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100 North Tampa, formerly known as the Regions Building and the AmSouth Building, is a skyscraper in Tampa, Florida, United States. Rising to a height of 579 feet (176 m) and 42 floors in Downtown Tampa , the structure currently stands as the tallest building in Tampa and the twenty-sixth- tallest building in Florida .
100 North Tampa: 579 (176) 42 1992 Tallest building in Tampa since 1992. Tallest building along Florida's Gulf Coast. Also known as the Regions Building. [2] [8] 2 Bank of America Plaza: 577 (176) 42 1986 Damaged in a 2002 plane crash. Tallest building constructed in Tampa in the 1980s. [3] [9] 3 One Tampa City Center: 537 (164) 38 1981
100 North Tampa: 579 (176) 42 1992 Tampa: Tallest building in Tampa since 1992. Tallest building along Florida's Gulf Coast, and Central Florida. Tallest building constructed in Tampa in the 1990’s. Also known as the Regions Building. [56] 33 Bank of America Plaza: 577 (176) 42 1986 Tampa: Damaged in a 2002 plane crash. Tallest building ...
The KVLY-TV mast is the tallest structure in the United States, at 2,063 ft (629 m) tall Galesville, Wisconsin WKBT-DT tower. This is a list of the tallest structures in the US that are at least 350 meters, ordered by height.
The Bank of America Plaza is a 42-story skyscraper located in Downtown Tampa, in the U.S. state of Florida, and was completed in 1986. At 175.87 m (577.0 ft), it surpassed One Tampa City Center as the tallest building in Tampa, until completion of 100 North Tampa in 1992. The structure was originally known as Barnett Plaza. [1]
At 1,550 feet, the tower is the tallest residential building in the world both by roof height and architectural height. Construction was delayed in 2015 and resumed in 2017. [6] Topped out in September 2019. It is the tallest building outside Asia by roof height. 3 Willis Tower † Chicago: United States 442.1 (1,451) 110 1974
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Height restriction laws are laws that restrict the maximum height of structures. There are a variety of reasons for these measures. There are a variety of reasons for these measures. Some restrictions serve aesthetic values, such as blending in with other housing and not obscuring important landmarks.