Daily Almanac for
Jan 16, 2009
Search White Pages
Info search tips
Bio search tips

World's Tallest Towers

This table provides information about the tallest towers in the world. A tower differs from a building in that the latter has floors, and is designed for residential, business, or manufacturing use. The structures listed here are principally telecommunications towers, and while they may have observation decks or restaurants, they do not have floors all the way up.

Tower, cityYearHeight
(m)
Height
(ft)
Canadian National (CN) Tower,
 Toronto
19755531,815
Ostankino Tower,
 Moscow
19675371,762
KFVS TV Tower,
 Missouri
19605111,677
Oriental Pearl Tower,
 Shanghai
19954681,535
Milad Tower,
 Tehran
20054351,427
Menara Kuala Lumpur,
 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
19964211,403
Tianjin TV Tower,
 Tianjin, China
19914151,362
Central Radio & TV Tower,
 Beijing
19924051,329
Kiev TV Tower,
 Kiev, Ukraine
19733851,263
Tashkent Tower,
 Tashkent, Uzbekistan
19853751,230
Liberation Tower,
 Kuwait City
19963721,221
Alma-Ata Tower,
 Almaty, Kazakhstan
19833711,217
Riga TV Tower,
R iga, Latvia
19873681,209
Fernsehturm Tower,
 Berlin, Germany
19693681,207
Stratosphere Tower,
 Las Vegas, United States
19963501,149
Macau Tower,
 Macau, China
20013381,109
NOTES: This list includes only towers.1 For buildings, see World's Tallest Buildings. Height is from top to bottom, antennas included. Towers and buildings are freestanding structures; this list does not include masts supported by guy wires. The tallest mast currently standing is the KVLY-TV Mast in North Dakota, built in 1963; it is 629 m (2,063 ft) tall. The tallest mast of all time was the Warszawa Radio Mast near Konstantynów, Poland, built in 1974; it was 646 m (2,120 ft) tall before collapsing during renovation work in 1991. (Note that the name of a building or mast may include the word “tower,” but that does not affect its status.) This list also does not include the Petronius Platform, built in 2000 in the Gulf of Mexico, which is 610 m (2,001 ft) tall without its spire, or 640 m (2,100 ft) with it. While it is the world's tallest freestanding structure, 535 m (1,754 ft) of it is underwater and it is partly supported by buoyancy.
Sources: Structurae, Emporis, and other sources.

Information Please® Database, © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.

World's Tallest BuildingsStructures and BuildingsTop Ten Tallest Completed Building Projects, 2005
    • Cite
    • Print
    • Bookmark

More on World's Tallest Towers from Infoplease:


Premium Partner Content
HighBeam Research

Related content from HighBeam Research on: World's Tallest Towers

Tall targets? (International).(Petronas Towers, Malaysia)(Brief Article) (New York Times Upfront)

Kiss the sky: Houk group plans a downtown building that would be L.A.'s tallest residential tower.(Houk Development Co.) (Los Angeles Business Journal)

Plaza Towers Take Shape.(Iowa City's tallest building ) (Midwest Contractor)

Giddy heights (Petronas Twin Towers in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, tallest building in the world). (New Internationalist)

The world's tallest building. (Petronas Towers, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia)(includes related article on taller building planned for Hong Kong) (Popular Mechanics)

Northern star: at the northern limit for tall buildings, Foster's daring Russia tower tests extremes of scale, structure and form. (The Architectural Review)

Tallest ATC tower.(at Orlando International Airport)(Brief Article) (Airports International)

Aussie rules: in the heart of Melbourne, the world's tallest residential tower acts as an agent of densification and regeneration.(Eureka) (The Architectural Review)

This Week: On tap in Evanston: tallest N. Shore tower.(North shore tallest building)(Brief article) (Crain's Chicago Business)

Man on WireA documentary with a difference, Man on Wire recreates the extraordinary events of August 7, 1974, when Philippe Petit, a French street performer, walked a tightrope between the Twin Towers. He had an obsession with conquering tall buildings; in the 1960s he walked between Notre Dame's towers and danced on the high rafters of the Sydney Harbour bridge. (Irish Independent (Dublin, Republic of Ireland))

Additional search results provided by HighBeam Research, LLC. © Copyright 2005. All rights reserved.