List of tallest buildings in Memphis

This list of tallest buildings in Memphis ranks completed buildings by height in the U.S. city of Memphis, Tennessee, the 28th largest city in the United States. The tallest building is the 100 North Main building at 430 ft (131m), built in 1965. The Sterick Building, 364 ft (111m) was the tallest building in the Southern United States when built in 1930, holding that title until 1932 when surpassed by the Louisiana State Capitol in Baton Rouge.[1] The first skyscraper built in Memphis was the Dr. D.T. Porter Building, 131 ft (40m), in 1895.[2] The tallest man-made structure in the city is the 1003 ft (305.7m) Edwin L. Nass Tower 1, a guyed steel TV transmitting tower located at 5317 Crestview Road in northeast Memphis.[3]

Unlike many other downtowns in the Sun Belt, Memphis did not experience the high-rise building booms of the late 1980s or early 2000s. Only four buildings over 100m have been built in downtown Memphis since World War II: 100 North Main, Raymond James Tower, One Commerce Square, and First Tennessee Bank Building.[2] This has resulted in a smaller, more historic skyline compared to other nearby cities of similar age and population (compare to Atlanta, Nashville, Dallas/Fort Worth, or St. Louis). Three of the tallest in the city are located in the upscale neighborhood of East Memphis: the Clark Tower, the Hilton Memphis, and the White Station Tower.

As of 2018, highrise development plans have seemingly picked up in Memphis, with the long-delayed One Beale Street project getting a completely revised plan of 4 separate components: hotel, residential, office and garage. The hotel component will be built first, and received a ground-breaking date for January 2019. Also, a major renovation of the cities' tallest tower—100 North Main St—which currently sits vacant, was planned and the same owner/developer announced plans for a 26-story Loews brand highrise hotel. This will be built near city hall and the convention center downtown. In addition, there may be a 2nd tower built for either office or residential mixed-use.

Tallest buildings

Rank Name ImageHeight
feet/meters
Floors Year Notes
1 100 North Main 430/130 37 1965 Tallest building in Memphis since 1965. Tallest in Tennessee from 1965-1970. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Currently sits vacant, but major renovation underway. In 2017, new owner who will be gut-renovating and converting to apartments/possibly office use in 2019/2020.
2 Raymond James Tower 403/123 21 1985 Includes the spire atop the building
3 Clark Tower 400/120 34 1971 Tallest building outside of downtown.
4 One Commerce Square 396/121 31 1973
5 Sterick Building 365/111 29 1930 Tallest building in Tennessee and the Southern United States from 1930-1957. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
6 First Tennessee Building 332/101 25 1964
7 Hilton Memphis 329/100 24 1975 Tallest hotel in Memphis.
8 Memphis Pyramid 321/98 5 1991 7th-tallest pyramid and largest Bass Pro Shops in the world. Home to retail, restaurants, an observation deck, a hotel, a bowling alley, and the largest free-standing elevator in America.
9 The Renaissance Apartments 296/90 25 1968 Tallest residential building in Memphis.
10 Lincoln American Tower 290/88 22 1924 Listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
11 White Station Tower 280/85 22 1965
12 Exchange Building 264/80 20 1910 Listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
13 LeBonheur Children's Hospital 251/77 12 2010
14 Sheraton Memphis 233/71 19 1985
15 Madison Hotel 219/67 16 1907 Listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
16 Number 10 Main 215/66 16 1910 Listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
17 The Tower at Peabody Place 202/62 15 1997
18 The Artesian 201/61 16 2015
19 Crosstown Concourse 188/57 14 1927 Former Sears retail store, offices, and catalog order processing warehouse.
20 88 Union Center 177/54 14 1927

Tallest future buildings

Approved

Buildings that are approved for construction in Memphis and expected to rise above 200 feet (60 m) include:

Name Height
feet
Height
meters
Floors Year Notes
18 Main LLC Pinch District Office 325 99 22 2023 Proposed tower adjacent to downtown in the Pinch. Will be one of 5 or 6 towers.
18 Main LLC Pinch District Hotel 300 91 20 2024 Major high rise brand hotel.
18 Main LLC Pinch District Residential 250 76 18 2024 Apartment/Condo high rise in the Pinch District.
18 Main LLC Pinch District Residential 300 91 22 2023 Second high rise residential tower in the Pinch District.
18 Main LLC Mixed use Tower: Residential or office or hotel, TBD. 325 99 24 2023 5th highrise in Pinch Development.
North Main Hotel Loews Brand Convention Center Hotel 300 91 26 2022 Loews Hotel next to convention center.
One Beale Office Component 250 76 16 2022 Mixed use office tower.
The Clipper Office Tower Component 250 76 10 2022 Across street from FedEx Networks new HQ in Gibson Guitar Factory.
The Clipper Hotel Component 225 69 15 2024 Slated to start construction TBD
One Beale Hotel and Residential Component 200 61 12 2022 Second hotel under construction as of Jan 2020.
Union Row Hotel and Residential Component 200 61 12 2022 Starting phase I construction in Q2 2020.
Union Row Hotel High Rise Phase I 225 69 12 2022 Starting phase I construction in Q2 2020. Phase II and III will be another 6 or 8 bldgs.
Sheraton Hotel Tower 2 Hotel High Rise Expansion 200 61 14 2021 300 new hotel rooms announced by Sheraton Downtown Memphis Hotel. New tower to be adjacent to existing.

Timeline of tallest buildings

This lists buildings that once held the title of tallest building in Memphis.

Name Street Address Years as tallest Height
feet
Height
meters
Floors
Number 10 Main 10 South Main Street 1904–1905 216 66 16
Madison Hotel 79 Madison Avenue 1905–1910 232 71 16
Exchange Building 9 North Second Street 1910–1924 264 80 19
Lincoln American Tower 60 North Main Street 1924-1930 290 88 22
Sterick Building 8 North Third Street 1930-1965 365 111 29
100 North Main 100 North Main Street 1965–present 430 130 37

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.