List of tallest buildings in Perth

Perth is the fourth-largest city in Australia, with an urban population of over 2.3 million. As the capital of Western Australia, and by far its largest city, Perth contains the vast majority of the high-rises in the state. The city is home to 30 high-rise buildings that reach a height of 100 metres (328 ft) or greater as of 2025, five of which are taller than 150 m (492 ft). Perth has the fifth-greatest number of skyscrapers of any Australian city, after Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane, and the Gold Coast. The tallest building in Perth is the 51-storey Central Park (more commonly known as the "Rio Tinto building") at 249 m (817 ft), completed in 1992; it also stands as the tallest building in Western Australia.

Skyline of Perth
Skyline of Perth in 2023
Tallest buildingCentral Park (1992)
Tallest building height249 m (817 ft)
First 150 m+ building108 St Georges Terrace (1988)
Number of tall buildings (2025)
Taller than 100 m (328 ft)30
Taller than 150 m (492 ft)4
Taller than 200 m (656 ft)3

The first high-rises in Perth appeared towards the 1960s, one of them being Council House in 1963. High-rise development increased markedly in the 1970s with commercial skyscrapers such as St Martins Tower, the tallest building in the city from 1978 to 1988. This continued until the late 1980s and early 1990s, when Central Park and the city's third-tallest building, 108 St Georges Terrace. Following a period of slower development from the mid-1990s to the mid-2000s, another high-rise boom occurred with a greater share of residential and hotel buildings, alongside new commercial towers. The most notable of these is Brookfield Place, the city's second tallest building. Built in 2012 at a height of 234 m (768 ft), it serves as the headquarters of mining company BHP.

There are several ongoing projects that will further add to Perth's skyline. Elizabeth Quay is a major mixed-use development project that first broke ground in 2012. Currently topped out in Elizabeth Quay is EQ West, which at a height of 186 m (610 ft), will be the fourth-tallest building in the city. Lot 4 EQ, in the same development, will surpass it at a height of 212 m (696 ft) when it is scheduled to complete in 2029.

The large majority of tall buildings in Perth are situated in the city's central business district, with recent high-rise developments extending the skyline eastwards, towards East Perth. The main skyline runs northwest to southeast and is bounded by the Swan River to the south. Another high-rise cluster is being developed across the river in South Perth, where the residential tower Civic Heart was completed in 2024. There are additional new clusters on the western side of Canning Bridge and in Burswood.

History

Number of buildingsYear0510152025301970198019902000201020202030Buildings taller than 100 m (328 ft)Buildings taller than 150 m (492 ft)Buildings taller than 200 m (656 ft)Growth of skyscrapers in Perth
Number of buildings by height in Perth by the end of each year. Click on the legend to toggle a specific height on or off. View chart definition.

1930s–60s

Tall buildings in Perth got their start later than in larger Australian cities like Sydney or Melbourne. One of the earliest high-rises in the city was the CML Building, built for the Colonial Mutual Life Assurance Society in 1936; the company had also built some of the earliest high-rises in Brisbane and Adelaide. Construction took place during the Great Depression, providing work for 200 men, and was overseen by local architect Reginald Summerhayes, who was responsible for decorative gargoyles on the exterior of the building. It was the tallest building in the city for over two decades until 1962, and was ultimately demolished in 1980.

During the 1950s and 1960s, many of Perth's older buildings had been demolished to make way for modern developments, which had led to criticism of the Perth City Council for approving such redevelopments. The CML Building was surpassed by the T&G Building, now known as Citibank House, an 68 m (224 ft), 18-storey office building completed in 1962. The modernist high-rise took the place of Moir Chambers, an American Romasque building that had been standing since 1897. Despite protests, it was demolished in 1960, and construction on the new CML Building began the same year. When the T&G Building was constructed, there were no plot ratio limits imposed by the City of Perth on multistorey developments, and the building had a plot ratio of approximately 7:1. However, subsequent to the construction, a limit of 5:1 was imposed. Another early high-rise is the 13-storey Council House, opened by Queen Elizabeth a year after Perth had hosted the Commonwealth Games. The building served as the headquarters of the city council, which in 1959 launched an architectural competition for the new building.

1970s–1990s

The construction of tall buildings increased in the 1970s, with commercial high-rises able to regularly reach 100 m (328 ft) in height. Between 1976 and 1978, the title of Perth's tallest building changed hands three times in a span of three years, first with the AMP Building (now 140 St Georges Terrace) in 1976. The 30-storey, 131 m (430 ft) skyscraper was built for AMP Limited, replacing the six-storey "AMP Chambers" that had stood since 1915. Only a year after the AMP Building had been completed, Allendale Square overtook it by a metre in 1977. Upon its opening, the 31-storey, 132 m (433 ft) tower was the largest fully aluminium-clad freestanding tower in Australia, and one of the largest in the world. It has been described as "timeless" and a "fine example" of high-rise architecture. In 1978, would lose the title of Perth's tallest to St Martins Tower. At 140 m (460 ft) tall, it features a revolving restaurant, C Restaurant, the only one of its kind in Western Australia.

High-rise development entered into a slowdown in the late 1970s and continued until the mid-1980s, potentially affected by the 1973–1975 recession. Construction resumed in the late 1980s with the completion of three of Perth's tallest buildings at the time. The first was 108 St Georges Terrace (opening as Bond Tower or R&I Tower, as both logos were on the building's exterior at the time). Completed in 1988, the tower's prime location was the site of the first licensed premises in Perth from the 1830s. The skyscraper preserves the 1897 Palace Hotel at its base. A public campaign, with a group known as The Palace Guards, had opposed the demolition of the Palace Hotel after initial plans for the site were made in 1972. The skyscraper's design is known for its triangular shape and diagonal roof.

The next of these buildings was QV1, completed in 1991. It was among the westernmost skyscrapers in Perth at the time, and some suggested it was too far west in the central business district; however, it was fully leased by 1996. The building's modernist design has drawn criticism, and it has been labelled "Perth's most ugly building", while architect Harry Seidler described it as "the best building he had ever built". In 1992, Perth's current tallest building, Central Park, was completed. It was also the fourth tallest building in Australia at the time. The 1987 approval of the building was controversial due to plot ratio concessions made by the city council, as well as the developer requesting more parking bays than was allowed by the council's town planning scheme. Today, the tower is considered one of Australia's "finest modern landmark office towers", known for its distinctive setbacks. The early 1990s recession led to another slowdown in high-rise construction, lasting until the mid-2000s. New office towers would not be fully leased, with Central Park facing a sluggish office rental market, experiencing high vacancy rates for several years.

In 1994, the city council vacated the Council House building to allow for the removal of asbestos. Commissioners appointed by the Western Australian government to oversee the break-up of the city council voted to demolish the high-rise, planning to extend Stirling Gardens right across the site to beside Government House. This provoked calls to save the building, supported by the Royal Australian Institute of Architects; however, Graham Kierath, the Minister for Heritage, refused to place the building on the WA Register of Heritage Places. A feasibility study in 1995 recommended to refurbish the building instead, and this plan was approved in 1996. The building was "stripped back to bare bones" and the tiny tiles coating the building's distinctive T-shaped fins were removed, repaired, and re-glued to the surface. The city council moved back into the building in 1999.

2000s–present

High-rise construction catiously returned with the completion of Woodside Plaza (now 240 St Georges Terrace) in 2003, the first premium-grade skyscraper completed in Perth since Central Park in 1992. This was followed by 100 St Georges Terrace in 2009, the first office building constructed in Perth to a 4.5-star Australian Building Greenhouse Rating.

In the 2010s, Perth would undergo a building boom that significantly increased the size and extent of its skyline. Perth's second tallest building, Brookfield Place, was completed in 2012; its major tenant is BHP, a multinational mining and metals company. The building terminates in a tapered structural roof crown, echoing the shape of Perth's other notable skyscrapers such as 108 St Georges Terrace. In addition to new office towers, more residential and hotel skyscrapers were built at a greater height, such as Elevation Tower, which became the city's tallest residential building in 2010. Residential developments in East Perth such as Elevation Tower, Concerto (2017), and Vue Tower (2019) extended the central skyline to the east.

One of the largest recent development projects is that of Elizabeth Quay, involving the construction of an artificial inlet on what was previously the Esplanade Reserve, along the Swan River. Construction began in 2012 and is ongoing; so far, notable skyscrapers built on the site include a Ritz Carlton hotel (2019) and One The Esplanade (2023). Currently rising will be two of Perth's five tallest buildings: EQ West, planned to be completed in 2026 at 186 m (610 ft) tall, and Lot 4 EQ, which will be 212 m (696 ft) tall.

The 2010s and 2020s has also seen a growth in high-rises located outside of central Perth, most notably across the Swan River in South Perth, where the 147.5 m (484 ft) tall Civic Heart was completed in 2024, now the tallest residential building in Perth and the tallest building outside of the central business district. In Burswood, a 500-room hotel was completed at the Crown Perth resort and casino at a height of 105 m (344 ft). In the suburbs of Applecross and Mount Pleasant, at the western entrance of the Canning Bridge, several new residential high-rises have gone up since the late 2010s. such as Cirque Duet and Sabina Applecross.

Cityscape

Tallest buildings

This list ranks completed buildings in Perth that stand at least 100 m (324 ft) 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 of completion. Buildings tied in height are sorted by year of completion, and then alphabetically.

  Was the tallest building in Perth upon completion
Rank Name Image Location Height

m (ft)

Floors Year Purpose Notes
1 Central Park CBD

152–158 St Georges Terrace

31°57′13″S 115°51′20″E / 31.953703°S 115.855568°E / -31.953703; 115.855568 (Central Park)

252.9 (830) 52 1992 Office Tallest building in Perth since 1992. Tallest building completed in Perth in the 1990s.
2 Brookfield Place CBD

125 St Georges Terrace

31°57′18″S 115°51′17″E / 31.95497°S 115.854729°E / -31.95497; 115.854729 (Brookfield Place)

234 (768) 45 2012 Office Tallest building completed in Perth in the 2010s.
3 108 St Georges Terrace CBD

108 St Georges Terrace

31°57′16″S 115°51′26″E / 31.954466°S 115.857216°E / -31.954466; 115.857216 (108 St Georges Terrace)

214 (702) 50 1988 Office Tallest building in Perth from 1988 to 1992. Formerly known as the Bankwest Tower. Tallest building completed in Perth in the 1980s.
4 QV1 CBD

250 St Georges Terrace

31°57′09″S 115°51′03″E / 31.952372°S 115.850822°E / -31.952372; 115.850822 (QV1)

162.6 (533) 38 1991 Office
5 David Malcolm Justice Centre CBD

28 Barrack Street

31°57′19″S 115°51′38″E / 31.95526°S 115.86044°E / -31.95526; 115.86044 (David Malcolm Justice Centre)

149 (489) 35 2015 Office
6 Civic Heart South Perth

99 Mill Point Road

31°58′23″S 115°51′03″E / 31.97292°S 115.85090°E / -31.97292; 115.85090 (Civic Heart)

147.5 (484) 37 2024 Residental Tallest residential building in Perth. Tallest building in South Perth.
7 Exchange Plaza CBD

2 The Esplanade

31°57′23″S 115°51′31″E / 31.956331°S 115.858749°E / -31.956331; 115.858749 (Exchange Plaza)

146 (479) 40 1992 Office
8 Mia Yellagonga Tower 3 CBD

1 Spring Street

31°57′17″S 115°51′02″E / 31.95476°S 115.850563°E / -31.95476; 115.850563 (Mia Yellagonga Tower 3)

141 (463) 37 2024 Office Also known as Capital Square Tower 3.
9 St Martins Tower CBD

44 St Georges Terrace

31°57′18″S 115°51′34″E / 31.955116°S 115.859421°E / -31.955116; 115.859421 (St Martins Tower)

140 (459) 33 1978 Office Tallest building in Perth from 1978 to 1988. Tallest building completed in Perth in the 1970s.
10 Woodside Plaza CBD

240 St Georges Terrace

31°57′10″S 115°51′06″E / 31.952799°S 115.85173°E / -31.952799; 115.85173 (Woodside Plaza)

137 (449) 28 2003 Office Tallest building completed in Perth in the 2000s.
11 One The Esplande CBD

1 The Esplanade

31°57′26″S 115°51′30″E / 31.957098°S 115.85832°E / -31.957098; 115.85832 (One The Esplande)

133 (436) 29 2023 Office Also known as Chevron Tower.
12 Allendale Square CBD

77 St Georges Terrace

31°57′21″S 115°51′29″E / 31.955711°S 115.858131°E / -31.955711; 115.858131 (Allendale Square)

132 (433) 31 1977 Office Tallest building in Perth from 1977 to 1978.
13 140 St Georges Terrace CBD

140 St Georges Terrace

31°57′15″S 115°51′23″E / 31.954224°S 115.856369°E / -31.954224; 115.856369 (140 St Georges Terrace)

131 (430) 30 1976 Office Tallest building in Perth from 1976 to 1977. Formerly known as the AMP Building or AMP Centre.
14 Mia Yellagonga Tower 1 CBD

11 Mount Street

31°57′14″S 115°51′00″E / 31.953775°S 115.849876°E / -31.953775; 115.849876 (Mia Yellagonga Tower 1)

130 (430) 32 2018 Office Also known as One Capital Square.
15 The Switch CBD

553-561 Wellington Street

31°57′04″S 115°51′25″E / 31.951081°S 115.856852°E / -31.951081; 115.856852 (The Switch)

124.8 (409) 39 2022 Residential Also known as Switch Perth.
16 Concerto East Perth

189 Adelaide Terrace

31°57′35″S 115°52′10″E / 31.959636°S 115.869547°E / -31.959636; 115.869547 (Concerto)

117 (384) 37 2017 Residential Also known as Symphony City. Tallest building in East Perth.
17 Vue Tower East Perth

63 Adelaide Terrace

31°57′40″S 115°52′30″E / 31.961185°S 115.874985°E / -31.961185; 115.874985 (Vue Tower)

112.7 (370) 34 2019 Residential
18 Equus CBD

580 Hay Street

31°57′15″S 115°51′41″E / 31.95407°S 115.861263°E / -31.95407; 115.861263 (Equus)

111 (364) 27 2011 Mixed-use Mixed-use residetial and office building. Tallest mixed-use building in Perth.
19 221 St Georges Terrace CBD

221 St Georges Terrace

31°57′13″S 115°51′07″E / 31.953655°S 115.852081°E / -31.953655; 115.852081 (221 St Georges Terrace)

110 (361) 30 1990 Office Also known as the Forrest Centre.
20 Governor Stirling Tower CBD

197 St Georges Terrace

31°57′14″S 115°51′09″E / 31.953934°S 115.852585°E / -31.953934; 115.852585 (Governor Stirling Tower)

110 (361) 28 1978 Office
21 Westin Hotel CBD

480 Hay Street

31°57′19″S 115°51′52″E / 31.955339°S 115.864487°E / -31.955339; 115.864487 (Westin Hotel)

107 (351) 28 2017 Hotel Tallest hotel building in Perth.
22 Telstra Exchange CBD

625 Wellington Street

31°57′02″S 115°51′14″E / 31.9505°S 115.853989°E / -31.9505; 115.853989 (Telstra Exchange)

106 (348) 17 1979 Communication
23 Bankwest Place CBD

306 Murray Street

31°57′06″S 115°51′27″E / 31.951626°S 115.857445°E / -31.951626; 115.857445 (Bankwest Place)

106 (348) 22 2011 Office Sits atop Raine Square. Also known simply as Raine Square.
24 Crown Towers Burswood

Great Eastern Highway

31°57′34″S 115°53′38″E / 31.959475°S 115.8938034°E / -31.959475; 115.8938034 (Crown Towers)

105 (344) 21 2016 Hotel Tallest building in Burswood.
25 Ritz Carlton Hotel CBD

1 Barrack Street

31°57′29″S 115°51′29″E / 31.958078°S 115.858147°E / -31.958078; 115.858147 (Ritz Carlton Hotel)

103.1 (338) 28 2019 Hotel
26 100 St Georges Terrace CBD

100 St Georges Terrace

31°57′17″S 115°51′28″E / 31.95484°S 115.857689°E / -31.95484; 115.857689 (100 St Georges Terrace)

103 (338) 23 2009 Office Also known as ENEX100.
27 Elevation Tower CBD

237 Adelaide Terrace

31°57′30″S 115°52′00″E / 31.958452°S 115.86673°E / -31.958452; 115.86673 (Elevation Tower)

103 (338) 30 2010 Residential
28 Perth Hub CBD

80 Milligan Street

31°56′56″S 115°51′12″E / 31.9490031°S 115.853277°E / -31.9490031; 115.853277 (Perth Hub)

103 (338) 32 2024 Residental
29 At238 CBD

240 Adelaide Terrace

31°57′28″S 115°52′01″E / 31.957872°S 115.86704°E / -31.957872; 115.86704 (At238)

102 (335) 31 2023 Residential
30 NV Apartments CBD

374/396 Murray Street

31°57′04″S 115°51′16″E / 31.951153°S 115.854454°E / -31.951153; 115.854454 (NV Apartments)

100 (328) 33 2020 Residential

Tallest under construction or proposed

Under construction

This list ranks completed buildings in Perth that stand at least 100 m (328 ft) 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 of completion.

Name Location Height

m (ft)

Floors Purpose Year Notes
Lot 4 EQ CBD 212 (696) 54 Mixed Use 2030 On hold
EQ West CBD 186 (610) 53 Residential 2025 Completed
Garden Tower East Perth 116 (381) 38 Residential 2026 Under construction
UniLodge 609 Wellington CBD 110 (360) 33 Residential 2027 Under construciton
Lumiere South Perth 101 (331) 30 Residential 2027 Under construction

Proposed

The following table ranks proposed and approved skyscrapers in Perth that are expected to be at least 100 m (328 ft) tall as of 2025, based on standard height measurement. The “Year” column indicates the expected year of completion. A dash “–“ indicates information about the building’s height or year of completion is not available.

Name Location Height

m (ft)

Floors Purpose Year Status Notes
St. Andrew's Hotel CBD 234 (768) 62 Hotel Approved
15 The Esplanade CBD 213 (699) 56 Mixed Use Approved
Carillon PBSA CBD 134 (440) 38 Mixed Use Approved
108 Stirling Northbridge 129 (423) 34 Mixed Use Approved
Subiaco East Subiaco 128 (420) 36 Residential Approved
Perth Girls School East Perth 125 (410) 37 Residential Approved
88 Mill Point South Perth 123 (404) 36 Residential Approved
Kings Square 5 CBD 114 (374) 27 Office Approved
Murray Tower CBD 110 (360) 33 Residential Approved [citation needed]
City Tower Burswood 109 (358) 32 Residential Approved [citation needed]
White Sands Scarborough 103 (338) 29 Residential Approved
Peninsula Tower 6 Burswood 101 (331) 31 Residential Approved [citation needed]

Timeline of tallest buildings

This following is a list of buildings that once held the title of the tallest building in Perth.

Name Image Years as tallest Height Floors Notes
CML Building 1936–1962 50 (160) 11 Demolished in 1980.
Citibank House 1962–1970 68 (223) 18 Formerly known as the T & G Building
Parmelia House 1970–1973 80 (260) 20
Pan Pacific Perth Hotel 1973–1976 90 (300) 24 Formerly known as the Sheraton Hotel
140 St Georges Terrace 1976–1977 131 (430) 30 Formerly known as the AMP Building
Allendale Square 1977–1978 132 (433) 31
St Martins Tower 1978–1988 140 (460) 33
108 St Georges Terrace 1988–1992 214 (702) 50 Formerly known as the R & I Tower and Bankwest Tower
Central Park 1992–Present 249 (817) 52 Current tallest building in Perth.

Map of tallest buildings

This map displays the location of buildings taller than 100 m (328 ft) in central Perth. Each marker is coloured by the decade of the building's completion. There are only two buildings in Perth taller than 100 m (328 ft) that are located outside the CBD and the adjacent suburb of East Perth: Crown Perth, which is in Burwood, and Civic Plaza, which is in South Perth.

240m
262yds
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Buildings taller than 100 m (328 ft) in Perth's central business district. An asterisk (*) next to the building's name indicates it is located outside the map.
  •  1970s 
  •  1980s 
  •  1990s 
  •  2000s 
  •  2010s 
  •  2020s 
1
Central Park
2
Brookfield Place
3
108 St Georges Terrace
4
QV1
5
David Malcolm Justice Centre
6
Civic Heart*
7
Exchange Plaza
8
Mia Yellagonga Tower 3
9
St Martins Tower
10
Woodside Plaza
11
One The Esplande
12
Allendale Square
13
140 St Georges Terrace
14
Mia Yellagonga Tower 1
15
The Switch
16
Concerto
17
Vue Tower
18
Equus
19
221 St Georges Terrace
20
Governor Stirling Tower
21
Westin Hotel
22
Telstra Exchange
23
Bankwest Place
24
Crown Towers*
25
Ritz Carlton Hotel
26
100 St Georges Terrace
27
Elevation Tower
28
Perth Hub
29
At238
30
NV Apartments

Skylines

See also

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