List of buildings by height
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This is a List of buildings by height:
Tall buildings (180 feet or more)
Mid-rise buildings (100 to 179 feet)
- Protective Life building (Commerce Center, 1928), 168 feet
- UAB administration building (Central Bank and Trust building, 1967), 165 feet
- Patriot Center (1974), 160 feet
- Redmont Hotel (1925), 160 feet
- Stonewall Building, 160 feet
- Children's Hospital Harbert Tower (2012), 159 feet
- Birmingham VA Medical Center, 153 feet
- Highland Manor, 15 stories
- Park Place Tower, 15 stories
- Doubletree Hotel Birmingham, 14 floors
- Birmingham City Hall, 133 feet
- Woodward Building, 132 feet
- Massey Building, 130 feet
- Jefferson County Courthouse (1931), 128 feet
- Farley Building, 126 feet
- Frank Nelson Building, 120 feet
- Pizitz Department Store, 120 feet
- Title Building, 120 feet
- Jackson Building, 120 feet
- Colonial Plaza, 12 stories
- Building Trades Towers, 12 stories
- Princeton Towers I, 12 stories
- Faculty Office Tower, 12 stories
- James C. Lee Building, 12 floors
- Westin Birmingham, 119 feet, 9 floors
- Highland Towers, 117 feet
- Claridge Manor Apartments, 115 feet, 10 floors
- Liberty National Building (Pioneer Building, 1925), 115 feet, 10 floors
- Transportation Building, 115 feet
- Sparks Center, 110 feet
- 2600 Highland Avenue, 11 floors
- Camp Hall, 11 stories
- One Concord Center, 11 floors
- One Federal Place, 11 floors
- Park Tower, 11 stories
- Social Security Building (1974), 11 floors
- UAB Inpatient Rehabilitation Hospital (2025), 11 stories
- Sheraton Apartments, 107 feet
- Arlington Crest, 10 floors
- Carraway Hospital, 10 floors
- Medical Forum, 10 floors
- New Pilgrim Towers (1980), 10 floors
- Tinsley Harrison Tower, 10 floors
- Town House Apartments, 10 floors
- YWCA Building, 10 floors
- West Pavilion, 10 floors
- Zeigler Research Building, 10 floors
Tall uninhabited structures
- WBRC Tower, 1,378 feet
- WVTM Tower, 1,339 feet
- WIAT Tower (1974), 1,194 feet
- WTTO Tower (1986), 1,062 feet
- TopGolf (2018) range net, 170 feet
Notable demolished buildings
- Tutwiler Hotel (1914), 175 feet
- Parliament House, 142 feet
- Ramsay-McCormack Tower, 122 feet
- YMCA (1911), 120 feet
- Essex House, 116 feet
- Molton Hotel, 106 feet
- Roden Hotel, 12 floors
- Denman Hall, 10 floors
Notable unbuilt proposals
- Shepherd Centre Building 1, 72 floors
- Shepherd Centre Building 2, 44 floors
- Melaver proposal, 18 floors
- Daniel Corporation Office Tower, 17 floors
- Corporate Realty Development proposal, 16 floors
- Summit Condominiums, 15 floors
- University Tower, 15 floors
- Renaissance Plaza, 14 floors
- Westin Grand Bohemian, 14 floors
- Standard at Midtown, 11 floors
- 2040 Highland Avenue, 10 floors
Notes
- Heights are to the main roof, not to spires or other appurtenances. Heights are as given by Skyscraperpage.com and Emporis.com unless more accurate information is available. The cutoff for this listing is 100 feet or 10 stories.
- It is often related that Federal Aviation Administration rules limit the height of buildings in downtown Birmingham. The FAA has indeed published regulations that would effectively limit the heights of structures near airports. In 1963 it was hoped that some of those "glide path restrictions" would soon be relaxed and a new zoning code was proposed to allow for buildings to be constructed to 1,143 feet above mean sea level (or approximately 535 feet above the average downtown grade of 608). The agency would still have the authority to review zoning ordinances and specific plans for tall buildings for their potential impact on airport operations. However, no specific height limit for downtown Birmingham structures is currently recognized. (Bennett-1963), (West-2016)
References
- Bennett, James (August 22, 1963) "50 Story Buildings OK is Aim" Birmingham Post-Herald - via Birmingham Public Library Digital Collections
- "Slideshow: Birmingham's tallest buildings" (September 29, 2011) Birmingham Business Journal
- West, Ty (January 7, 2016) "Throwback Thursday: Remember when a 72-story skyscraper was proposed in downtown Birmingham?" Birmingham Business Journal