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Marathon Oil Tower is a skyscraper in Uptown Houston. The building rises 562 feet (171 m) in height. [1] It contains 41 floors, and was completed in 1983 and construction only took 22 months. [2] First City Tower currently stands as the 20th-tallest building in the city.
First City Tower, located at 1001 Fannin, is a skyscraper in downtown Houston, Texas. The building rises 662 feet (202 m) in height. [3] Completed in 1981, it contains 49 floors. First City Tower currently stands as the 14th-tallest building in the city.
The downtown skyline of Houston The tallest skyscrapers in Texas. This list of tallest buildings in Texas ranks skyscrapers in the U.S. state of Texas by height. The tallest structure in the state, excluding radio towers, is the JP Morgan Chase Tower, in Houston, which contains 75 floors and is 1,002 ft (305 m) tall.
The building itself occupies a square footprint and spans 21 floors. Its facade is brick cladding set over a concrete-clad steel frame, on top of a granite and limestone base. The inclusion of a two-story parking garage made the Petroleum Building the first known skyscraper to incorporate built-in above-ground parking into its original ...
Allison Tower, formerly Anadarko Tower, is a 32-story, 439 feet (133.81 m) skyscraper located in The Woodlands, Texas.It is currently the tallest building in Montgomery County, Texas and the tallest building between Houston and Dallas.
The Bryan Tower is a skyscraper in Dallas, Texas. The building rises 512 ft (156 m). It contains 40 floors, and was completed in 1973. The Bryan Tower currently stands as the 19th-tallest building in the city. The architect who designed the building was Neuhaus & Taylor. The building is known for its distinctive gold-tinted windows and the ...
Skyscrapers in Texas, United States Wikimedia Commons has media related to Skyscrapers in Texas . Articles in this category should be placed in both a city category and an appropriate building use category.
By the mid-1980s, Austin featured over a dozen skyscrapers, [12] with at least 12 buildings built during the decade featuring at least 15 floors. [18] Described by the Austin American-Statesman as "the first downtown high-rise wave", the uptick in skyscraper construction that began in the 1980s was mostly characterized by granite and limestone ...