List of tallest buildings in Denver

Denver is the capital and largest city of the U.S state of Colorado, with a metropolitan area population of 3 million as of 2024. Denver is home to more than 300 high-rise buildings, 49 of which have a height greater than 300 feet (91 meters). Denver has one of the largest skylines in the Mountain states, with the second greatest number of skyscrapers taller than 492 ft (150 m) after Las Vegas, having eight such buildings. Since 1984, the tallest building in the city is Republic Plaza, a 714-foot (218 m) office skyscraper. It is the tallest building in Colorado. The second-tallest building, 1801 California Street, is 709 ft (216 m) tall, only five feet shorter than Republic Plaza.

Skyline of Denver
Denver's skyline from Speer Boulevard in 2020
Tallest buildingRepublic Plaza (1984)
Tallest building height714 ft (217.6 m)
First 150 m+ building555 17th Street (1978)
Number of tall buildings (2025)
Taller than 100 m (328 ft)41
Taller than 150 m (492 ft)8
Taller than 200 m (656 ft)3
Number of tall buildings — feet
Taller than 300 ft (91.4 m)49

The history of skyscrapers in Denver began with the completion of the Equitable Building in 1892; this building, rising 143 feet (44 m) and nine floors, was the first high-rise in Denver. The 20-story Daniels & Fisher Tower became the tallest building between the Mississippi River and the state of California when it was built in 1910. At 325 ft (99 m), it surpassed the tip of the Colorado State Capitol, which was completed less than a decade ago in 1901. A few more high-rises were built in Denver during the Roaring Twenties, including the AT&T Building in 1929, before the Great Depression put skyscraper development on hold until the 1950s. The city's skyline grew to greater heights during the 1960s and 1970s; oil and gas companies occupied office space in downtown skyscrapers due to proximity to the mountains and the energy fields contained within.

Denver's skyline would see its greatest period of growth in the late 1970s and early 1980s, as the 1970s energy crisis led to a surge in oil and gas prices. From 1974 to 1984, the title of Denver's tallest building changed hands five times. All three of Denver's buildings taller than 650 ft (198 m) were completed between 1982 and 1984: Republic Plaza, 1801 California Street, and Wells Fargo Center, popularly called the "Cash Register Building" for the shape of its roof. Energy prices declined in the 1980s oil glut, abruptly halting Denver's skyscraper boom as vacancy rates increased and the city's population declined. High-rise construction resumed in the 2000s, with major projects such as Four Seasons Hotel Denver and 1144 Fifteenth, the city's fourth and fifth-tallest buildings, while the downtown skyline is expanding northwards towards the Ballpark and RiNo districts.

Most of the city's tallest buildings are located in Downtown Denver. Skyscrapers in downtown are mainly oriented in the area's diagonal grid–with the exception of buildings in North Capitol Hill–as opposed to the rest of the city. There is a smaller and much shorter concentration of residential towers in Cherry Creek, southeast of downtown, and even smaller clusters in Spree and east of Cheesman Park. The Denver Technological Center has several commercial high-rises that are shared between the city and Greenwood Village, a municipality in the metropolitan area. However, the tallest building in the Denver MSA outside of Denver itself is the Rocky Mountain Tower in Glendale, which is 325 ft (99 m) tall.

History

Number of buildingsYear0102030405019001920194019601980200020202040Buildings taller than 300 ft (91 m)Buildings taller than 328 ft (100 m)Buildings taller than 492 ft (150 m)Buildings taller than 656 ft (200 m)Growth of skyscrapers in Denver
Number of buildings by height in Denver by the end of each year, based on the information in this article. Click on the legend to toggle a specific height on or off. View chart definition.

The history of skyscrapers in Denver began with the completion of the Equitable Building in 1892; this building, rising 143 feet (44 m) and nine floors, was the first high-rise in Denver. The title of the city's "first skyscraper" is usually given to the Daniels & Fisher Tower, which rises 325 feet (99 m) and was completed in 1910. The city went through a large building boom that lasted from the early 1970s to the mid-1980s. During this time, 21 of the city's 27 tallest buildings were constructed, including Republic Plaza, 1801 California Street, and the Wells Fargo Center. The city is the site of eight skyscrapers over 492 feet (150 m) in height, including two which rank among the tallest in the United States. Overall, the skyline of Denver is ranked (based upon existing and under construction buildings over 492 feet (150 m) tall) second in the Mountain States (after Las Vegas) and seventeenth in the United States.[A]

The tallest building recently completed in Denver is the Four Seasons Hotel and Tower, which rises 45 stories and 641 feet (195 m). It now stands as the fourth-tallest building in Denver as well as the city's tallest residential tower. The 1144 Fifteenth office tower rises just over 600 feet at over 40 stories making it the fifth-tallest building in Denver upon completion early 2018. As of the mid-2020s, Denver has been experiencing a high rise residential building boom for shorter towers with several large projects having been built or under construction throughout the city, mainly concentrated in the Downtown Denver, Golden Triangle and River North (RiNo) neighborhoods.

In 2024, work was completed on One River North, a 16-story residential high-rise that prominently features a canyon-like crack that runs through its glass facade.

Cityscape

Map of tallest buildings

The map below shows the location of buildings taller than 300 feet (91 m) in Downtown Denver. Each marker is numbered by the building's height rank, and colored by the decade of its completion. Of the buildings taller than 300 feet (91 m) in Denver, three are not visible on the map: the Country Club Twin Towers in Country Club, and The Pinnacle at City Park South Tower, immediately south of City Park.

220m
240yds
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1
   
Buildings taller than 300 ft (91 m) in Downtown Denver. An asterisk (*) next to the building's name indicates it is located outside the map.
  •  1950s and before 
  •  1960s 
  •  1970s 
  •  1980s 
  •  1990s 
  •  2000s 
  •  2010s 
  •  2020s 
1
Republic Plaza
2
1801 California Street
3
Wells Fargo Center
4
Four Seasons Hotel Denver
5
1144 Fifteenth
6
1999 Broadway
7
707 17th Street
8
555 17th Street
9
Hyatt Regency Denver at the Colorado Convention Center
10
Spire
11
Block 162
12
1670 Broadway
13
17th Street Plaza
14
633 17th Street
15
1900 Lawrence
16
Brooks Tower
17
Denver Place South Tower
18
One Tabor Center
19
Johns Manville Plaza
20
Granite Tower
21
Ritz-Carlton Denver
22
U.S. Bank Tower
23
621 17th Street
24
1600 Glenarm Place
25
Denver Financial Center I
26
One Lincoln Park
27
The Confluence
28
Dominion Plaza
29
Lincoln Center
30
1125 17th Street
31
United Western Financial Center
32
Denver Energy Center Tower II
33
1600 Broadway
34
The Curtis
35
1800 Larimer
36
410 Building
37
Larimer Place
38
Denver Energy Center Tower I
39
1001 17th Street
40
Country Club East Tower*
41
Country Club West Tower*
42
Daniels & Fisher Tower
43
Independence Plaza
44
Grand Hyatt Denver
45
The Quincy
46
The Barclay
47
One Civic Center Plaza
48
The Pinnacle at City Park South Tower*
49
1401 Lawrence

Tallest buildings

This lists ranks buildings in Denver that stand at least 300 feet (91 m) tall as of 2025, based on standard height measurement. This includes spires and architectural details but does not include antenna masts. The "Year" column indicates the year in which a building was completed. Buildings with the same height. If two or more buildings are tied in height, the earlier building is listed first.

  Was the tallest building in Denver upon completion
Rank Name Image Coordinates Height
ft (m)
Floors Year Purpose Notes
1 Republic Plaza 39°44′36″N 104°59′19″W / 39.743446°N 104.988663°W / 39.743446; -104.988663 (Republic Plaza) 714 (217.6) 56 1984 Office Tallest building in Denver and Colorado since 1984. Tallest building in the Mountain states. Tallest building completed in Denver in the 1980s.
2 1801 California Street 39°44′52″N 104°59′23″W / 39.747726°N 104.989715°W / 39.747726; -104.989715 (1801 California Street) 709 (216.1) 53 1982 Office Tallest building in Denver and Colorado upon completed in 1983 until it was surpassed by the Republic Plaza building in 1984. The roof houses an antenna mast; with this structure included, the building reaches to a total height of 738 feet (225 m). When measuring by pinnacle height this building (arguably) remains the tallest building in Denver, Colorado. The exteriors of the building were used as the setting for Colbyco in the television series Dynasty
3 Wells Fargo Center 39°44′37″N 104°59′08″W / 39.743523°N 104.985451°W / 39.743523; -104.985451 (Wells Fargo Center) 698 (212.8) 52 1983 Office Nicknamed "the Cash Register" because of its unique crown.
4 Four Seasons Hotel Denver 39°44′47″N 104°59′53″W / 39.746483°N 104.998116°W / 39.746483; -104.998116 (Four Seasons Hotel Denver) 639 (194.8) 45 2010 Mixed-use Mixed-use residential and hotel building; there are 24 residential floors atop 21 hotel floors (239 rooms & suites). Topped off in September 2009. When measured to the roof of the structure, Four Seasons Tower rises to around 565 feet. The spire is 75 feet tall.
5 1144 Fifteenth 39°44′49″N 104°59′52″W / 39.747028°N 104.997643°W / 39.747028; -104.997643 (1144 Fifteenth) 602 (183.6) 42 2018 Office Topped off July 2017 and completed in March 2018. Located on the same block as the Four Seasons tower, which by pinnacle height is just 24 feet taller. 1144 Fifteenth is the tallest office building built in Denver in more than 30 years at the time of completion. Headquarters of information security company Optiv.
6 1999 Broadway 39°44′52″N 104°59′16″W / 39.747726°N 104.98777°W / 39.747726; -104.98777 (1999 Broadway) 544 (165.8) 43 1985 Office Built around the historic Holy Ghost Church.
7 707 17th Street 39°44′49″N 104°59′25″W / 39.747082°N 104.990402°W / 39.747082; -104.990402 (707 17th Street) 522 (159.1) 42 1981 Mixed-use Briefly the tallest building in Denver from 1981 to 1982. Mixed-use office and hotel building. Formerly known as MCI Plaza.
8 555 17th Street 39°44′43″N 104°59′21″W / 39.745174°N 104.989182°W / 39.745174; -104.989182 (555 17th Street) 507 (154.5) 40 1978 Office Briefly the tallest building in Denver from 1978 to 1981. Tallest building completed in Denver in the 1970s.
9 Hyatt Regency Denver at the Colorado Convention Center 39°44′37″N 104°59′37″W / 39.743645°N 104.993652°W / 39.743645; -104.993652 (Hyatt Regency Denver at the Colorado Convention Center) 489 (149) 37 2005 Hotel Tallest all-hotel building in Denver. Contains 1,100 rooms (60 suites). Currently Denver's 2nd largest hotel by room/suite count.
10 Spire 39°44′41″N 104°59′45″W / 39.744797°N 104.995712°W / 39.744797; -104.995712 (Spire) 483 (147.2) 41 2009 Residential Topped off in March 2009. Home to 496 residential units. Tallest all residential building in Denver and Colorado.
11 Block 162 39°44′39″N 104°59′34″W / 39.744144°N 104.99270°W / 39.744144; -104.99270 (Block 162) 452 (137.8) 30 2021 Office Topped off in 2020. Contains 595,000 square feet of office space. Completed and opened in early 2021. Tallest building completed in Denver in the 2020s.
12 1670 Broadway 39°44′34″N 104°59′12″W / 39.742897°N 104.986763°W / 39.742897; -104.986763 (1670 Broadway) 448 (136.6) 34 1980 Office
13 17th Street Plaza 39°45′01″N 104°59′43″W / 39.750263°N 104.995171°W / 39.750263; -104.995171 (17th Street Plaza) 438 (133.5) 32 1982 Office
14 633 17th Street 39°44′48″N 104°59′24″W / 39.746563°N 104.990013°W / 39.746563; -104.990013 (633 17th Street) 434 (132.3) 32 1974 Office Tallest building in Denver from 1974 to 1978. Formerly known as First Interstate Tower North. Exteriors of the building were used as the setting for Denver-Carrington in the television series Dynasty.
15 1900 Lawrence 39°45′05″N 104°59′32″W / 39.751305°N 104.992126°W / 39.751305; -104.992126 (1900 Lawrence) 427 (130.2) 30 2024 Office Contains over 700,000 square feet of usable office space. 1900 Lawrence is located on the north end of Denver's CBD and just a few blocks from Coors Field.
16 Brooks Tower 39°44′47″N 104°59′48″W / 39.746304°N 104.99678°W / 39.746304; -104.99678 (Brooks Tower) 420 (128) 42 1968 Residential Tallest building in Denver from 1968 to 1974. Tallest building completed in Denver in the 1960s.
17 Denver Place South Tower 39°44′57″N 104°59′31″W / 39.749058°N 104.99192°W / 39.749058; -104.99192 (Denver Place South Tower) 416 (126.8) 34 1981 Office
18 One Tabor Center 39°44′57″N 104°59′47″W / 39.7491°N 104.996269°W / 39.7491; -104.996269 (One Tabor Center) 408 (124.4) 32 1984 Office
19 Johns Manville Plaza 39°44′49″N 104°59′28″W / 39.746868°N 104.991249°W / 39.746868; -104.991249 (Johns Manville Plaza) 404 (123.1) 29 1978 Office
20 Granite Tower 39°44′58″N 104°59′33″W / 39.74958°N 104.992538°W / 39.74958; -104.992538 (Granite Tower) 398 (121.3) 31 1983 Office
21 Ritz-Carlton Denver 39°45′01″N 104°59′31″W / 39.750175°N 104.991882°W / 39.750175; -104.991882 (Ritz-Carlton Denver) 390 (118.9) 38 1983 Mixed-use Mixed-use hotel and residential building.
22 U.S. Bank Tower 39°44′51″N 104°59′38″W / 39.747574°N 104.993828°W / 39.747574; -104.993828 (U.S. Bank Tower) 389 (118.6) 26 1975 Office
23 621 17th Street 39°44′45″N 104°59′24″W / 39.74588°N 104.990082°W / 39.74588; -104.990082 (621 17th Street) 385 (117.4) 28 1957 Office Tallest building in Denver from 1957 to 1968. Tallest building completed in Denver in the 1950s.
24 1600 Glenarm Place 39°44′38″N 104°59′23″W / 39.743992°N 104.9897°W / 39.743992; -104.9897 (1600 Glenarm Place) 384 (117) 32 1967 Residential Also known as Glenarm Plaza. Originally known as the Security Life building.
25 Denver Financial Center I 39°44′40″N 104°59′07″W / 39.744549°N 104.985252°W / 39.744549; -104.985252 (Denver Financial Center I) 374 (114) 32 1981 Office
26 One Lincoln Park 39°44′52″N 104°59′12″W / 39.747799°N 104.986534°W / 39.747799; -104.986534 (One Lincoln Park) 374 (114) 32 2009 Residential
27 The Confluence 39°45′14″N 105°00′27″W / 39.753998°N 105.007545°W / 39.753998; -105.007545 (The Confluence) 371 (113) 34 2017 Residential Topped off February 2017. Located at the western edge of the Lower Downtown (LoDo) neighborhood the 288-unit all residential tower is located adjacent to Confluence Park at the confluence of Cherry Creek and the South Platte River.
28 Dominion Plaza 39°44′43″N 104°59′27″W / 39.745209°N 104.990929°W / 39.745209; -104.990929 (Dominion Plaza) 401 (122.2) 28 1983 Office
29 Lincoln Center 39°44′35″N 104°59′09″W / 39.742935°N 104.985741°W / 39.742935; -104.985741 (Lincoln Center) 366 (111.6) 30 1972 Office
30 1125 17th Street 39°44′58″N 104°59′41″W / 39.749432°N 104.994789°W / 39.749432; -104.994789 (1125 17th Street) 363 (110.6) 25 1980 Office
31 United Western Financial Center 39°44′46″N 104°59′29″W / 39.746155°N 104.991478°W / 39.746155; -104.991478 (United Western Financial Center) 357 (108.8) 24 1961 Office Also known as Matrix Capital Bank Tower.
32 Denver Energy Center Tower II 39°44′32″N 104°59′16″W / 39.74226°N 104.98783°W / 39.74226; -104.98783 (Denver Energy Center Tower II) 357 (108.8) 29 1980 Office Also known by its address, 1625 Broadway. The tallest of two towers at the Denver Energy Center, formerly the World Trade Center.
33 1600 Broadway 39°44′32″N 104°59′13″W / 39.742153°N 104.98705°W / 39.742153; -104.98705 (1600 Broadway) 352 (107.3) 26 1972 Office Also known as Colorado State Bank.
34 The Curtis 39°44′55″N 104°59′33″W / 39.748577°N 104.992516°W / 39.748577; -104.992516 (The Curtis) 350 (106.7) 30 1974 Mixed-use Mixed-use hotel and residential building. Also known as Executive Tower.
35 1800 Larimer 39°45′04″N 104°59′40″W / 39.751225°N 104.994354°W / 39.751225; -104.994354 (1800 Larimer) 344 (104.7) 22 2010 Office
36 410 Building 39°44′39″N 104°59′20″W / 39.744064°N 104.98896°W / 39.744064; -104.98896 (410 Building) 335 (102.1) 24 1978 Office
37 Larimer Place 39°44′57″N 104°59′53″W / 39.74905°N 104.998177°W / 39.74905; -104.998177 (Larimer Place) 335 (102.1) 32 1981 Residential
38 Denver Energy Center Tower I 39°44′34″N 104°59′16″W / 39.7427626°N 104.987847°W / 39.7427626; -104.987847 (Denver Energy Center Tower I) 335 (102) 29 1980 Office
39 1001 17th Street 39°44′57″N 104°59′36″W / 39.74915°N 104.99325°W / 39.74915; -104.99325 (1001 17th Street) 330 (100.6) 21 1977 Office
N/A Elitch Gardens Observation Tower 39°45′03″N 105°00′39″W / 39.7508743°N 105.0108441°W / 39.7508743; -105.0108441 (Elitch Gardens Observation Tower) 330 (100.6) N/A 1995 Observation Located inside Elitch Gardens Theme Park near Riverfront Park in Denver. Included in this list for comparative purposes.
40 Country Club East Tower 39°42′56″N 104°58′27″W / 39.715656°N 104.974174°W / 39.715656; -104.974174 (Country Club East Tower) 328 (100) 31 2017 Residential Topped off Spring 2017 with completion in late 2017. Located in Denver's Speer neighborhood adjacent to the Denver Country Club. There are a total of around 550 residential units within towers II & III.
41 Country Club West Tower 39°42′56″N 104°58′30″W / 39.715691°N 104.974976°W / 39.715691; -104.974976 (Country Club West Tower) 328 (100) 31 2017 Residential Topped off Spring 2017 with completion in late 2017. Located in Denver's Speer neighborhood adjacent to the Denver Country Club. There are a total of around 550 residential units within towers II & III.
N/A Denver International Airport Tower 39°51′45″N 104°40′25″W / 39.8624543°N 104.6736894°W / 39.8624543; -104.6736894 (Denver International Airport Tower) 327 (99.7) N/A 1993 Transport Included in this list for comparative purposes.
42 Daniels & Fisher Tower 39°44′53″N 104°59′44″W / 39.748104°N 104.995689°W / 39.748104; -104.995689 (Daniels & Fisher Tower) 325 (99.1) 20 1910 Office Located in Denver's Skyline Park, D&F Tower was the tallest building located west of the Mississippi River from 1910 until 1914, and was the tallest building in Denver from 1910 to 1957. Today the tower continues to house mostly office condominiums as well as an events venue on the upper floors and a cabaret in the basement. Standing near the center of the Sixteenth Street Mall, the Daniels & Fisher Tower remains a beloved Denver landmark.
43 Independence Plaza 39°44′53″N 104°59′39″W / 39.748188°N 104.994232°W / 39.748188; -104.994232 (Independence Plaza) 322 (98.2) 24 1972 Office
44 Grand Hyatt Denver 39°44′46″N 104°59′21″W / 39.7459741°N 104.98911°W / 39.7459741; -104.98911 (Grand Hyatt Denver) 320 (97.5) 26 1979 Hotel
45 The Quincy 39°44′55″N 104°59′33″W / 39.74856°N 104.99253°W / 39.74856; -104.99253 (The Quincy) 315 (96) 28 2018 Residential Contains 359 residential units.
46 The Barclay 39°44′59″N 104°59′51″W / 39.749603°N 104.997414°W / 39.749603; -104.997414 (The Barclay) 314 (95.7) 30 1981 Residential
47 One Civic Center Plaza 39°44′29″N 104°59′12″W / 39.741354°N 104.98655°W / 39.741354; -104.98655 (One Civic Center Plaza) 310 (94.5) 22 1984 Office Also known as the Denver Post Tower.
48 The Pinnacle at City Park South Tower 39°44′36″N 104°57′10″W / 39.743332°N 104.952782°W / 39.743332; -104.952782 (The Pinnacle at City Park South Tower) 305 (93) 27 2008 Residential
49 1401 Lawrence 39°44′50″N 104°59′56″W / 39.74712°N 104.998878°W / 39.74712; -104.998878 (1401 Lawrence) 304 (92.7) 22 2016 Office

Tallest under construction or proposed

Under construction

This table lists buildings that are under construction in Denver that are planned to rise at least 300 feet (91 m) as of 2025.

Name Height
ft (m)
Floors Year Purpose Notes
Upton Residences South Tower 400 (121.9) 38 2026 Residential Also known as 18th & Glenarm. Will be home to around 275 residential units. South Tower is located on the same site as its shorter 32-story sister tower. Both are being constructed simultaneously and will ultimately be connected via shared parking & amenities spaces.
Upton Residences North Tower 350 (106.7) 32 2026 Residential Also known as 18th & Glenarm. North Tower is located on the same site as its taller 38-story sister tower. Both are being constructed simultaneously and will ultimately be connected via shared parking & amenities spaces.

Proposed

This table lists buildings in Denver that are planned to rise at least 300 feet (91 m) that are either proposed, actively under design or site review (concept or site development), or approved and awaiting construction. The "year column" indicates the estimated year when construction will begin.

Name Height
ft (m)
Floors Year Purpose Status Notes
1546 California 673 (205) Observation Proposed
1620 Champa 610 (186) 53 2025 Residential Under review
Two Tabor 499 (152) 35 Office Proposed
650 17th 430 (131) 39 Mixed-use Approved
Block 176 Tower 3 425 (130) 39 Residential Under review
Block 176 Tower 4 425 (130) 39 Residential Under review
Bell Tower 410 (125) 36 2024 Residential Under review
1055 19th Tower 1 400 (122) 38 Mixed-use Approved
1055 19th Tower 2 400 (122) 28 Office Approved
2099 Lawrence 387 (118) 36 2025 Mixed-use Under review
601 16th 375 (114) 25 Mixed-use Proposed
Downtown Denver Marriott 340 (104) 27 2024 Hotel Approved

Timeline of tallest buildings

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

Name Image Street address Years as tallest Height
ft (m)
Floors Reference
Equitable Building 730 17th Street 1892–1910 148 (45) 9
Daniels & Fisher Tower 1601 Arapahoe Street 1910–1957 325 (99) 20
621 17th Street 621 17th Street 1957–1968 384 (117) 28
Brooks Tower 1020 15th Street 1968–1974 420 (130) 42
First Interstate Tower North 633 17th Street 1974–1978 434 (132) 32
555 17th Street 555 17th Street 1978–1981 507 (155) 40
MCI Plaza 707 17th Street 1981–1982 522 (159) 42
1801 California Street 1801 California Street 1982–1984 709 (216) 53
Republic Plaza 330 17th Street 1984–present 714 (218) 56

See also

wikipedia, wiki, encyclopedia, book, library, article, read, free download, Information about List of tallest buildings in Denver, What is List of tallest buildings in Denver? What does List of tallest buildings in Denver mean?