This list of tallest buildings in Stuttgart ranks high-rise buildings and important landmarks that reach a height of 50 meters (164 feet).
Stuttgart's history of skyscrapers began 1928 with the completion of the 16-storey, 61-meter-high (200-foot) Tagblatt-Turm. The architect Ernst Otto Oßwald planned the tower in 1924 opposite the Schocken department store as the first high-rise building in Stuttgart and the first reinforced concrete high-rise in Germany.
As in every major city, there are also remarkable but unrealized high-rise plans in Stuttgart. Mention should be made here of a so-called Trump Tower (Germany), which was a topic of discussion from 2001. This planned Trump Tower was to be erected on the exposed Prag, a hill on the northern edge of Stuttgart's valley basin. The 180-metre-high office, hotel and residential tower, which was estimated to cost around 230 million euros at the time, was “controversial among the population, the local council and the architectural and real estate scene.”[1] The skyscraper was initially to be built in Berlin. When this project failed, the alternatives of Frankfurt/M. and, in April 2001, Stuttgart were discussed.[2] After 2003, the plans were no longer pursued.[3]
A special landmark on the Stuttgart skyline is the 217-meters-high Fernsehturm Stuttgart, built in 1956. It was the first telecommunications tower in the world constructed from reinforced concrete, and it is the prototype for many such towers worldwide.
Rank | Name | Image | Height m (ft) |
Floors | Year completed | Use / Note |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Stuttgarter Fernsehturm | 216.6 m (711 ft) | 1956 | Telecommunications tower, Tallest structure in Stuttgart. | |||
1 | Porsche Design Tower | 87.1 m (286 ft) | 25 | 2022 | Tallest high-rise building in Stuttgart, Office, Restaurant, Hotel | |
2 | Skyline Living | 79.7 m (261 ft) | 21 | 2017 | Residential, Office | |
3 | LBBW-Hochhaus | 73.8 m (242 ft) | 19 | 2005 | Headquarters of LBBW | |
4 | Colorado | 73.5 m (241 ft) | 20 | 2007 | Office | |
5 | Dormero Hotel | 71.6 m (235 ft) | 20 | 1991 | Hotel, Part of SI-Centrum | |
6 | Julius-Brecht-Hochhaus | 69.9 m (229 ft) | 23 | 1969 | Residential | |
7 | Cloud No. 7 | 68.5 m (225 ft) | 19 | 2017 | Luxury high-rise in the Europaviertel. | |
8 | StEP 6 | 67.5 m (221 ft) | 16 | 2002 | Headquarters of Debitel AG | |
9 | Hannibal, Im Asemwald 52–62 | 67.4 m (221 ft) | 24 | 1973 | Residential | |
10 | Hochhaus am Allianz Park | 67.2 m (220 ft) | 18 | 2025 | Headquarters of Allianz Lebensversicherungs-AG | |
11 | Hannibal, Im Asemwald 2–10 | 66.8 m (219 ft) | 24 | 1972 | Residential | |
11 | Hannibal, Im Asemwald 22–32 | 66.8 m (219 ft) | 24 | 1973 | Residential | |
13 | Salute-Hochhaus | 64.4 m (211 ft) | 21 | 1963 | Residential | |
14 | EnBW-City | 63.8 m (209 ft) | 17 | 2009 | Headquarters of EnBW | |
15 | Wohnhochhaus „Fasan II“ | 63.6 m (209 ft) | 22 | 1965 | Residential | |
16 | Atlanta BusinessCenter | 63.45 m (208 ft) | 17 | 1992 | Office | |
17 | Daimler Hauptverwaltung | 63.2 m (207 ft) | 15 | 1958 | Office, Height with star is 78.3 m. | |
18 | Mercedesstr. 120 | 63 m (207 ft) | 14 | Office | ||
19 | Turm am Mailänder Platz | 61.3 m (201 ft) | 19 | 2021 | Hotel | |
20 | Tagblatt-Turm | 61.2 m (201 ft) | 16 | 1928 | First high-rise building in Stuttgart. | |
21 | Wohnhochhaus „Fasan I“, | 60.6 m (199 ft) | 21 | 1965 | Residential | |
22 | Stiftswaldstr. 1 | 60.5 m (198 ft) | 21 | 1969 | Residential | |
23 | MPA Hochhaus | 58.6 m (192 ft) | 14 | 1969 | Office | |
24 | Fortuna | 57.7 m (189 ft) | 17 | 1996 | Residential | |
25 | Lorenzstr. 10 | 57.2 m (188 ft) | 14 | 1975 (refurbishment 2012) | Headquarters of Alcatel-Lucent | |
26 | Bülow-Turm | 56.4 m (185 ft) | 16 | 1991 | Office | |
27 | Kollegiengebäude 2 | 56.3 m (185 ft) | 12 | 1964 | University building | |
27 | Kollegiengebäude 1 | 56.1 m (184 ft) | 12 | 1960 | University building | |
29 | Sturmvogelweg 2–10 | 54.9 m (180 ft) | 20 | 1975 | Residential | |
29 | Romeo-Hochhaus | 54.9 m (180 ft) | 19 | 1957 | Residential | |
29 | Paul-Lincke-Str. 5 | 54.9 m (180 ft) | 18 | 1972 | Residential | |
32 | Naturwissenschaftliches Zentrum NWZ1 + NWZ2 | 53.9 m (177 ft) | 11 | 1974 | University building | |
32 | GENO-Hochhaus | 53.9 m (177 ft) | 13 | 1972 (refurbished 2004) | Office | |
34 | Van Technology Center (VTC) | 53.84 m (177 ft) | 14 | 2005 | Office, Mercedes-Benz | |
35 | Reinsburgstr. 21–27 | 52.8 m (173 ft) | 15 | 1975 (refurbishment 2006) | Seat of Allianz | |
36 | Fontana (Pullmann-Hotel) | 52 m (171 ft) | 15 | 1990 | Hotel | |
36 | Dessauer Str. 5 | 52 m (171 ft) | 18 | 1971 | Residential | |
38 | Im Lauchau 31 | 51.1 m (168 ft) | 17 | 1969 | Residential | |
39 | Mönchfeldstr. 110 | 50.08 m (164 ft) | 18 | 1962 | Residential | |
40 | Stuttgart International | 50.04 m (164 ft) | 18 | 1969 | Hotel, Part of SI-Centrum | |
41 | Paul-Lincke-Str. 10 | 50 m (164 ft) | 16 | 1974 | Residential |
More high-rise buildings in the region
editRank | Name | Image | Height m (ft) |
Floors | Year completed | Use / Note | City |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Schwabenlandtower[4] | 107 m (351 ft) | 34 | On Hold | Residential | Fellbach | |
2 | Bitzer-Hochhaus[5] | 75 m (246 ft) | 18 | 2019 | Headquarters of Bitzer | Sindelfingen | |
3 | Wüstenrot Tower | 72 m (236 ft) | 19 | 1974 | Headquarters of Wüstenrot | Ludwigsburg | |
4 | Sky-Hochhaus[6] | 70 m (230 ft) | 18 | 2016 | Residential | Bietigheim-Bissingen | |
5 | Festo-Hochhaus[7] | 66 m (217 ft) | 16 | 2015 | Festo Automation Center | Esslingen | |
6 | Bosch-Hochhaus[8] | 60 m (197 ft) | 12 | 2015 | Bosch Research Center | Renningen |
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Welt.de: Stuttgart steht zum Trump-Tower".
- ^ "FAZ:Europas erster Trump-Tower setzt auf Sicherheit". 25 October 2001.
- ^ "Welt.de:Der Stuttgarter Traum vom Trump Tower scheint zu platzen".
- ^ "Adler-group:SLT 107 Schwabenlandtower".
- ^ "Bitzer: BITZER weiht neue Firmenzentrale ein".
- ^ "Stuttgarter Nachrichten: Das Sky ist das Limit".
- ^ "Stuttgarter Nachrichten: Wahrzeichen für die Wirtschaftsregion".
- ^ "Stuttgarter Zeitung:Im Gehirn von Bosch".