List of buildings by height in Tuscaloosa: Difference between revisions

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[[Image:RBC Bank building (downtown Tuscaloosa).jpg|right|thumb|250px|RBC Bank building is the tallest building in Tuscaloosa.]]
[[Image:RBC Bank building (downtown Tuscaloosa).jpg|right|thumb|250px|RBC Bank building is the tallest building in Tuscaloosa.]]
* [[RBC Bank building]], 141 feet & 10 floors
* [[RBC Bank building]], 141 feet & 10 floors
* [[Rose Towers]], 130.5 feet & 13 stories
* [[Tutwiler Hall]], 123 feet & 13 stories
* [[Tutwiler Hall]], 123 feet & 13 stories
* [[Denny Chimes]], 115 feet
* [[Denny Chimes]], 115 feet
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* [[The Chimes]], 6 stories
* [[The Chimes]], 6 stories
* [[Tuscaloosa VA Medical Center]], 6 stories
* [[Tuscaloosa VA Medical Center]], 6 stories
==Demolished structures==
* [[Rose Towers]], 130.5 feet & 13 stories (demolished in 2012)


==Notable unbuilt proposals==
==Notable unbuilt proposals==

Revision as of 20:55, 23 January 2013

This list of buildings by height in Tuscaloosa ranks buildings and other structures in Tuscaloosa by height. The tallest building in the city is currently the RBC Bank building, which rises ten stories 141 feet in downtown Tuscaloosa and was completed in 1925. The history of tall buildings in the city began with the construction of the Alston Building in 1909; this building, rising 85 feet to its main roof and seven floors, is regarded as the first "skyscraper" in Tuscaloosa. The majority of the tallest structures in the city are concentrated downtown and in and around the University of Alabama campus.

Existing buildings

RBC Bank building is the tallest building in Tuscaloosa.

Demolished structures

  • Rose Towers, 130.5 feet & 13 stories (demolished in 2012)

Notable unbuilt proposals

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.