami and the FAA approval needed for each building, none of the tallest buildings in Miami have a defined spire. Buildings tied in height are sorted by year of completion with earlier buildings ranked first, and then alphabetically.
Was the tallest building in Miami upon completion Architecturally topped out but not yet completed| Rank | Name | Image | Location | Height ft (m) | Floors | Year | Purpose | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Panorama Tower | Brickell
25°45′47″N 80°11′25″W / 25.763161°N 80.190392°W / 25.763161; -80.190392 (Panorama Tower) | 826 (251.9) | 85 | 2017 | Mixed-use | Tallest building in Miami and Florida since 2017, approximately 70th-tallest in the United States. Tallest building in Miami and Florida completed in the 2010s. Mixed use residential, office, and hotel building.[19] | |
| 2 | Aston Martin Residences | Downtown
25°46′14″N 80°11′18″W / 25.77062°N 80.188377°W / 25.77062; -80.188377 (Aston Martin Residences) | 821 (250.2) | 66 | 2022 | Residential | Topped out on December 2021, as the tallest residential building south of New York City. Tallest building in Miami and Florida completed in the 2020s.[20][21] | |
| 3 | Four Seasons Hotel Miami | Brickell | 789 (240.4) | 70 | 2003 | Mixed-use | Had been the tallest building in Miami and Florida from 2003 until 2017. Tallest building completed in Miami and Florida in the 2000s. Mixed-use residential, office, and hotel building.[22][23] | |
| 4 | Southeast Financial Center | Downtown | 764 (232.8) | 55 | 1984 | Office | Tallest all-office building in Miami and Florida; tallest building completed in Miami and Florida in the 1980s.[24] | |
| 5 | 830 Brickell | Brickell
25°45′58″N 80°11′32″W / 25.766043°N 80.192322°W / 25.766043; -80.192322 (830 Brickell) | 724 (220.7) | 57 | 2024 | Office | 649,000 square foot office tower. Second tallest all-office building in Miami.[25][26][27] | |
| 6 | Marquis Miami | Park West
25°47′07″N 80°11′24″W / 25.785233°N 80.189941°W / 25.785233; -80.189941 (Marquis Miami) | 702 (214) | 63 | 2009 | Mixed-use | Mixed-use residential and hotel building[28][29] | |
| 7 | One Thousand Museum | Park West
25°47′03″N 80°11′24″W / 25.784199°N 80.190071°W / 25.784199; -80.190071 (One Thousand Museum) | 699 (213.1) | 60 | 2019 | Residential | [30][31] | |
| 8 | Paramount Miami Worldcenter | Park West | 699 (213.1) | 60 | 2019 | Residential | [32][33] | |
| 9 | E11even Hotel and Residences | – | Park West | 01.0 699 (213) | 65 | 2026 | Mixed-use | The tower broke ground on November 11, 2021, and topped off in early 2025.[34][35] |
| 10 | Brickell Flatiron | Brickell
25°45′50″N 80°11′35″W / 25.763924°N 80.192993°W / 25.763924; -80.192993 (Brickell Flatiron) | 698 (212.9) | 64 | 2019 | Residential | Residential tower with 549 condominiums and 3,716 square meters of ground floor retail. Site is located on the corner of South Miami Avenue and Brickell Plaza. Typical of Miami residential construction, financing will use the Latin American finance method. Construction began in March 2016.[36][37] | |
| 11 | Wells Fargo Center | Downtown
25°46′17″N 80°11′23″W / 25.771261°N 80.189781°W / 25.771261; -80.189781 (Wells Fargo Center) | 655 (199.5) | 47 | 2010 | Office | Formerly known as Met 2 Financial Center.[38][39] | |
| 12 | 900 Biscayne Bay | Park West
25°47′00″N 80°11′24″W / 25.783401°N 80.189957°W / 25.783401; -80.189957 (900 Biscayne Bay) | 650 (198) | 63 | 2008 | Residential | Was the tallest all-residential skyscraper in Miami and Florida until 2019.[40][41] | |
| 13 | Missoni Baia | – | Edgewater
25°48′07″N 80°11′09″W / 25.802021°N 80.185722°W / 25.802021; -80.185722 (Missoni Baia) | 649 (197.8) | 57 | 2023 | Residential | Construction began in October 2017. Topped out in June 2021.[42][43] |
| 14 | Elysee | Edgewater
25°47′56″N 80°11′09″W / 25.799023°N 80.18576°W / 25.799023; -80.18576 (Elysee) | 644 (196.3) | 57 | 2021 | Residential | [44][45] | |
| 15 | The River District First Tower | – | Brickell | 640 (195) | 54 | 2025 | Residential | Also known as Miami River Phase 1. Topped off in August 2023.[46][47] |
| 16 | Echo Brickell | Brickell
25°45′29″N 80°11′33″W / 25.758154°N 80.192436°W / 25.758154; -80.192436 (Echo Brickell) | 637 (194.2) | 57 | 2017 | Residential | [48] | |
| 17 | Aria Reserve North Tower | – | Edgewater
25°48′01″N 80°11′08″W / 25.8004°N 80.18565°W / 25.8004; -80.18565 (Aria Reserve North Tower) | 637 (194.2) | 62 | 2026 | Residential | Tallest residential waterfront twin towers in the United States. Topped off in July 2025.[49][50][51] |
| 18 | Aria Reserve South Tower | – | Edgewater
25°47′59″N 80°11′08″W / 25.7996°N 80.18565°W / 25.7996; -80.18565 (Aria Reserve South Tower) | 637 (194.2) | 60 | 2025 | Residential | The Tallest Residential Waterfront Dual Towers in the United States. Topped off in April 2024.[52][50][53] |
| 19 | Casa Bella | – | Arts & Entertainment District
25°47′21″N 80°11′23″W / 25.78904°N 80.1896°W / 25.78904; -80.1896 (Casa Bella) | 637 (194) | 57 | 2026 | Residential | The Related group is the developer. Topped off in July 2025 as the tallest building in the Arts & Entertainment District.[54] |
| 20 | Mint at Riverfront | Downtown
25°46′10″N 80°11′43″W / 25.769402°N 80.195251°W / 25.769402; -80.195251 (Mint at Riverfront) | 631 (192.3) | 55 | 2009 | Residential | [55] | |
| 21 | Infinity at Brickell | Brickell
25°45′40″N 80°11′40″W / 25.761068°N 80.194443°W / 25.761068; -80.194443 (Infinity at Brickell) | 630 (192) | 52 | 2008 | Mixed-use | Mixed-use residential and office building.[56] | |
| 22 | Miami Tower | Downtown
25°46′20″N 80°11′30″W / 25.772257°N 80.191551°W / 25.772257; -80.191551 (Miami Tower) | 625 (190.5) | 47 | 1987 | Office | Designed by I.M. Pei & Partners. Formerly known as CenTrust Tower and Bank of America Tower. The building contains the Knight Center Metromover station. 216 ultra-modern LED fixtures placed on the setbacks and rooftops of neighboring blocks light the tower in multicolored displays.[57][58] | |
| 23 | Marinablue | Park West
25°46′57″N 80°11′24″W / 25.782461°N 80.189972°W / 25.782461; -80.189972 (Marinablue) | 615 (187.5) | 57 | 2007 | Residential | [59] | |
| 24 | Una Residences | – | Brickell
25°44′58″N 80°12′04″W / 25.749342°N 80.201149°W / 25.749342; -80.201149 (Una Residences) | 613 (186.8) | 47 | 2025 | Residential | [60] |
| 25 | Plaza on Brickell Tower I | Brickell | 610 (185.9) | 56 | 2007 | Residential | [61] | |
| 26 | Epic Residences & Hotel | Downtown | 601 (183.2) | 54 | 2009 | Mixed-use | [62] | |
| 27 | One Paraíso | – | Edgewater
25°48′26″N 80°11′08″W / 25.807234°N 80.18557°W / 25.807234; -80.18557 (One Paraíso) | 601 (183.2) | 53 | 2018 | Residential | Part of Paraiso Bay complex. Approved in July 2013. This twin residential tower project is located on NE 31st Street on the Biscayne Bay waterfront.[63][64] |
| 28 | SLS Brickell | Brickell
25°45′41″N 80°11′37″W / 25.761278°N 80.193695°W / 25.761278; -80.193695 (SLS Brickell) | 599 (182.6) | 52 | 2016 | Mixed-use | Mixed-use residential and hotel building.[65][66] | |
| 29 | SLS Lux | Brickell
25°45′58″N 80°11′35″W / 25.766088°N 80.192978°W / 25.766088; -80.192978 (SLS Lux) | 595 (181.4) | 57 | 2018 | Residential | This is the third tower in the Brickell Heights development project.[67] | |
| 30 | Natiivo | Downtown
25°46′51″N 80°11′30″W / 25.7808286°N 80.1917503°W / 25.7808286; -80.1917503 (Natiivo) | 589 (179.4) | 51 | 2023 | Residential | Includes serviced apartments. Topped out in November 2022. Also known as 601 Miami.[68][69] | |
| 31 | Icon Brickell North Tower | Brickell | 586 (178.6) | 58 | 2008 | Residential | Part of the Icon Brickell development.[70] | |
| 32 | Icon Brickell South Tower | Brickell | 586 (178.6) | 58 | 2008 | Residential | Part of the Icon Brickell development.[71] | |
| 33 | Miami World Tower | Park West
25°46′53″N 80°11′33″W / 25.781527°N 80.192505°W / 25.781527; -80.192505 (Miami World Towers 1) | 579 (176) | 53 | 2024 | Residential | [72] | |
| 34 | Downtown 6th | – | Downtown
25°46′47″N 80°11′34″W / 25.77969°N 80.19283°W / 25.77969; -80.19283 (Downtown 6th) | 574 (175) | 58 | 2026 | Residential | Topped out in early 2026.[73][74] |
| 35 | Lofty Brickell | – | Brickell
25°46′06″N 80°11′43″W / 25.768196°N 80.195303°W / 25.768196; -80.195303 (Lofty Brickell) | 574 (175) | 44 | 2026 | Residential | Project broke ground on January 31, 2022. Topped off in January 2026 with The Standard Residences.[75] |
| 36 | The Standard Residences | – | Brickell
25°46′03″N 80°11′43″W / 25.7676045°N 80.195324°W / 25.7676045; -80.195324 (Lofty Brickell) | 574 (175) | 45 | 2026 | Residential | Constructed alongside Lofty Brickell. Topped off in January 2026 with Lofty Brickell.[76] |
| 37 | The Elser Hotel & Residences | Downtown | 573 (174.7) | 49 | 2022 | Mixed-use | Mixed-use residential and hotel building.[77][78] | |
| 38 | Downtown 1st | Downtown
25°46′23″N 80°11′39″W / 25.773024°N 80.19416°W / 25.773024; -80.19416 (Downtown 1st) | 560 (170.7) | 60 | 2023 | Residential | [79] | |
| 39 | Paramount Bay at Edgewater Square | Edgewater | 555 (169.1) | 47 | 2009 | Residential | Designed by Arquitectonica Architects, Creative Vision by Lenny Kravitz for Kravitz Design Inc.[80][81][82] | |
| 40 | 50 Biscayne | Downtown
25°46′30″N 80°11′17″W / 25.774874°N 80.188095°W / 25.774874; -80.188095 (50 Biscayne) | 554 (168.9) | 55 | 2007 | Mixed-use | Mixed-use residential and hotel building.[83][84] | |
| 41 | Quantum on the Bay South Tower | Arts & Entertainment District | 554 (168.9) | 51 | 2008 | Mixed-use | Mixed-use residential and office building.[85][86] | |
| 42 | Solitair Brickell | Brickell
25°45′58″N 80°11′40″W / 25.7661°N 80.194427°W / 25.7661; -80.194427 (Solitair Brickell) | 550 (167.7) | 50 | 2017 | Residential | 438-unit residential condominium tower. The tower is being built where the parking garage of the Brickell Bayview Center office building had been located. Construction began in July 2015.[87] | |
| 43 | Biscayne Beach | Edgewater
25°48′18″N 80°11′09″W / 25.805067°N 80.185829°W / 25.805067; -80.185829 (Biscayne Beach) | 550 (167.7) | 51 | 2016 | Residential | Residential apartment tower began construction in May 2014. Tower will have 399 units and a private "beach club." Topped of summer 2016.[88] | |
| 44 | Brickell Heights East Tower | Brickell | 549 (167.3) | 52 | 2017 | Residential | Also known as Brickell Heights North Tower. Formerly announced in 2006 as Premiere Towers. The project was cancelled by the Great Recession and re-announced in October 2013 as a twin 690 unit residential tower. Construction began in June 2014.[89] | |
| 45 | 1010 Brickell | Brickell
25°45′51″N 80°11′32″W / 25.764088°N 80.192291°W / 25.764088; -80.192291 (1010 Brickell) | 548 (167) | 50 | 2017 | Residential | 352-unit residential condominium tower. The tower is to be built on the current parking garage of the 1010 Brickell office building. The tower began construction with the demolition of the existing parking garage in Spring 2014.[90] | |
| 46 | ParaisoBay | Edgewater
25°48′25″N 80°11′11″W / 25.806881°N 80.186394°W / 25.806881; -80.186394 (ParaisoBay) | 24.0548 (167) | 55 | 2017 | Residential | Part of the Paraiso Bay complex.[91] | |
| 47 | GranParaiso | Edgewater
25°48′22″N 80°11′12″W / 25.806227°N 80.186668°W / 25.806227; -80.186668 (GranParaiso) | 24.0548 (167) | 55 | 2018 | Residential | Announced in early 2013. Part of the Paraiso Bay complex. Approved in July 2013. This twin residential tower project is located on NE 31st Street on the Biscayne Bay waterfront. Site work construction began June 2014.[92][64] | |
| 48 | Opera Tower | Arts & Entertainment District
25°47′33″N 80°11′14″W / 25.792427°N 80.187126°W / 25.792427; -80.187126 (Opera Tower) | 543 (165.5) | 56 | 2007 | Residential | [93][94] | |
| 49 | W Miami Hotel Tower | Brickell
25°46′07″N 80°11′23″W / 25.76871°N 80.189595°W / 25.76871; -80.189595 (W Miami Hotel Tower) | 542 (165.2) | 50 | 2009 | Mixed-use | Third tower of the Icon Brickell development. Formerly known as Viceroy.[95] | |
| 50 | Vizcayne North Tower | Downtown
25°46′37″N 80°11′19″W / 25.776985°N 80.188614°W / 25.776985; -80.188614 (Vizcayne North Tower) | 538 (164) | 50 | 2008 | Residential | [96][97] | |
| 51 | Vizcayne South Tower | Downtown
25°46′35″N 80°11′21″W / 25.776501°N 80.189049°W / 25.776501; -80.189049 (Vizcayne South Tower) | 538 (164) | 49 | 2008 | Residential | [98][99] | |
| 52 | Avant on Met Square | – | Downtown
25°46′18″N 80°11′18″W / 25.771528°N 80.188469°W / 25.771528; -80.188469 (Avant on Met Square) | 538 (164) | 46 | 2018 | Residential | 391-unit rental apartment tower. Contains restaurant space and 1,778-seat movie theatre. Also contain a Tequesta Indian display after artifacts and structures of the tribe were unearthed at the site. Construction began in July 2015.[100] |
| 53 | Quantum on the Bay North Tower | Arts & Entertainment District | 536 (163.4) | 44 | 2008 | MIxed-use | Mixed-use residential and office tower.[101][102] | |
| 54 | Aria On The Bay | Arts & Entertainment District
25°47′37″N 80°11′13″W / 25.793482°N 80.186989°W / 25.793482; -80.186989 (Aria On The Bay) | 535 (163) | 50 | 2017 | Residential | 647 Unit condo tower by Melo Group. Construction began in April 2015.[103] | |
| 55 | Ten Museum Park | Park West
25°47′05″N 80°11′24″W / 25.784615°N 80.19010°W / 25.784615; -80.19010 (Ten Museum Park) | 530 (161.5) | 50 | 2007 | Residential | [104][105] | |
| 56 | Brickell Heights West Tower | Brickell | 529 (161.2) | 52 | 2017 | Residential | Also known as Brickell Heights South Tower. Formerly announced in 2006 as Premiere Towers. The project was cancelled by the Great Recession and re-announced in October 2013 as a twin 690 unit residential tower. Construction began in June 2014 and topped out fall 2016.[106] | |
| 57 | Jade at Brickell Bay | Brickell
25°45′37″N 80°11′22″W / 25.760363°N 80.189491°W / 25.760363; -80.189491 (Jade at Brickell Bay) | 528 (160.9) | 49 | 2004 | Residential | [107] | |
| 58 | Plaza on Brickell Tower II | Brickell | 524.9 (160.0) | 48 | 2007 | Residential | [108][109] | |
| 59 | 2600 Biscayne | – | Edgewater
25°48′07″N 80°11′23″W / 25.80193°N 80.18963°W / 25.80193; -80.18963 (Viceroy Brickell) | 521 (158.8) | 41 | 2026 | Mixed-use | Topped out in September 2025.[110] |
| 60 | Santa Maria | Brickell
25°45′20″N 80°11′42″W / 25.755426°N 80.194962°W / 25.755426; -80.194962 (Santa Maria) | 520 (158.5) | 51 | 1997 | Residential | Tallest building completed in Miami in the 1990s.[111] | |
| 61 | Rise | Brickell
25°46′01″N 80°11′41″W / 25.76689°N 80.194695°W / 25.76689; -80.194695 (Rise) | 520 (158.5) | 45 | 2016 | Residential | Part of the Brickell City Centre project, which also includes construction of 520,000 square ft (48,310 square m) of retail, and two office towers with a height of 262 ft (80 m) each.[112][113] | |
| 62 | EAST Miami | Brickell
25°46′00″N 80°11′34″W / 25.766745°N 80.192703°W / 25.766745; -80.192703 (EAST Miami) | 516 (157.3) | 44 | 2015 | Mixed-use | Part of the Brickell City Centre project.[114] | |
| 63 | The Ivy | Downtown
25°46′13″N 80°11′43″W / 25.77029°N 80.195274°W / 25.77029; -80.195274 (The Ivy) | 512 (156.2) | 45 | 2008 | Residential | [115][116] | |
| 64 | Stephen P. Clark Government Center | Downtown | 510 (155.4) | 28 | 1985 | Office | Also known as Government Center and Miami-Dade Center[117] | |
| 65 | Brickell House | Brickell
25°45′37″N 80°11′25″W / 25.760416°N 80.190361°W / 25.760416; -80.190361 (Brickell House) | 509 (155) | 48 | 2014 | Residential | Tallest building completed in Miami in the first half of the 2010s.[118][119] | |
| 66 | Parkline South | – | Downtown
25°46′42″N 80°11′45″W / 25.778221°N 80.195808°W / 25.778221; -80.195808 (Parkline South) | 506 (154.2) | 33 | 2019 | Residential | Part of the MiamiCentral Complex.[120] |
| 67 | Reach | Brickell
25°46′04″N 80°11′33″W / 25.767895°N 80.192558°W / 25.767895; -80.192558 (Reach) | 503 (153.3) | 44 | 2016 | Residential | Part of the Brickell City Centre project.[121][122] | |
| 68 | JW Marriott Marquis Miami | Downtown | 502 (153.1) | 41 | 2010 | Hotel | Also known as the Met 2 Marriott Marquis. Connected to the Wells Fargo Center.[123][124] | |
| 69 | Wind | Downtown
25°46′14″N 80°11′39″W / 25.770571°N 80.19413°W / 25.770571; -80.19413 (Wind) | 501 (152.7) | 41 | 2008 | Residential | [125][126] | |
| 70 | 1450 Brickell | Brickell
25°45′31″N 80°11′35″W / 25.758621°N 80.193169°W / 25.758621; -80.193169 (1450 Brickell) | 500 (152.5) | 34 | 2010 | Office | Formerly known as Park Place at Brickell II. 1450 Brickell has been certified gold by The Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) Green Building Rating System.[127][128] | |
| 71 | Paraiso Bayviews | – | Edgewater
25°48′25″N 80°11′15″W / 25.806898°N 80.187416°W / 25.806898; -80.187416 (Paraiso Bayviews) | 500 (152.4) | 44 | 2018 | Residential | Construction began in 2015. Part of the Paraiso Bay complex.[64][129] |
| 72 | Hamilton House | – | Edgewater
25°48′30″N 80°11′08″W / 25.808462°N 80.185661°W / 25.808462; -80.185661 (Hamilton House) | 497 (151.4) | 38 | 2026 | Residential | [130] |
| 73 | Downtown 5th East | – | Downtown
25°46′45″N 80°11′34″W / 25.77928°N 80.1929°W / 25.77928; -80.1929 (Downtown 5th East) | 495 (151) | 52 | 2021 | Residential | [131] |
| 74 | Downtown 5th West | – | Downtown
25°46′45″N 80°11′36″W / 25.77928°N 80.1934°W / 25.77928; -80.1934 (Downtown 5th West) | 495 (151) | 52 | 2021 | Residential | [132] |
| 75 | Avenue Brickell Tower | Brickell
25°45′47″N 80°11′31″W / 25.76317°N 80.191864°W / 25.76317; -80.191864 (Avenue Brickell Tower) | 495 (150.9) | 47 | 2007 | Residential | [133] | |
| 76 | Bezel at Miami Worldcenter | Park West | 494 (150.6) | 42 | 2021 | Residential | Also known as LUMA at Miami Worldcenter[134] | |
| 77 | One Biscayne Tower | Downtown
25°46′26″N 80°11′17″W / 25.77393°N 80.188042°W / 25.77393; -80.188042 (One Biscayne Tower) | 492 (150.0) | 39 | 1973 | Office | Tallest building built in Miami in the 1970s. Surpassed as tallest by Wachovia Financial Center (now Southeast Financial Center) in 1984.[135][136] |
Tallest buildings by neighborhood
This lists the tallest building in each neighborhood, district, or sub-district of Miami. Note that all buildings over 400 feet (120 m) are within the Greater Downtown area between the Julia Tuttle Causeway and Rickenbacker Causeway, east of Interstate 95. The "Year" column indicates the year in which a building was completed or topped-out for still under construction or stalled buildings. A dash "–" indicates a building's exact height is unknown.
| District | Name | Height ft (m) | Floors | Year | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brickell | Panorama Tower | 868 (265) | 85 | 2017 | [19] |
| Central Business District (Downtown) | Aston Martin Residences | 817 (249) | 66 | 2022 | [20] |
| Park West | One Thousand Museum | 709 (216) | 62 | 2018 | [137] |
| Edgewater | Elysee Miami | 649 (197) | 57 | 2019 | [138] |
| Arts & Entertainment District | Casa Bella | 637 (194) | 57 | 2025 | [54] |
| Brickell Key | Asia | 483 (147) | 36 | 2008 | [139] |
| Wynwood | Hyde Midtown | 372 (113) | 31 | 2017 | [140] |
| Coconut Grove | Grovenor House | 341 (104) | 33 | 2006 | [141] |
| Allapattah | River Landing Residences | – | 26 | 2021 | [142] |
Tallest under construction or approved
Under construction
This lists buildings that are currently under construction in Miami and are planned to rise at least 492 feet (150 m) as of 2026. Buildings that have already been topped out are moved to the main list. Table entries with dashes (—) indicate that information regarding expected building dates of completion has not yet been released. The year column indicates the estimated year of completion. Buildings on hold are not included.
| Name | Location | Height ft (m) | Floors | Year | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Waldorf Astoria Miami | Downtown | 1,041 (317.3) | 100 | 2027 | Announced in 2015. It will be one of the tallest buildings in Miami, the State of Florida and the Southern United States. Construction had commenced after the groundbreaking ceremony in October 2022.[143] |
| Cipriani Residences Miami | Brickell | 939 (286.2) | 80 | 2028 | Construction had started after the site's groundbreaking ceremony took place on February 6, 2024. On site of former Capital at Brickell or CCCC Miami site. |
| Okan Tower | Downtown | 903 (275.2) | 70 | 2027 | Will contain 149 condominiums and be one of Miami's tallest buildings when completed. Construction plans have resumed after being suspended due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[144][145] |
| 1428 Brickell | Brickell | 01.0 861 (262) | 71 | 2027 | 189-unit luxury building will also be the world's the first residential high-rise in the world partially powered by the sun, the developer says, with 500 photovoltaic-integrated windows |
| Baccarat Residences | Brickell | 835 (254.5) | 75 | 2028 | Archaeologists discovered human remains and artifacts at the site in 2021.[146] Construction on the site has been paused so archaeologists can conduct a dig. Construction had commenced on October 30, 2023, after a groundbreaking ceremony took place on the site.[147] |
| Mercedes-Benz Places | Brickell | 773 (235.6) | 67 | 2027 | Large mixed-use project adjacent to Southside Park next to Brickell station. Formerly named 1 Southside Park.[148] |
| JEM Private Residences | Park West | 700 (213.3) | 67 | 2027 | [149] |
| E11even Residences Beyond | Park West | 01.0 699 (213) | 65 | 2026 | Broke ground in summer of 2023.[150] |
| Villa Miami | Edgewater | 650 (198) | 56 | 2027 | One Thousand Group is the developer.[151] |
| The St. Regis Residences, Miami | Brickell | 639 (195) | 50 | 2027 | [152] |
| West Eleventh Residences | Park West | 01.0 493 (150) | 44 | 2027 | Groundbreaking took place on September 26, 2024.[153] |
Timeline of tallest buildings
| Name | Image | Street address | Years as tallest | Height ft / m | Floors | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Burdine's Department Store | 22 E Flagler St | 1912–1917 | N/A | 6 | At the intersection of Flagler Street and Miami Avenue, the center of the Miami road grid. | |
| Ralston Building[B] | 40 NE 1st Avenue | 1917 | 88 (27) | 8 | This building was originally known as the Ralston Building, but has since been renamed the Carrion Jewelry Center.[154] | |
| McAllister Hotel | 50 Biscayne Boulevard | 1917–1925 | 120 (37) | 10 | Demolished in 1988. Currently the location of 50 Biscayne.[155][156] | |
| Freedom Tower | 600 Biscayne Boulevard | 1925–1928 | 256 (78) | 17 | Tallest building in Florida upon completion until surpassed in 1926 by the Biltmore Hotel in Coral Gables.[157][158] | |
| Dade County Courthouse | 75 West Flagler Street | 1928–1972 | 360 (110) | 28 | Tallest building in Florida from 1928 to 1967.[159][160] | |
| One Biscayne Tower | 2 South Biscayne Boulevard | 1972–1984 | 492 (150) | 39 | [135][136] | |
| Southeast Financial Center | 200 South Biscayne Boulevard | 1984–2003 | 764 (233) | 55 | Tallest building in Florida during the same period.[24][161] | |
| Four Seasons Hotel Miami | 1441 Brickell Avenue | 2003–2017 | 789 (240) | 64 | Tallest building in Florida during the same period.[22][162] | |
| Panorama Tower | 1101 Brickell Avenue | 2017–present | 868 (265) | 85 | Tallest building in Florida. |
See also
- List of tallest buildings in Florida
- List of tallest buildings in Fort Lauderdale
- List of tallest buildings in Jacksonville
- List of tallest buildings in Miami Beach
- List of tallest buildings in Orlando
- List of tallest buildings in Sunny Isles Beach
- List of tallest buildings in St. Petersburg
- List of tallest buildings in Tampa
- List of tallest buildings in Tallahassee
Notes
- Topped-out
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External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Miami, Florida skylines.- Diagram of Miami skyscrapers on SkyscraperPage
- Miami structures on Structurae
- Miami's Future Skyscrapers – Metro Atlantic