List of tallest buildings in Tucson

This is a list of the tallest buildings in Tucson, Arizona.

View of downtown Tucson from (Sentinel Peak) in 2011. Catalina Mountains left in the background. (Original Photo)
Rank Name Image Height
ft (m)
Floors Year Notes
1 One South Church 330 (100) 23[1] 1986 Formerly the Norwest Bank Tower until 2001, the name was changed to UniSource Energy Tower until 2012 when UniSource Energy moved to the new UniSource Energy Building.
2 Bank of America Plaza 264 (80)[2] 16[2] 1977 Originally the Arizona Bank Plaza, the tallest building in Tucson from 1977-1986. The tower has an antenna that reaches up to 360 feet tall.
3 Pima County Legal Services Building 260 (79) 20[3] 1967[4] Originally the Tucson Federal Savings & Loan Association Building or Tucson Federal Building.[5] Tallest building in Tucson from 1967-1977. Otherwise known as Home Federal Tower or Great American Tower.[6]
4 5151 E Broadway 225 (68) 16[7] 1975[8] Originally the Great Western Bank-Pima Savings Building or Great Western Bank Building.[7]
5 Tucson House 195 (59) 17 1963[9] Originally designed by Chicago developers to be a luxury high-rise apartment building with hotel-like amenities. Tallest building in Tucson from 1963-1967, and still the tallest residential building in the city. Currently owned by the City of Tucson and utilized as public housing for the elderly and disabled. [10]
6 Luna 170 (51.6) 14 2013 Construction has been completed. The building is now the tallest all-student residential building in the city.[11][12]
7 Casino Del Sol Hotel Tower ~166 (~50) 10 2011 A 26 ft tall L.E.D. dome sits atop the building.
8 Sol 160 (48.7) 13 2014 A 160 foot tall tower under construction. Private dormitories for University of Arizona students.[13]
9 Hub at Tucson 158 (48.7) 13 2014 A 160 foot tall residential tower. It is 13 stories tall. Private dormitories for University of Arizona students.[14]
10 Pima County Administrative Building 155 (47) 11 1969[15]
11 Transamerica Building 153 (47) 11 1962[16] Originally the Phoenix Title Building, named after its largest tenant.
12 Pioneer Hotel Building 151 (46) 11 1930[17] Originally a hotel. In the early morning hours of December 20, 1970 a fire broke out in the building resulting in the deaths of 29 people. Louis Cuen Taylor, a 16-year-old boy, was later charged with starting the fire. Taylor was sentenced to life in prison; when doubts arose as to the actual cause of the fire, he was allowed to change his plea to "no contest" and was set free after serving 42 years.
13 The Hotel Arizona 150 (45) 12 1973[18] Originally the Braniff Place Tucson or Braniff International Hotel.[19][20]
14 Joint Justice 143 (42.6) 8 2013 A court complex to be operated by Pima County. Frame work and facade are complete.[21]
15 Chase Building 142 (43) 11 1929 Originally the Consolidated National Bank building.
16 Pima County Superior Court Building 137 (42) 9 1974
17 UniSource Energy Building 135 (42) 9[22] 2011 Building will become the new home for Tucson Electric Power and UniSource Energy, it is the first highrise/skyscraper built in Tucson since the mid-1980s.
18 Evo A. DeConcini United States Courthouse 134 (41) 6 2000
19 Gould-Simpson Building 131 (40) 10 1985 Houses technical labs and classrooms on the University of Arizona campus.
20 Merrill Lynch Building 130 (40) 9 1963
21 City Hall Tower 120 (36) 10 1967[4]
22 Federal Building 113 (34) 8 1974[23]
23 St. Marys Hospital 102 (31) 8 1950 [24]

Approved, Proposed, Under Construction or Cancelled

Under Construction

Rank in City After Completion Name Image Height
ft (m)
Floors Year Notes
14 UA Health Sciences Innovation Building 148 (45.1) 9 2018 A new building for the school's nursing, medical, and pharmacy colleges. Lobby space will be used to host school events. Swaim architects. [25]
5 Banner University Medical Center Tucson 196 (59) 9 2019 An expansion to Banner's current property to open in 2019. [26]
21 Aspire Tucson 120 (36) 12 2019 Student housing in the main gate area [27]

Approved and Proposed

Rank in City After Completion Name Image Height
ft (m)
Floors Year Notes
2 75 Broadway 300 (91.44) 20 2020 A 20 story tower with 200,000 square feet of office space. [28]
4 Speedway and Campbell 1 250 (76.2) 20 2019 A proposed tower adjacent to the University of Arizona. Completed complex will have three towers. [29]
16 Speedway and Campbell 2 150 (45.72) 12 2019 A proposed tower adjacent to the University of Arizona [29]
10 Residence Inn Main Gate [30] 160 (48.7) 12 2018 A proposed hotel in the Main Gate Overlay District. UEB Builders is the contractor. On hold [31]

References

  1. "CBRE - One South Church Avenue - Tucson's Premier High-Rise" (PDF). Chapmanmanagementgroup.com. Retrieved 7 July 2018.
  2. 1 2 "'Plaza' keeps rising, giving city new top" Tucson Daily Citizen [Tucson, Arizona] Dec 4,1975 - Page 1
  3. "Sundt Co. Will Construct Tucson Federal Building" Tucson Daily Citizen [Tucson, Arizona] May 22, 1964 - Page 40
  4. 1 2 "City Hall Tower Dedicated" Tucson Daily Citizen [Tucson, Arizona] October 23, 1967 - Page 2
  5. "A New High Point for Tucson Skyline" Tucson Daily Citizen [Tucson, Arizona] March 26, 1965 - Front Page
  6. "Pima County Legal Services Building, Tucson - 127429". Emporis.com. Retrieved 7 July 2018.
  7. 1 2 "Bank project on schedule" Tucson Daily Citizen [Tucson, Arizona] - August 30, 1974 - page 63
  8. "Merrill Lynch move 'didn't miss a lick'" Tucson Daily Citizen [Tucson, Arizona] - May 21, 1975 - page 63
  9. "Historic Miracle Mile : Tucson's Northern Auto Gateway" (PDF). Tucsonaz.gov. Retrieved 7 July 2018.
  10. burnham, wil gerken, nathan hendler, doug floyd, amy. "Tucson Weekly: Homeless No More (March 12 - March 18, 1998)". Tucsonweekly.com. Retrieved 7 July 2018.
  11. "14-story student housing tower tops out". Insidetucsonbusiness.com. Retrieved 7 July 2018.
  12. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2013-01-30. Retrieved 2013-03-30.
  13. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2013-03-24. Retrieved 2013-03-30.
  14. "Core Spaces - Core Spaces". Corecamp.us. Retrieved 7 July 2018.
  15. "County Nears End Of Moving" Tucson Daily Citizen [Tucson, Arizona] September 19, 1969 - Page 37
  16. "Yesterday Was 'M' Day" Tucson Daily Citizen [Tucson, Arizona] - February 12, 1962 - page 20
  17. "Tucson - Hotel Pioneer formally opened." Winslow Daily Mail [Winslow, Arizona] January 4, 1930 - Page Six
  18. "Hotel grand opening is Nov. 29" Tucson Daily Citizen [Tucson, Arizona] October 17, 1973 - Page 24
  19. "Here's how they stack up" Tucson Daily Citizen [Tucson, Arizona] October 19, 1973 - Page 49
  20. "Braniff to run Tucson's new 312-room hotel" The Arizona Republic[Phoenix, Arizona] June 6, 1973 - Page 29
  21. TEP | Company Headquarters Archived 2013-04-11 at Archive.is
  22. "Federal agencies move set" Tucson Daily Citizen [Tucson, Arizona] - April 18, 1974 - page 27
  23. "Tucson - SkyscraperPage.com". Skyscraperpage.com. Retrieved 7 July 2018.
  24. "Project 13-9193 - Planning Design & Construction". Pdc.arizona.edu. Retrieved 7 July 2018.
  25. "Home". Bumct-expansion.com. Retrieved 7 July 2018.
  26. Star, Paul Barlyn For the Arizona Daily. "Work is underway on the newest student housing high-rise near the UA". Arizona Daily Star. Retrieved 2018-04-21.
  27. Foster, Bud. "20-story office, retail project proposed for downtown Tucson". Retrieved 2018-04-21.
  28. 1 2
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