![]() The 300 foot threshold is still a tall building from an average standpoint-anywhere from 20-30 floors, which ain't too shabby at all. I know you have the + though, I guess that covers potential error. For example, Philadelphia has 7 under construction (over 300'). I like seeing the 300' threshold rather than 500' or taller, gives a better idea of mid/high-rise density.Īlso, the "under construction" seems low for several cities. Interesting, the top 10 aren't shocking though. *Bubbling under at 26 Phoenix, 20+ total, 2+ under constructionĢ5 Cleveland, 21+ total, 2+ under constructionĢ4 New Orleans, 26+ total, 1 under constructionĢ3 Nashville, 29+ total, 7+ under constructionĢ2 Baltimore, 31+ total, 2+ under constructionĢ1 Pittsburgh, 32+ total, 1+ under constructionĢ0 Charlotte, 35+ total, 3+ under constructionġ9 Detroit, 36+ total, 3+ under constructionġ8 Minneapolis, 41+ total, 2+ under constructionġ7 San Diego, 42+ total, 2+ under constructionġ6 Jersey City, 44+ total, 4+ under constructionġ5 Austin, 48+ total, with 15+ under constructionġ4 Honolulu, 50+ total, with 2+ under constructionġ3 Denver, 52+ total, with 4+ under constructionġ2 Las Vegas, 55+ total, 2+ under constructionġ1 Boston, 55+ total, with 5+ under constructionġ0 Los Angeles, 58+ total, 8+ under constructionĩ Dallas, 60+ total, with 4+ under constructionĨ Atlanta, 65+ total, with 3+ under constructionħ Seattle, 75+ total, with 10+ under constructionĦ Philadelphia, 75+ total, with 3+ under constructionĥ Houston, 85+ total, with 8+ under constructionĤ San Francisco, 100+ total, with 5+ under constructionģ Miami, 125+ total, with 7+ under constructionĢ Chicago, 300+ total, with 10+ under constructionġ New York City, 900+ total, with 15+ under construction ![]() ![]() But things are starting to ramp up again, as the recovery happens and economic conditions improve. The fascinating thing to watch here, are the high-growth sunbelt cities starting to catch up and pass, some of the traditional rust belt cities.Īlso, COVID-19 really scaled back the number of "under construction" in most cities. The numbers could be a bit off, but it's a good snapshot of where the rankings lie for each city. I pulled the info from Wikipedia, Emporis and Skyscraper Page, as well as SkyscraperCity. The numbers as they get higher, are estimates. Below are the top 25 US Cities with a rough snapshot of the most skyscrapers over 300 feet high, as of July 2021. ![]()
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