Tallest Approved or Proposed
This lists buildings that are approved or proposed for construction in Atlanta and are planned to rise at least 400 feet (122 m). A floor count of 40 stories is used as the cutoff in place of a height of 400 feet (122 m) for buildings whose heights have not yet been released by their developers.
Name | Height* |
Floors | Year* | Status | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
TWELVE Midtown | 746 (227) | 58 | — | Proposed | Considered to be a stale proposal |
Mandarin Oriental Hotel & Residences Atlanta | 700 (213) | 50 | — | Proposed | |
1506 Spring Street | 586 (179) | 50 | — | Proposed | |
TWELVE Centennial Park Tower II | 520 (159) | 37 | — | Approved | |
50 Allen Plaza | 501 (152) | 34 | — | Approved | Development is on-hold |
Aquarius Tower | 500 (152) | 38 | — | Proposed | Considered to be a stale proposal |
Post Park at 16 Allen Plaza | 468 (143) | 40 | — | Proposed | |
Peachtree and Seventh | 468 (143) | 40 | — | Proposed | |
Rooms To Go Tower | 468 (143) | 40 | — | Proposed | Considered to be a stale proposal |
Cousins Residential Tower II | 468 (143) | 40 | — | Proposed | |
Cousins Residential Tower III | 468 (143) | 40 | — | Proposed | |
Trilogy III | 468 (143) | 40 | — | Proposed | |
Trilogy II | 468 (143) | 40 | — | Proposed | |
1506 Spring Street | — | 50 | — | Proposed | Considered to be a stale proposal |
SunTrust Plaza Phase 3 | — | 40 | — | Proposed | Considered to be a stale proposal |
* Table entries with dashes (—) indicate that information regarding building heights or dates of completion has not yet been released.
Read more about this topic: List Of Tallest Buildings In Atlanta
Famous quotes containing the words tallest and/or proposed:
“But not the tallest there, tis said,
Could fathom to this ponds black bed.”
—Edmund Blunden (18961974)
“He [Roosevelt] has made some speeches that indicate that he is going quite beyond anything that he advocated when he was in the White House, and has proposed a program which is absolutely impossible to carry out except by a revision of the Constitution.”
—William Howard Taft (18571930)