Tallest Buildings
This list ranks Indianapolis skyscrapers that stand at least 200 feet (61 m) tall, based on standard height measurement. This includes spires and architectural details but does not include antenna masts. An equal sign (=) following a rank indicates the same height between two or more buildings. The "Year" column indicates the year in which a building was completed.
Rank | Name | Height |
Floors | Year | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
01.01 | Chase Tower | 830 (253) | 49 | 1990 | 170th-tallest building in the world, 38th-tallest in the United States. Has been the tallest building in the city and the state since 1990. Tallest building in the Midwestern U.S. outside of Chicago and Cleveland. Tallest building constructed in Indianapolis in the 1990s. Formerly known as Bank One Tower. |
02.02 | OneAmerica Tower | 533 (162) | 38 | 1982 | Tallest building constructed in the city during the 1980s. Formerly known as the AUL Tower. |
03.03 | One Indiana Square | 504 (154) | 36 | 1970 | Tallest building completed in Indianapolis during the 1970s. |
04.04 | Market Tower | 421 (128) | 32 | 1988 | |
05.05 | 300 North Meridian | 408 (124) | 28 | 1989 | |
06.06 | M&I Plaza | 401 (122) | 31 | 1988 | |
07.07 | JW Marriott Indianapolis | 376 (115) | 34 | 2011 | |
07.08 | City-County Building | 372 (113) | 28 | 1962 | Tallest building constructed in the city during the 1960s. |
08.09 | 101 West Ohio | 360 (110) | 22 | 1987 | |
09.010 | AT&T Building | 321 (98) | 22 | 1932 | When completed in the 1930s, the building was only seven floors high. Additions in the 1940s and 1960s brought it to its current height. |
10.011 | Capital Center South Tower | 311 (95) | 22 | 1987 | |
11.012 | Hilton Indianapolis | 302 (92) | 18 | 1971 | Tallest all-hotel building in Indiana. |
12.013= | Riley Towers I | 295 (90) | 30 | 1963 | Tied with Riley Towers II as the tallest residential building in the city and the state. |
12.013= | Riley Towers II | 295 (90) | 30 | 1963 | Tied with Riley Towers I as the tallest residential building in the city and the state. |
14.015 | Conrad Indianapolis | 287 (87) | 23 | 2006 | |
15.016 | AT&T 220 Building | 284 (87) | 23 | 1974 | Formerly known as the SBC 220 Building. |
16.0 | Soldiers' and Sailors' Monument | 284 (87) | 3 | 1902 | Was the tallest structure in Indianapolis until the completion of the City-County Building in 1962. |
17.017 | Market Square Center | 283 (86) | 20 | 1975 | |
18.018 | Lucas Oil Stadium | 270 (82) | 7 | 2008 | |
19.019 | Hyatt Regency Indianapolis | 268 (82) | 22 | 1977 | Tallest mixed use building in the city. |
20.020 | Simon Property Group Headquarters | 259 (79) | 14 | 2006 | |
21.021 | Indiana Statehouse | 255 (78) | 4 | 1888 | |
22.022 | Fifth Third Bank Tower | 246 (75) | 17 | 1983 | |
23.023 | Barnes and Thornburg Building | 245 (75) | 17 | 1909 | Formerly known as the Merchants Bank Building. |
24.024 | 8888 Keystone Crossing | 229 (70) | 18 | 1988 | |
25.025 | Hilton Garden Inn | 218 (66) | 16 | 1915 | Formerly known as the Fletcher Trust Building. |
26.026 | Sheraton Indianapolis City Centre | 217 (66) | 21 | 1969 | Formerly known as the Radisson Hotel City Centre. |
27.027= | Indianapolis Marriott Downtown | 214 (65) | 19 | 2001 | |
27.027= | Indiana Government Center North | 214 (65) | 14 | 1960 | |
28.029 | One North Pennsylvania | 212 (65) | 16 | 1908 | |
28.030 | James Whitcomb Riley Hospital for Children Expansion Tower | 210 (64) | 10 | 2009 | |
29.031 | 30 South Meridian | 206 (63) | 13 | 1929 | |
30.032 | 110 East Washington Street | 200 (61) | 15 | 1921 |
Read more about this topic: List Of Tallest Buildings In Indianapolis
Famous quotes containing the words tallest and/or buildings:
“But not the tallest there, tis said,
Could fathom to this ponds black bed.”
—Edmund Blunden (18961974)
“Now, since our condition accommodates things to itself, and transforms them according to itself, we no longer know things in their reality; for nothing comes to us that is not altered and falsified by our Senses. When the compass, the square, and the rule are untrue, all the calculations drawn from them, all the buildings erected by their measure, are of necessity also defective and out of plumb. The uncertainty of our senses renders uncertain everything that they produce.”
—Michel de Montaigne (15331592)