Tallest buildings of Greater New York outside of Manhattan

Downtown Brooklyn, NY (with Lower Manhattan the background) – Source: pbs.twimg.com

The following list identifies the tallest buildings in Greater New York City outside of Manhattan,. this includes the other boroughs, as well as other core and suburban cities around the region. Baes on the 51 towers listed, these areas have the most skyscrapers (exceeding 460 feet in height) outside of Manhattan. Peace.

  • Jersey City = 19
  • Brooklyn = 17
  • Long Island City (Queens) = 12
  • White Plains and Fort Lee = 2 each
  • Newark = 1
  1. Brooklyn Tower – Brooklyn NY = 1,073 feet with 93 floors

2. 99 Hudson Street – Jersey City, NJ = 900 feet with 79 floors

3. 30 Hudson Street – Jersey City, NJ = 781 feet with 43 floors

4. Skyline Tower – Long Island City (Queens), NY = 778 feet with 67 floors

5. Journal Square 2 – Jersey City, NJ = 759 feet with 72 floors

6. Sven – Long Island City (Queens), NY = 755 feet with 67 floors

7. Brooklyn Point – Brooklyn, NY = 720 feet with 68 floors

8. URBY Harborside Tower – Jersey City, NJ = 713 feet with 69 floors

9. One Court Square – Long Island City (Queens), NY = 673 feet with 50 floors

10. Tower 28 – Long Island City (Queens), NY = 637 feet with 57 floors

11-12. Haus 25 – Jersey City, New Jersey = 626 feet with 57 floor and 11 Hoyt – Brooklyn, NY = 626 feet with 51 floors

13. The Hub – Brooklyn, NY = 611 feet with 52 floors

14. Eagle Lofts – Long Island City (Queens), NY = 598 feet with 55 floors

15. AVA DoBro – Brooklyn, NY = 596 feet with 58 floors

16. 288 Bridge Street – Brooklyn, NY = 590 feet with 51 floors

17. 3 Jackson Park – Long Island City (Queens), NY = 581 feet with 54 floors

18. Journal Square Tower 1 – Jersey City, NJ = 574 feet with 54 floors

19. 590 Fulton Street – Brooklyn, NY = 568 feet with 52 floors

20. 101 Hudson Street – Jersey City, NJ = 548 feet with 42 floors

21. 235 Grand Street – Jersey City, NJ = 537 feet with 45 floors

22-23. Trump Plaza – Jersey City, NJ = 532 feet with 55 floors and 18 Sixth Avenue – Brooklyn, NY = 532 feet with 49 floors

24. Newport Tower – Jersey City, NJ = 531 feet with 36 floors

25-26. 70 Columbus and 90 Columbus – Jersey City, NJ = 530 feet with 50 floors each

27. City Tower – Brooklyn, NY = 515 feet with 46 floors

28. The Brooklyner – Brooklyn, NY = 515 feet with 51 floors

29. Williamsburg Savings Bank Tower – Brooklyn, NY = 512 feet with 42 floors

30. 540 Fulton – Brooklyn, NY = 511 feet with 43 floors

31. 1 QPS Tower – Long Island City (Queens), NY = 510 feet with 44 floors

32-34. Monaco North and Monaco South – Jersey City, NJ = 509 feet with 47 floors each and Hayden LIC – Long Island City (Queens), NY = 509 feet with 50 floors

35. 1 Jackson Park – Long Island City (Queens), NY = 501 feet with 45 floors

36-37. 70 Greene Street and 77 Hudson Street – Jersey City, NJ = 500 feet with 50 floors each

38. 5 Pointz North Tower -Long Island City (Queens), NY = 498 feet with 48 floors

39-40. The Modern I and Modern II – Fort Lee, NJ = 496 feet with 47 floors each

41. One Willoughby Square – Brooklyn, NY = 495 feet with 34 floors

42. Exchange Place Center – Jersey City, NJ = 490 feet with 32 floors

43. 66 Rockwell Place – Brooklyn, NY = 489 feet with 44 floors

44. ALTA LIC – Long Island City (Queens), NY = 485 feet with 44 floors

45-47. The Residences at the Ritz CarltonNorth Tower and South Tower – White Plains, NY= 484 feet with 44 floors each and Trump Bay Street – Jersey City, NJ = 484 feet with 50 floors

48. 100 Flatbush – Brooklyn, NY = 482 feet with 44 floors

49. Harborside Plaza 5 – Jersey City, NJ = 480 feet with 34 floors

50. 12 Metrotech Center – Brooklyn, NY = 473 feet with 32 floors

51. 2 Jackson Park – Long Island City (Queens), NY = 471 feet with 43 floors

52. National Newark Building – Newark, NJ = 465 feet with 34 floors

53. Montague–Court Building – Brooklyn, NY = 462 feet with 35 floors

Aside from the buildings listed above, additional skyscrapers of lesser heights can be found in these cities/boroughs, as well as in The Bronx, NY; Stamford, CT; Guttenberg, NJ; North Bergen, NJ; West New York, NJ; New Brunswick, NJ; Yonkers, NY; and elsewhere in suburban New York City.

Downtown Jersey City, NJ =- Source: pixels.com

SOURCES:

Long Island City (Queens), NY – Source: newyorkyimby.com
This entry was posted in architecture, cities, downtown, economic development, engineering, geography, historic preservation, history, infrastructure, land use, new urbanism, pictures, planning, revitalization, skylines, skyscrapers, spatial design, Statistics, urban design, urban planning and tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.