List of tallest buildings in Los Angeles

The Wilshire Grand Center is the tallest building in Los Angeles, California, measuring 1,100 feet (335.3 m) in height. The Wilshire Grand became the city's tallest building upon its completion 2017, and is also currently the tallest building in the state, the tallest building in the U.S. west of the Mississippi River, as well as the 15th-tallest building in the U.S. overall.

Los Angeles skyline in 2024, with Downtown Los Angeles in the background and Westwood in the foreground
Bunker Hill in Downtown Los Angeles

The 73-story U.S. Bank Tower, which rises 1,018 feet (310 m) in Downtown Los Angeles and was completed in 1989,[1] is now the second-tallest building in Los Angeles.

Six of the ten tallest buildings in California are located in Los Angeles.[2] The history of skyscrapers in Los Angeles began with the 1903 completion of the Braly Building, which is often regarded as the first high-rise in the city;[3] it rises 13 floors and 151 feet (46 m) in height.[4] The building, originally constructed as a commercial structure, has since been renovated into a residential tower and is now known as the "Continental Building".[3]

In 1904, Los Angeles imposed height restrictions throughout the city, prohibiting the construction of any building taller than 150 feet (46 m). An exception was made for Los Angeles City Hall, built from 1926 to 1928, which stands at 454 feet (138 m). This effectively limited the height of non-government buildings to 13 stories, and was intended to address local concerns about growing congestion and over development at the time. That height limit was lifted in Downtown Los Angeles by the city government in 1957. By 1958 they imposed a flat roof ordinance on all new high-rises, which was to accommodate fire-fighting equipment.[5]

Los Angeles (and especially downtown) then went through a large building boom that lasted from the early 1960s to the early 1990s, during which time the city saw the completion of 17 of its 30 tallest buildings, including the U.S. Bank Tower, the Aon Center, and Two California Plaza.[6] Modern skyscrapers are difficult and expensive to construct in Los Angeles, as well as the resulting difficulty of adhering to the city's rigorous engineering standards. Nevertheless, a number of successful and iconic skyscrapers dot the Los Angeles skyline from Downtown Los Angeles (DTLA) through Koreatown, along the Wilshire Corridor and Miracle Mile, in addition to Century City and other areas of the city's west side. Other skyscraper hubs in Los Angeles include Century Boulevard by Los Angeles International Airport (LAX), the Hollywood district in central Los Angeles, as well as Warner Center, Encino and Universal City in the San Fernando Valley. Los Angeles's west side has so many skyscrapers that often Wilshire Boulevard in the Westwood District and Century City's skyscrapers are confused with being DTLA by visitors arriving from LAX. The flat roof ordinance was rescinded in 2014.

As of August 2023, Los Angeles has over 816 high-rise buildings over 100 feet (30 m), most as low rise apartment buildings,[7][8] 54 buildings over 400 feet (120 m),[9] and 21 buildings over 600 feet (183 m), including two supertalls over 1,000 feet (305 m), the Wilshire Grand and U.S. Bank Tower.[10][11][12] Its skyline is ranked first in the Pacific coast region and fifth in the United States, after New York City, Chicago, Miami and Houston.[note 1]


Tallest buildings

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The tallest buildings in Los Angeles

Buildings in the height range.

1,000 ft
(305 m) +
900 to 999 ft
(274 to 304 m)
800 to 899 ft
(244 to 274 m)
700 to 799 ft
(213 to 244 m)
600 to 699 ft
(183 to 213 m)
500 to 599 ft
(152 to 183 m)
400 to 499 ft
(122 to 152 m)
300 to 399 ft
(91 to 122 m)
200 to 299 ft
(61 to 91 m)
100 to 199 ft
(30 to 61 m)
Total
2 0 1 6 12 14 19 56 134 572 816 [13]

This lists ranks Los Angeles skyscrapers that stand at least 400 feet (122 m) tall, based on standard height measurement. This includes spires and architectural details but does not include antenna masts. An equal sign (=) following a rank indicates the same height between two or more buildings. The "Year" column indicates the year a building was completed.

Rank Name Image Height
ft (m)
Architect Floors Year Primary Purpose Notes
1 Wilshire Grand Center   1,100 (335) AC Martin Partners 73 2017 Office/Hotel 15th-tallest building in the United States, tallest building on the West Coast of the United States, tallest building in California; tallest building constructed in Los Angeles in the 2010s.[1][14][15] Topped-out in 2016. When measured by roof height, the tower is 934 feet (285 m) tall, which is 84 feet (26 m). shorter than the U.S. Bank Tower roof. The building held its grand opening on June 23, 2017.
2 U.S. Bank Tower   1,018 (310) Henry N. Cobb 73 1989 Office 22nd-tallest building in the United States, third tallest building on the West Coast of the United States, third tallest building in California; tallest building in the world with a helipad on its roof; tallest building constructed in Los Angeles in the 1980s; formerly known as Library Tower; at the time of its completion, the building was the tallest structure in a major active seismic region (Taipei 101 now holds this title).[1][14][15]
3 Aon Center   858 (262) Charles Luckman 62 1973 Office Tallest building constructed in Los Angeles in the 1970s[16]
4 Two California Plaza   750 (229) Arthur Erickson 54 1992 Office Tallest building constructed in Los Angeles in the 1990s[17][18]
5 Gas Company Tower   749 (228) Richard Keating 52 1991 Office 77th-tallest building in the United States[19][20]
6 Bank of America Plaza   735 (224) AC Martin Partners 55 1974 Office 92nd-tallest building in the United States; formerly known as Security Pacific Bank Plaza, ARCO Plaza, and BP Plaza[21][22]
7 777 Tower   725 (221) César Pelli 52 1991 Office 98th-tallest building in the United States[23][24]
8 Wells Fargo Tower   723 (220) Skidmore, Owings & Merrill 54 1983 Office 103rd-tallest building in the United States[25][26]
9 Figueroa at Wilshire   717 (219) AC Martin Partners 53 1990 Office 107th-tallest building in the United States; formerly known as the Sanwa Bank Building[27][28]
10= City National Tower   699 (213) AC Martin Partners 52 1971 Office Formerly known as the Bank of America Tower; this building and Paul Hastings Tower stand as the tallest twin towers in Los Angeles.[29][30]
10 Paul Hastings Tower   699 (213) AC Martin Partners 52 1971 Office Formerly known as ARCO Tower; this building and City National Tower stand as the tallest twin towers in Los Angeles.[31][32]
12 The Beaudry   695 (212) Marmol Radziner 52 2023 Residential Residential / above Figat7th shopping Center and adjacent to 777 Tower. Tallest residential tower in LA.[33][34]
13 Oceanwide Plaza Tower I   677 (206) CallisonRTKL 49 On Hold Residential 11th & Figueroa St. / Across from Crypto.com Arena. Topped off. Interior left unfinished.[35][11]
14 The Ritz-Carlton Los Angeles   667 (203) Gensler 54 2010 Hotel/Residential Tallest building constructed in Los Angeles in the 2010s until the Wilshire Grand Center[36]
15 Metropolis Tower D   647 (197) Harley Ellis Devereaux 58 2019 Residential 889 Francisco St.[11][37]
16 820 Olive   637 (194) Onni Group 49 2019 Residential 825 S Hill St Los Angeles, CA 90014 \ Formerly the tallest residential building in California at completion.[38][39]
17 FourFortyFour South Flower   625 (191) AC Martin Partners 48 1981 Office Formerly known as Citigroup Center

Formerly known as the 444 Flower Building[40][41]

18 611 Place   620 (189) William Pereira 42 1969 Office Tallest building constructed in Los Angeles in the 1960s[42][43]
19 KPMG Tower   606 (185) Skidmore, Owings & Merrill 42 1984 Office [44][45]
20= Century Plaza North Tower 600 (183) Pei Cobb Freed & Partners 46 2021 Residential Condo addition to the renovated Century Plaza Hotel.[35][11]
20= Century Plaza South Tower 600 (183) Pei Cobb Freed & Partners 46 2021 Residential The tallest buildings in Los Angeles outside of the downtown core.[35][11]
22 One California Plaza   578 (176) Arthur Erickson 42 1985 Office [46][47]
23= Century Plaza Tower I   571 (174) Minoru Yamasaki 44 1975 Office Similar design elements as the World Trade Center, designed by same architect Minoru Yamasaki.[48][49]
23= Century Plaza Tower II   571 (174) Minoru Yamasaki 44 1975 Office Designed by Minoru Yamasaki.[50][51]
25 Ernst & Young Plaza   534 (163) Skidmore, Owings & Merrill 41 1985 Office [52][53]
26 SunAmerica Center   533 (162) Johnson & Fain 39 1990 Office [54][55]
27= Figueroa Eight   530 (162) Johnson Fain HKS Architects 42 2024 Residential
27= Oceanwide Plaza Tower II   530 (162) CallisonRTKL 40 On Hold Residential 11th & Figueroa St. / Across from Crypto.com Arena. Topped off. Interior left unfinished.[35][11]
27= Oceanwide Plaza Tower III   530 (162) CallisonRTKL 40 On Hold Residential 11th & Figueroa St. / Across from Crypto.com Arena. Topped off. Interior left unfinished.[35][11]
30 Hope+Flower Tower 1 529 (161) Gensler 40 2019 Residential 1201 S. Hope Street / Formerly the tallest residential building in the city at completion.
31 Fig+Pico Tower I 529 (161) Gensler 42 2023 Residential Moxy Hotel and AC Branded Hotels by Marriott / Ground Retail.[56][57][58]
32 The Grand by Gehry 522 (159) Frank Gehry 39 2022 Residential [11][59][60]
33 TCW Tower   517 (158) AC Martin Partners 39 1990 Office [61][62]
34 Union Bank Plaza   516 (157) AC Martin Partners 40 1968 Office First skyscraper built in the central business district of Los Angeles following the repeal of ordinance limitating construction greater than 150 feet in height in 1957.[63][64][65]
35 10 Universal City Plaza   506 (154) Skidmore, Owings & Merrill 36 1984 Office Tallest building in the San Fernando Valley[66][67]
36 1100 Wilshire   496 (151) AC Martin Partners 37 1987 Residential [68][69]
37 Fox Plaza   493 (150) Johnson Fain 34 1987 Office [70][71]
38 MGM Tower   491 (150) Johnson Fain 35 2003 Office First high rise to be completed in the 21st century in Los Angeles[72][73]
39 Ten Thousand   483 (147) Handel Architects 40 2016 Residential [74][75]
40 The Century   478 (146) Robert A. M. Stern 42 2010 Residential [76]
41 ARCO Tower   463 (141) Gin Wong 33 1989 Office [77][78]
42= Equitable Life Building   454 (138) Welton Becket 34 1969 Office Tallest building in the Koreatown district. [79][80]
42= Los Angeles City Hall   454 (138) Austin, Parkinson and Martin 32 1928 Office Tallest building constructed in Los Angeles in the 1920s; tallest base-isolated structure in the world[81][82][83]
44 South Park Center   452 (138) William Pereira 32 1965 Office [84][85]
45 Metropolis Tower C   451 (137) Harley Ellis Devereaux 40 2018 Residential [86][87]
46 AT&T Switching Center   448 (137) The Parkinsons 17 1961 Office [88][89]
47 Metropolis Tower B   442 (135) Gensler (Concept Designer) & Harvey Ellis Devereaux (Interior Architect) 38 2017 Residential [90]
48 Hallasan Tower 439 (134) MVE+Partners 38 2023 Residential Tallest residential tower in Koreatown district.[91][92][93][94][95]
49 5900 Wilshire   433 (132) Gin Wong / William Pereira 31 1971 Office [96][97]
50 Hope+Flower Tower 2 421 (128) Gensler 31 2019 Residential 1201 S. Hope Street
51 MCI Center   414 (126) Charles Luckman 33 1973 Office [98][99]
52= Circa Tower I 400 (122) Harley Ellis Devereaux 35 2018 Residential [100]
52= Circa Tower II 400 (122) Harley Ellis Deveraux 35 2018 Residential [100]
52= Westin Bonaventure Hotel   400 (122) John C. Portman Jr. 37 1977 Hotel 404 S. Figueroa Street[101]
55 Warner Center Tower III   352 (107) Ware & Malcomb 25 1991 Office [102][103]

Under construction buildings

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This lists buildings that are under construction in Los Angeles and are planned to rise at least 300 feet (91 meters).

Name Height
ft (m)
Floors Year Neighborhood Notes
Olympic and Hill 590 (180) 54 2024 South Park (1002 S. Hill) 21st tallest building in the city when completed.[104][105]
Century City Center 563 (172) 37 2026 Century City (1950 Ave of the Stars.) Office above the under construction D Line Extension Century City Station. Designed by Johnson Fain.[106][107][108]
Alloy 390 (119) 35 2024 Arts District (520 Mateo St.) Condominiums by Carmel Partners & designed by Works Progress Architecture.[109][110]
One Beverly Hills Santa Monica Residences Tower 410 (125) 32 2026 Beverly Hills (9900 Wilshire Boulevard) Residential. Tallest proposed tower in Beverly Hills. Designed by Norman Foster.[111] BH.org[112]
One Beverly Hills Garden Residences 369 (112) 28 2028 Beverly Hills (9900 Wilshire Boulevard) Residential. Residential addition to Beverly Hilton Complex. Designed by Norman Foster.[112][111] BH.org

Approved and proposed buildings

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This list is of buildings approved or proposed over 300 feet (91 m) throughout the city. The tallest buildings currently proposed are Angels Landing at 854 feet (260 m), and Olympia Tower at 853 feet (260 m).

Building Name or Address Height
ft (m)
Floors Proposed Completion Year (est.) Neighborhood Notes
Angels Landing Tower 1 854 (260) 64 2028 Historic Core (4th and Hill St.) Proposed Residential and office Tower / Retail / Designed by Peebles, MacFarlane, and Claridge Properties.[113] Parcel is above Pershing Square D Line Metro Subway Station and Angels Knoll Park.[114][115][116][117]
Olympia Tower I 853 (260) 65 TBD South Park (1025 W. Olympic Blvd) Proposed Three Towers by Sheng Long Group north of LA Live Regal Cinema \ Retail, Hotel and residential[118][11][119] 700 unit apartments.[120]
11th & Olive[121] 810 (247) 70 TBD South Park (1045 S. Olive St.) Proposed Residential Apartments / retail / Developed by Crescent Heights.[122][123][11]
The Bloc Tower 710 (216) 53 TBD Financial District (700 S. Flower St.) Proposed Residential / Developed by National Real Estate Advisors, above mall parking podium. Designed by Handel Architects.[124][125]
Mack Urban Tower II [121] 678 (207) 60 TBD South Park (1120 S. Olive St.) Proposed Residential Apartments / retail / Developed by Crescent Heights.[126]
Mack Urban Tower I [121] 606 (185) 51 TBD South Park (1115 S. Olive St.) Proposed Residential Apartments / retail / Developed by Crescent Heights.[126][127]
Olympic Tower 742 (226) 58 TBD South Park (949 S. Figueroa St.) Proposed Tower \ Retail, Hotel and residential [118][11] Replaces the car wash on corner of Fig and Olympic.[128][129]
City Lights Tower 723 (220) 53 2025 South Park (1300 S. Figueroa St.) Proposed \ Hotel \ Replaces apartment completed in 2004, by TriCal.[11]
Wilshire Courtyard Tower I 655 (200) 41 2024 Miracle Mile (5700 Wilshire Blvd) Proposed \ Office.[130] Twin office towers with skybridges, tallest outside DTLA if constructed. Adjacent LACMA. Replaces low rise office complex. Onni Group.[131]
Onni Times Square Tower I 655 (200) 53 2024 Civic Center (202 W. 1st St.) Proposed \ residential.[11][132] rehabilitate and add to the LA Times Building. The Times moved to El Segundo neighborhood and sold the building to Onni.[133]
1600 Figueroa TBD 52 TBD South Park (1600 S. Figueroa St.) Proposed \ Retail and hotel. Designed by Gensler. Replacing DTLA Toyota Dealership.[134]
1111 Sunset Residential Tower 1 TBD 49 2028 Echo Park (1111 N. Sunset Blvd.) Approved residential / Former Metropolitan Water District Complex / 778 Residential units.[135][136] Designed by SOM and James Corner Field Operations.[137][138][139]
Olympia Tower II 653 (199) 53 TBD South Park (1001 W. Olympic Blvd ) Proposed Three Towers by Sheng Long Group \ Retail, Hotel and residential north of LA Live Regal Cinema.[118][11][119]
Tribune Residential Tower 616 (188) 56 2025 Historic Core (222 W. 2nd St.) Proposed Residential Tower by Tribune Real Estate Holdings \ Designed by Solomon Cordwell Buenz. Ground retail above Historic Broadway Metro subway station.[140][141]
Eight & Hope Tower 592 (180) 45 2024 South Park (754 S. Hope St.) Proposed Residential Tower by Mitsui Group \ Designed by Gensler with three terraced decks. Ground Retail.[142]
Wilshire Courtyard Tower II 565 (172) 35 2024 Miracle Mile (5700 Wilshire Blvd) Proposed \ Office.[130] Twin office towers with skybridges, tallest outside DTLA if constructed. Adjacent LACMA. Replaces low rise office complex. Onni Group.
Olympia Tower III 550 (168) 43 TBD South Park (1001 W. Olympic Blvd.) Proposed Three Towers by Sheng Long Group \ Retail, Hotel and residential north of LA Live Regal Cinema.[118][11][119]
Mirabel 550 (168) 42 2027 Miracle Mile (5411 Wilshire Blvd) Luxury Apartments designed by Richard Keating. Art Deco base with street level retail. Currently a Staples office supply store. Portion of the 1930s original building will be preserved.[143] Near new subway station, Wilshire/La Brea station.[144]
Angels Landing Tower 2 542 (165) 48 2028 Historic Core (4th and Hill St.) Proposed Residential and office Tower / Retail / Designed by Peebles, MacFarlane, and Claridge Properties.[113] Parcel is above Pershing Square D Line Metro Subway Station and Angels Knoll Park.[114][115][116][117]
Luxe Redevelopment Tower II 540 (165) 38 TBD South Park (1020 S. Figueroa St.) Proposed by Shenzhen Hazen \ residential \ Across from L.A. Live replacing Luxe Hotel w/ a W Hotel. Phase 2.[145][146]
5350 Wilshire 530 (162) 46 2029 Mid-Wilshire (5350 Wilshire Blvd.) Residential Tower proposed by Onni Group.[147]
JW Marriott Expansion 450 (137) 40 2025 South Park Expansion of the existing hotel with new tower. Plans approved for LA Convention Center expansion along with tower.[148][149]
Westfield Promenade 2035 SE Hotel Tower 502 (153) 28 2033 Warner Center (6100 Topanga canyon Blvd.) Approved \ residential and hotel.[11][150]
Spring Street Tower 500 (152) 45 TBD Historic Core (525 S. Spring St.) Residential \ Retail.[151]
Fourth & Central Building 2 496 (151) 44 TBD Arts District (400 S. Central Avenue) Residential \ Retail. Proposed $2 Billion 10 building development plan on a 8-acre site by Continuum. Designed by Studio One Eleven and architect David Adjaye.[152]
Onni Times Square Tower II 488 (149) 37 2024 Civic Center (202 W. 1st St.) Proposed \ residential \ Retail.[11][132] rehabilitate and add to the LA Times Building after/ if they vacate to Aon Tower. Designed by A. C. Martin.[133]
Terrace Block 483 (147) 41 2025 Koreatown (550 S. Shatto Place) Proposed \ residential \ Townline and Forme Development[153] Tallest proposed building in Koreatown.
The Albany 480 (146) 37 2025 Pico-Union (1330 W. Pico Blvd.) Proposed \ Hotel \ Sandstone Properties.[154][155][156]
World Trade Center Redevelopment 480 (146) 41 2025 Financial District (350 S. Figueroa St.) Proposed \ residential \ CallisonRTKL[157]
Lake On Wilshire 459 (140) 41 TBD Westlake (1930 W. Wilshire Blvd.) Proposed market rate residential Apartments / 70,000 square foot cultural center / Designed by Archeon Group.[158]
City Market Tower 454 (138) 38 TBD Fashion District (900–1118 S. Julian St.) Four City Blocks \ 1,719,658 square feet of total developed floor area. The

project would include 945 residential dwelling units, 210 hotel rooms, 294,641 square feet of commercial office uses, 224,862 square feet of retail uses (including restaurants, bars, event space, wholesale uses, and a cinema with 744 seats), and a 312,112 square-foot corporate/educational campus. / Designed by HansonLA/ [159][160]

Civic Center Building A 450 (137) 27 TBD Civic Center (150 N. Los Angeles St.) LA City Hall Complex \ Proposed \ office.[11] Replacing Parker Center.[161][162]
333 South Hope Street 430 (131) 34 2026 Bunker Hill (333 S. Hope St.) Proposed Residential Tower.[163] Southeast corner at Bank of America Tower plaza.
Wilshire Gate 450 (137) 33 TBD Koreatown (631 S. Vermont Ave.) Approved \ Office Space \ Condominiums. Floor retail.[164][165]
2143 Violet 425 (130) 36 2024 Arts District (2143 East Violet St.) Proposed \ Condominiums. Owned by Omni Group, architect Arno Matis Architecture.[166]
1000 La Brea 420 (128) 34 TBD West Hollywood (1000 N. La Brea Ave) Proposed \ 514 Apartments \ Grocery Store.[167]
Residences 420 (128) 34 2026 Financial District (333 S. Hope St.) Proposed \ Condominiums. Brookfield proposed, LARGE Architecture designed cylinder tower replaces Bank of America Park Plaza.[168]
The Reef aka Broadway Square 420 (128) 19 TBD Historic Core (Corner of S. Broadway and Washington Blvd.) Proposed \ Office Space \ Condominiums \ Hotel. Owned by PHR LAmart at the LA Trade Technical College.[169]
340 Hill 410 (125) 33 TBD Old Bank District (340 S. Hill St.) Residential. Above the northern underground entrance to the Red Line Subway Pershing Square Station.ULA
Crossroads Hollywood Tower I 407 (124) 26 2024 Hollywood (SE corner of Highland Ave and Selma Ave.) 1.4 million square feet of programmed space, including 950 residential units, a 308-key hotel, 94,000 square feet of office space and 185,000 square feet of shops and restaurants / Crossroads of the World shopping square.[170] redevelopment of four square blocks.
Gayley at Wilshire 427 (130) 29 TBD Westwood (10955 Wilshire Blvd) Proposed \ residential \ Across from UCLA in a small triangle lot. Architect Robert A.M. Stern RAMSA designed a flatiron inspired tower.[171]
Luxe Redevelopment Tower I 430 (131) 32 TBD South Park (1020 S. Figueroa St.) Proposed by Shenzhen Hazen \ residential \ Across from L.A. Live replacing Luxe Hotel. Phase 1.[145][172]
6000 Hollywood Boulevard 422 (129) 35 TBD Hollywood (6000 Hollywood Blvd.) Proposed residential / Ground retail. Replacing Toyota of Hollywood car park, East end of the Walk of Fame.[173]
Bixel Residences 409 (125) 36 TBD City West (675 S. Bixel St.) Proposed residential.[174][175]
1111 Sunset Residential Tower 2 TBD 31 2028 Echo Park (1111 N. Sunset Blvd) Approved residential / Former Metropolitan Water District Complex / Boutique hotel Designed by Kengo Kuma.[137][135][136][138][139]
3100 Wilshire 393 (120) 34 TBD Koreatown (3100 Wilshire Blvd.) Proposed \ Apartments.[176] Hartshorne Plunkard designed tower. Developer is Crescent Heights. Design uses the ground floor 1939 facade within its development.
SB Omega 390 (119) 38 TBD Historic Core (6th & Main St.) Proposed \ Redevelopment and Apartments.[177] David Takacs designed tower. Developer is Barry Shy.[178]
Civic Center Building C 390 (119) TBD 2024 Civic Center LA City Hall Complex\ Proposed \ government office and retail.[11]
Crossroads Hollywood Tower II 387 (118) 21 2024 Hollywood (SE corner of Highland Ave and Selma Ave.) 1.4 million square feet of programmed space, including 950 residential units, a 308-key hotel, 94,000 square feet of office space and 185,000 square feet of shops and restaurants / Redevelopment of Crossroads of the World.[170]
1233 Grand 384 (117) 30 TBD Financial District (1233 S. Grand) Proposed \ residential.[11]
1201 Grand TBD 40 TBD Financial District (1201 S. Grand) Proposed \ residential. 312 Residential Unites w/ ground retail. Proposed by "City Century" [179]
670 Mesquit 374 (114) 35 2026 Arts District (670 Mesquit Street) Proposed \ Condominiums developed by V.E. Equities and the Gallo Family \ Designed by Bjarke Ingels \ Designed to integrate into the new Sixth Street Viaduct park currently under construction.[180][181]
Fashion District Residences 370 (113) 33 TBD Fashion District (670 7th and Maple St.) Approved \ Residential. Designed by Humphreys & Partners Architects. Built by Realm Group and Urban Offerings.[182] Near Santee Court Alley.
Crossroads Hollywood Tower III 366 (112) 20 2024 Hollywood (SE corner of Highland Ave and Selma Ave) 1.4 million square feet of programmed space, including 950 residential units, a 308-key hotel, 94,000 square feet of office space and 185,000 square feet of shops and restaurants / Redevelopment of Crossroads of the World.[170]
Burbank/De Soto Development Phase II 350 (107) 24 2024 Warner Center (20950 Warner Center Lane) Proposed \ residential \ Office Park.[183][184]
Ivar & Selma 350 (107) 23 TBD Hollywood (6350 W. Selma Ave) Proposed \ residential \ Retail \ Artisan Realty "Artisan Hollywood Tower" designed by Gensler[185][186]
Palladium Residences Tower I 350 (107) 31 TBD Hollywood (6215 Sunset Blvd.) Approved \ residential[11]
Palladium Residences Tower II 350 (107) 31 TBD Hollywood (6215 Sunset Blvd.) Approved \ residential.[11]
Lifan Tower 350 (107) 29 TBD South Park (1247 W. 7th St.) Proposed \ Low income residential \ Designed by MVE + Partners[187][188]
920 Hill St Tower 346 (105) 32 TBD South Park (920 S. Hill St.) Proposed \ 239 Apartments \ Ground Retail / Developed by Barry Shy[189]
Spring Street Hotel 338 (103) 28 TBD Historic Core (633 S. Spring St.) Proposed \ Hotel AKA "Lizard" [11]
Westfield Promenade 2035 SE Residential Tower 336 (102) 28 2033 Warner Center (6100 Topanga Canyon Blvd.) Approved \ residential.[11][190][150]
Central Plaza Tower 2 332 (101) 28 2026 Koreatown (3470 Wilshire Blvd.) Proposed \ residential / Ground Retail.[191][192]
Fig+Pico Tower II 326 (99) 25 TBD South Park (1258 S. Figueroa St.) Proposed \ Hotel / Retail. Across Figueroa Street from the convention center's South Hall. Same block as Circa, (SW Corner).[56][57] Designed by Gensler. Tower I currently under construction.
District NoHo Tower 1 322 (98) 28 2037 North Hollywood (11232 Cumpston St.) Redesign of Metro's North Hollywood station. Eight city blocks of mix used development. Development by Trammell Crow Company, designed by Gensler, HKS Architects, KFA Architecture, and RELM.[193][194]
6400 Sunset Boulevard 318 (97) 28 TBD Hollywood (6400 Sunset Blvd.) Proposed \ Condominiums \ Ground retail [195] Replaces the famous Amoeba Music Store. Designed by Johnson Fain. Developed by GPI Companies.
Morrison Hotel 315 (96) 27 TBD South Park (1220 S. Hope St.) Proposed \ Hotel \ Re-development and additional 450 hotel room towers, 135 residential units, ground-floor retail space. Site of the original Morrison Hotel, now closed. Named after the album Morrison Hotel, by the band, the Doors. The hotel was made famous by the Doors as they named their fifth album after the hotel, and took a picture as there cover album.[196]
Sunset Gower Studio Tower 300 (91) 18 2028 Hollywood (6050 W. Sunset Blvd.) Proposed \ Office \ Addition to the Sunset Studios complex.[197]
Fox Future Tower 374 (114) 35 TBD Century City (10201 W. Pico Blvd.) Proposed \ Office \ Addition to the 20th Century Studios complex.[198]

Timeline of tallest buildings

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Los Angeles City Hall, shown here in 1931, was built in 1928 and was the tallest structure in the city until 1968. In 1964, height restrictions were removed from new construction.

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

Name Image Street address Years as tallest Height
ft (m)
Floors Reference
Braly Building[note 2]   408 South Spring Street 1903–1907 151 (46) 13 [4]
Security Building   510 South Spring Street 1907–1911 165 (50) 11 [199]
A.G. Bartlett Building   651 South Spring Street 1911–1916 190 (58) 14 [200]
Park Central Building 412 West 6th Street 1916–1927 N/A[note 3] 14 [201]
Texaco Building   929 South Broadway 1927–1928 242 (74) 13 [202]
Los Angeles City Hall   200 North Spring Street 1928–1968 454 (138) 32 [82]
Union Bank Plaza   445 South Figueroa Street 1968–1969 516 (157) 40 [65]
611 Place   611 West 6th Street 1969–1972 620 (189) 42 [43]
City National Tower[note 4]   555 South Flower Street 1972–1974 699 (213) 52 [30]
Paul Hastings Tower[note 4]   515 South Flower Street 1972–1974 699 (213) 52 [32]
Aon Center   707 Wilshire Boulevard 1974–1989 858 (262) 62 [203]
U.S. Bank Tower   633 West 5th Street 1989–2016 1,018 (310) 73 [14]
Wilshire Grand Tower   Figueroa and 7th 2016–present 1,100 (335) 73 [14]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Based on existing and under construction buildings over 150 meters tall. New York has 311 existing and under construction buildings at least 492 feet (150 m); Chicago has 129; Miami has 56; Houston has 36; Los Angeles has 31; Dallas has 20; San Francisco has 27. Source of Skyline ranking information: SkyscraperPage.com diagrams: New York City, Chicago, Miami, Houston, Los Angeles, Dallas, San Francisco (as of April 2017).
  2. ^ This building was originally known as the Braly Building, but has since been renamed the Continental Building.
  3. ^ Official height figures have never been released by this building's developer.
  4. ^ a b The City National Tower and the Paul Hastings Tower are twin towers, both rising 699 feet (213 m). As both buildings were completed in 1972, Los Angeles had two tallest buildings until the completion of Aon Center in 1974.

References

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  1. ^ a b c "US Bank Tower". Emporis. Archived from the original on September 30, 2007. Retrieved December 9, 2007.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  2. ^ "Diagram of California skyscrapers". SkyscraperPage.com. Retrieved May 5, 2008.
  3. ^ a b "Continental Building". Emporis. Archived from the original on January 12, 2012. Retrieved April 26, 2008.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
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