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Gunwharf Quays and a section of the Portsmouth skyline Portsmouth's two tallest structures viewed from Portsmouth harbour. This list of the tallest buildings and structures in Portsmouth ranks skyscrapers and structures in Portsmouth, England by height. Only structures taller than 150 feet (46 m) are listed below.
At a height of 560 feet (170 m), the tower is one of the tallest accessible structures in the United Kingdom outside London. The tower is visible around Portsmouth, changing the horizon of the area. It can be seen from the Isle of Wight , the Manhood Peninsula , Highdown Gardens and Cissbury Ring in Worthing and Nine Barrow Down in the Purbeck ...
The construction of Building 3 (109 m (358 ft)) commenced in 2024 [2] and is expected to be completed in 2026. [3] The full scheme is anticipated to be built over the course of seven years, [2] or 2031 (estimate). The tallest tower will reportedly form the third phase; [10] the timescale for which has yet to be publicised.
Tallest building in the world from 2004 till 2010; tallest building in Taiwan [25] 12 Shanghai World Financial Center: 492.0 1,614 101 (+ 3 below ground) Shanghai China: 2008 [26] 13 International Commerce Centre: 484.0 1,588 108 (+ 4 below ground) Hong Kong China: 2010 Tallest building in Hong Kong [27] 14 Wuhan Greenland Center: 475.6 1,560
The Obel Tower is a highrise building in Belfast, Northern Ireland, located on Donegall Quay on the River Lagan beside the Lagan Weir.Measuring 85 metres (279 ft) in height, [4] [5] the tower is the tallest storeyed building in Ireland, dominating the Belfast skyline.
Eda (short for Erie Dock Apartments [3] and formerly Anchorage Gateway), [4] is a 101-metre-tall (331 ft), 29-storey residential skyscraper in Salford Quays, Greater Manchester, England. It was designed by Chapman Taylor , [ 2 ] with Jon Matthews Architects as the delivery architect. [ 5 ]
Terminological and listing criteria follow Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat definitions. Guyed masts are differentiated from towers – the latter not featuring any guy wires or other support structures; and buildings are differentiated from towers – the former having at least 50% of occupiable floor space although both are self-supporting structures.
It is the tallest building in Wales. Standing at 107 m (351 ft), Meridian Quay is the only skyscraper in Wales (buildings over 100 m tall) and one of several high-rises in Swansea. [1] Initially known as Ferrara Tower, it was part of the £50 million Meridian Quay housing and office development project. [2]