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)
“There is no legislationI care not what it istariff, railroads, corporations, or of a general political character, that all equals in importance the putting of our banking and currency system on the sound basis proposed in the National Monetary Commission plan.”
—William Howard Taft (18571930)