thumb|The [[Eiffel Tower, measuring from base to tip, is perhaps the most famous example of a lattice tower. It was built in 1889, and was the tallest man-made structure in the world until 1930.]]

A lattice tower, or truss tower, is a freestanding vertical framework tower. This construction is widely used in transmission towers carrying high-voltage electric power lines, in radio masts and towers (both self-radiating towers and those that support aerials) and in observation towers. Its advantage is good shear strength at a much lower weight than a tower of solid construction would have as well as lower wind resistance.

In structural engineering, the term lattice tower is used for a freestanding structure, while a lattice mast is a guyed mast supported by guy lines. Lattices of triangular (three-sided) cross-section are most common, particularly in North America. Square (four-sided) lattices are also widely used and are most common in Eurasia. A lattice towers is often designed as either a space frame or a hyperboloid structure.

Before 1940, they were used as radio transmission towers especially for short and medium wave. Occasionally lattice towers consisting of wood were utilized. The tallest wooden lattice tower was at Mühlacker, Germany. It had a height of and was built in 1934 and demolished in 1945. Most wood lattice towers were demolished before 1960. In Germany, the last big radio towers consisting of wood were the transmission towers of the Golm transmitter and the transmitter Ismaning. They were demolished in 1979 and 1983 respectively.

The tallest free-standing lattice tower is the Tokyo Skytree, with a height of . The Petronius Compliant Tower is the tallest supported lattice tower at , being partially submerged. The city most renowned for lattice towers is Cincinnati, Ohio, which features four towers above in height. Tokyo is the only other city in the world that has more than one above that height.

The majority of the tallest steel lattice towers in the world are actually built in water and used as oil platforms. These structures are usually built in large pieces on land, most commonly in Texas or Louisiana, and then moved by barge to their final resting place. Since a large portion of these towers is underwater, the official height of such structures is often held in dispute. The steel lattice truss for these structures, known as jackets in the oil industry, are typically far more robust and reinforced than their land-based counterparts, sometimes weighing more than 50,000 tons as is the case for the Bullwinkle and Baldpate platforms, whereas tall (above 300 m) land-based lattice towers range from a high of 10,000 tons as is the case in the Eiffel Tower to as low as a few hundred tons. They are built to a higher standard to support the weight of the oil platforms built on top of them and because of the forces to which they are subjected. As a result, the cost to build these structures can run into the hundreds of millions. These costs are justified due to the resulting oil and gas revenues, whereas land-based towers have a much lower stream of revenue and therefore the capital costs of towers are typically much less.

thumb|[[Tokyo Skytree, the tallest lattice tower in the world since its completion in 2012]]

thumb|The [[Tokyo Tower was the tallest lattice tower in the world for 16 years, from 1957 to 1973, and remains the tallest four-sided lattice tower.]]

thumb|The [[WITI TV Tower is the tallest lattice tower in the United States and the tallest three-sided lattice tower in the world.]]

thumb|[[Dragon Tower, the tallest observation and radio lattice tower in China, features a solid core, the most common design for tall lattice towers built in China.]]

thumb|A -long fixed steel jacket (lattice) oil platform

thumb|A -long section of the Benguela-Belize Lobito-Tomboco Platform, which accounts for only about half the overall height of the structure

Timeline of world's tallest lattice tower

Since end of the 19th century, tall lattice towers were built. Lattice towers have even held the absolute height record. They are among the tallest free-standing architectural structures and hold a number of national records, such as the tallest free-standing or even overall tallest structure of a country.

Land record, iron and steel towers

{| class="sortable wikitable"

|-

!colspan="2"| Held record

!rowspan="2"| Name

!rowspan="2"| Location

!rowspan="2"| Completed

!rowspan="2"| Height (m)

!rowspan="2"| Height (ft)

!rowspan="2"| Notes

|-

! From !! To

|-

| 1852

| 1881

| Carysfort Reef Light

| Key Largo, Florida, US

| 1852

| 36.6

| 120

|

|-

| 1881

| 1889

| San Jose electric light tower

| San Jose, California, US

| 1881

| 72

| 237

| Collapsed in a storm in December 1915

|-

| 1889

| 1956

| Eiffel Tower

| Paris, France

| 1889

| 312.3

| 1,025

| When built held the absolute height record for tallest structure of any type in the world until 1930

|-

| 1956

| 1957

| KCTV Broadcast Tower

| Kansas City, Missouri, US

| 1956

| 317.6

| 1,042

|

|-

| 1957

| 1958

| Eiffel Tower

| Paris, France

| 1889

| 321

| 1,053

|The Eiffel Tower regained the record when it added an antenna.

|-

| 1958

| 1973

| Tokyo Tower

| Tokyo, Japan

| 1957

| 333

| 1,093

|

|-

| 1973

| 2012

| Kyiv TV Tower

| Kyiv, Ukraine

| 1973

| 385

| 1,263

|

|-

| 2012

| current

| Tokyo Skytree

| Tokyo, Japan

| 2012

| 634

| 2,080

|

|}

Land record, wood towers

{| class="sortable wikitable"

|-

!colspan="2"| Held record

!rowspan="2"| Name

!rowspan="2"| Location

!rowspan="2"| Completed

!rowspan="2"| Height (m)

!rowspan="2"| Height (ft)

!rowspan="2"| Notes

|-

! From !! To

|-

| 1853

| 1856

| Latting Observatory

| New York City, United States

| 1853

| 96

| 315

| Burned down in 1856

|-

| 1899

| 1902

| Wardenclyffe Tower

| Shoreham, United States

| 1899

| 57

| 187

|

|-

| 1902

| 1926

| Towers of South Wellfleet Marconi Wireless Station

| South Wellfleet, United States

| 1902

| 64

| 210

| 4 towers

|-

| 1926

| 1928

| Stadelheim Transmitter

| Munich-Stadelheim, Germany

| 1926

| 75

| 246

|

|-

| 1928

| 1930

| Flensburg Radio Tower

| Flensburg, Germany

| 1928

| 90

| 295

|

|-

| 1930

| 1932

| Transmitter Heilsberg

| Lidzbark Warmiński, Poland

| 1930

| 102

| 335

|

|-

| 1932

| 1933

| Sendeturm Ismaning

| Ismaning, Germany

| 1932

| 163

| 534

|

|-

| 1933

| 1934

| Transmitter Berlin-Tegel

| Berlin, Germany

| 1933

| 165

| 541

|

|-

| 1934

| 1945

| Transmission Tower Mühlacker

| Mühlacker, Germany

| 1934

| 190

| 623

| Demolished on April 6, 1945

|-

| 1945

| 1948

| Transmitter Berlin-Tegel

| Berlin, Germany

| 1933

| 165

| 541

| Demolished on December 16, 1948

|-

| 1948

| 1983

| Sendeturm Ismaning

| Ismaning, Germany

| 1932

| 163

| 534

| Demolished on March 16, 1983

|-

| 1983

| 1990

| Transmitter Żórawina

| Żórawina, Poland

| 1932

| 140

| 459

| Demolished during Fall 1990

|-

| 1990

| current

| Radio Tower Gliwice

| Gliwice, Poland

| 1935

| 118

| 387

|

|}

Land and water record, overall

{| class="sortable wikitable"

|-

!colspan="2"| Held record

!rowspan="2"| Name

!rowspan="2"| Location

!rowspan="2"| Completed

!rowspan="2"| Height (m)

!rowspan="2"| Height (ft)

!rowspan="2"| Notes

|-

! From !! To

|-

| 1852

| 1853

| Carysfort Reef Light

| Key Largo, Florida, US

| 1852

| 36.6

| 120

|

|-

| 1853

| 1856

| Latting Observatory

| New York City, United States

| 1853

| 96

| 315

| Burned down in 1856, structure was an inspiration for the Eiffel Tower

|-

| 1856

| 1881

| Carysfort Reef Light

| Key Largo, Florida, US

| 1852

| 36.6

| 120

|

|-

| 1881

| 1889

| San Jose electric light tower

| San Jose, California, US

| 1881

| 72

| 237

| Built using an unusual design featuring circular cross-beams

|-

| 1889

| 1956

| Eiffel Tower

| Paris, France

| 1889

| 312.3

| 1,025

| Weight of iron framework 7,300 tons total weight of the tower 10,100 tons

|-

| 1956

| 1957

| KCTV Broadcast Tower

| Kansas City, Missouri, US

| 1956

| 317.6

| 1,042

| Weight; 600 tons

|-

| 1889

| 1958

| Eiffel Tower

| Paris, France

| 1889

| 321

| 1,053

|

|-

| 1958

| 1973

| Tokyo Tower

| Tokyo, Japan

| 1957

| 333

| 1,093

| Weight; 4,000 tons

|-

| 1973

| 1977

| Kyiv TV Tower

| Kyiv, Ukraine

| 1973

| 385

| 1,263

| Weight; 3,000 tons

|-

| 1977

| 1989

| Cognac Platform

| Gulf of Mexico

| 1977

| 385.5

| 1,265

| Weight; 45,000 tons or 59,000 tons

|-

| 1989

| 1998

| Bullwinkle Platform

| Gulf of Mexico

| 1989

| 529

| 1,736

| Weight of the steel jacket 49,375 tons, total weight of the platform 72,000 tons

|-

| 1998

| 2000

| Baldpate Compliant Tower

| Gulf of Mexico

| 1998

| 581.5

| 1,908

| Weight of the steel jacket 28,900 tons, total weight of the platform 38,700 tons

|-

| 2000

| current

| Petronius Compliant Tower

| Gulf of Mexico

| 2012

| 640

| 2,100

| Weight of the steel jacket 43,000 tons, total weight of the platform 50,500 tons. When built held the absolute height record for tallest structure of any type in the world until 2010.

|}

Steel lattice towers

Tallest lattice towers, all types

List of all supertall lattice tower structures in the world.

{| class="wikitable sortable" style="font-size: 90%;"

|-

! Rank

! Name

! Type

! Year

! Built in

! City/location

! Height m

! Height ft

! Cost

! Weight

! Remarks

|-

| 1

| Petronius Compliant Tower

| Oil Platform, Compliant tower

| 2000

| United States

| Gulf of Mexico

| 640

| 2,100

| $500 million

| 50,500 tons

| Tallest lattice tower of any type(supported by water buoyancy), water depth of 1,754 ft

|-

| 2

| Tokyo Skytree

| Lattice tower

| 2012

| Japan

| Sumida, Tokyo

| 634

| 2,080

| $806 million

| 36,000 tons

| Tallest free standing lattice tower

|-

| 3

| Baldpate Compliant Tower

| Oil Platform, Compliant tower

| 1998

| United States

| Gulf of Mexico

| 581.5

| 1,908

| $300 million

| 38,700 tons

| Tallest structure in the world 1998–2000, water depth of 1,647 ft

|-

| 4

| Bullwinkle Platform

| Oil Platform, Steel Truss

| 1989

| United States

| Gulf of Mexico

| 529

| 1,736

| $500 million

| 72,000 tons

| Tallest fixed/rigged structure built in water, water depth of 1,352 ft

|-

| 5

| Benguela-Belize Lobito-Tomboco Platform

| Oil Platform, Compliant tower

| 2008

| United States

| Congo Basin

| 512

| 1,680

| $820 million

| 69,500 tons

| water depth of 1,280 ft

|-

| 6

| Pompano Platform

| Oil Platform, Steel Truss

| 1994

| United States

| Gulf of Mexico

| 477

| 1,565

|

| 39,890 tons (not including platform)

| water depth of 1,290 ft

|-

| 7

| Tombua Landana platform

| Oil Platform, Compliant tower

| 2009

| United States

| Congo Basin

| 474

| 1,554

| $200 million

| 81,500 tons

| water depth of 1,200 ft

|-

| 8

| Harmony Platform

| Oil Platform, Steel Truss

| 1992

| South Korea

| California

| 366

| 1,200

|

| 44,100 (not including platform)

| Oil Platform, Steel Truss

| 2016

| United States

| Gulf of Mexico

| 400

| 1,312

|

|

| water depth of 1,186 ft

|-

| 11

| Heritage Platform

| Oil Platform, Steel Truss

| 1977

| United States

| Gulf of Mexico

| 385.5

| 1,265

| $100 million

|-

| 13 tie

| Kyiv TV Tower

| Lattice tower

| 1973

| Ukraine

| Kyiv

| 385

| 1,263

| $12 million

|

|

|-

| 13 tie

| Yangtze River Crossing Jiangyin, North East tower

| Hydro Pylon

| 2022

| China

| Jiangyin

| 385

| 1,263

|

| 13,000 tons(tower) 410 tons(wires)

| tallest pylons in the world

|-

| 13 tie

| Yangtze River Crossing Jiangyin, South East tower

| Hydro Pylon

| 2022

| China

| Jiangyin

| 385

| 1,263

|

| 13,000 tons(tower) 410 tons(wires)

| tallest pylons in the world

|-

| 16 tie

| Jintang and Cezi islands Overhead Powerline Tie, East Tower

| Hydro Pylon

| 2019

| China

| Jintang Island

| 380

| 1,247

| $67 million

|

| formerly tallest pylons in the world

|-

| 16 tie

| Jintang and Cezi islands Overhead Powerline Tie, West Tower

| Hydro Pylon

| 2019

| China

| Jintang Island

| 380

| 1,247

| $67 million

|

| formerly tallest pylons in the world

|-

| 18

| Tashkent Tower

| Lattice tower/Steel tower

| 1985

| Uzbekistan

| Tashkent

| 374.9

| 1,230

|

| 6,000 tons

| may be categorized as a steel tower rather than a lattice tower

|-

| 19 tie

| Zhoushan Island Overhead Powerline Tie, North tower

| Hydro Pylon

| 2009

| China

| Damao Island

| 370

| 1,214

|

|

|

|-

| 19 tie

| Zhoushan Island Overhead Powerline Tie, South tower

| Hydro Pylon

| 2009

| China

| Damao Island

| 370

| 1,214

|

|

|

|-

| 21

| Amberjack Platform (tower) 400-450 tons(wind turbine)

| World's tallest and first supertall wind turbine

|-

| 23

| Hondo Platform

| Oil Platform, Steel Truss

| 1976

| United States

| Gulf of Mexico

| 354.5

| 1,163

| $70 million

|

| water depth of 850 ft

|-

| 24 tie

| Yangtze River Crossing Jiangyin, North West tower

| Hydro Pylon

| 2003

| China

| Jiangyin

| 346.5

| 1,137

|

| 4,000 tons

| Oil Platform, Steel Truss

| 1981

| United States

| Gulf of Mexico

| 327

| 1,073

| $90 million

|

| water depth of 935 ft

|-

| 30

| Cerveza Light Platform

|-

| 31

| St. Petersburg TV Tower

| Lattice tower

| 1962

| Russia

| Saint Petersburg

| 326

| 1,070

|

|

|

|-

| 32

| Eiffel Tower

| Lattice tower

| 1889

| France

| Paris

| 324

| 1,063

| $1.5 million

| 10,100 tons

|

|-

| 33

| WHDH-TV Tower

| Lattice tower

| 1960

| United States

| Newton, Massachusetts

| 323.8

| 1,062

|

|

|

|-

| 34

| KCTV Broadcast Tower

| Lattice tower

| 1956

| United States

| Kansas City, Missouri

| 317.6

| 1,042

| $0.42 million

| 600 tons

|

|-

| 35

| Turner Broadcasting Tower

| Lattice tower

| 1967

| United States

| Atlanta, Georgia

| 314.3

| 1,031

|

|

| disassembled in 2010

|-

| 36

| Yerevan TV Tower

| Lattice tower

| 1977

| Armenia

| Yerevan

| 311.7

| 1,023

|

|

| tallest structure in Armenia

|-

| 37

| Fazilka TV Tower

| Lattice tower

| 2007

| India

| Fazilka

| 304.8

| 1,000

| $2.1 million

| 15,100 tons

| tallest lattice tower in India

|-

| 38

| Mumbai Television Tower

| Lattice tower

| 1972

| India

| Mumbai

| 300

| 984

|

|

|

|}

Lattice towers with observation decks

indicates a structure that is no longer standing.<br />

{| class="wikitable sortable" style="font-size:95%;"

|-

!Tower !! Year !! Country !! Town !! Height m !! Height ft !! class=unsortable|Remarks

|-

|Tokyo Skytree ||2012 ||Japan || Sumida, Tokyo ||634 m || 2080&nbsp;ft || Tallest Lattice tower in the world

|-

|Tashkent Tower ||1985 ||Uzbekistan ||Tashkent ||374.9 m || 1230&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Dragon Tower ||2000 ||China ||Harbin ||336 m || 1102&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Tokyo Tower ||1957 ||Japan ||Tokyo ||333 m || 1093&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Eiffel Tower ||1889 ||France ||Paris ||330 m || 1083&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Zhuzhou Television Tower ||1999 ||China ||Zhuzhou ||293 m || 961&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Shijiazhuang TV-tower ||1998 ||China ||Shijiazhuang ||280 m || 919&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Kaifeng TV Tower || 1995 ||China ||Kaifeng ||268 m || 879&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Daqing Radio and Television Tower ||1989 ||China ||Daqing ||260 m || 853&nbsp;ft ||

|-

| Foshan TV Tower || ? || China || Foshan || 238 m || 781&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Qingdao TV Tower ||1994 ||China ||Qingdao ||232 m || 761&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Hongguangshan TV Tower || ? || China || Ürümqi || 230 m || 754&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Brasília TV Tower ||1967 ||Brazil ||Brasília ||224 m || 735&nbsp;ft || formerly the tallest structure in Brazil 1967-2004

|-

|Changchun Radio and Television Tower || 1997 || China || Qingdao || 218 m || 715&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Guangzhou TV Tower ||1991 ||China ||Guangzhou ||217 m || 712&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Guangdong TV Tower ||1965 ||China ||Guangdong ||200 m || 656&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Dalian Radio & TV Tower ||1990 ||China ||Dalian ||191 m || 627&nbsp;ft || Has a thick solid concrete core with an exterior steel lattice, it is unknown which provides most of the structural support but the steel lattice is a very prominent feature of the tower

|-

|Nagoya TV Tower ||1954 ||Japan ||Nagoya ||180 m || 590&nbsp;ft ||

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

|| Odinstårnet || 1935 || Denmark || Odense || 175 m || 574&nbsp;ft|| demolished on December 14, 1944

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

|| New Brighton Tower || 1900 || UK || Liverpool || 172.8 m || 567&nbsp;ft || dismantled from 1919 to 1921

|-

|Las Vegas Eiffel Tower ||1999 ||United States||Las Vegas || 165 m || 541&nbsp;ft || 1:2 scale replica of Eiffel Tower

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

|| Osaka ABC Tower || 1966 || Japan || Osaka || 160 m || 525&nbsp;ft || demolished in September 2009

|-

|The Parisian Macao ||2016 ||China||Macau || 160 m || 525&nbsp;ft || 1:2 scale replica of Eiffel Tower

|-

|Blackpool Tower ||1894 ||United Kingdom ||Blackpool || 158 m || 518&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Funkturm Berlin ||1926 ||Germany ||Berlin || 150 m || 492&nbsp;ft || Only observation tower standing on insulators

|-

|Sapporo TV Tower ||1957 ||Japan ||Sapporo || 147.2 m || 483&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Vasco-da-Gama-Tower ||1998 ||Portugal ||Lisbon || 145 m || 476&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Alphabetic Tower ||2012 ||Georgia ||Batumi || 130 m || 427&nbsp;ft ||

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

|| Gettysburg National Tower || 1974 || United States || Gettysburg, Pennsylvania || 120 m || 394&nbsp;ft || demolished on July 3, 2000 Hyperboloid structure

|-

|Observation tower of la Cité de l'Énergie ||1997 ||Canada ||Shawinigan, Quebec || 115 m || 377&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Torre Branca ||1933 ||Italy ||Milan || 108.6 m || 356&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Kobe Port Tower ||1963 ||Japan ||Kobe || 108 m || 354&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Eiffel Tower of Window of the World ||1993 ||China||Shenzhen || 108 m || 354&nbsp;ft || 1:3 scale replica of Eiffel Tower

|-

|Eiffel Tower of Tiandu City Community ||2007 ||China||Macau || 108 m || 354&nbsp;ft || 1:3 scale replica of Eiffel Tower

|-

|Marine Tower Yokohama ||1961 ||Japan ||Yokohama ||106 m || 348&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Tsutenkaku ||1956 ||Japan ||Osaka ||103 m || 338&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Hakata Port Tower ||1964 ||Japan ||Fukuoka ||103 m || 338&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Tour métallique de Fourvière ||1894 ||France ||Lyon ||101 m || 331&nbsp;ft ||Not used as observation tower since 1953

|-

|Total Tower ||1994 ||United States ||Denver ||100.6 m || 330&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Beppu Tower ||1957 ||Japan ||Beppu ||100 m || 328&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Eiffel Tower of Kings Island ||1972 ||United States||Mason, Ohio ||96 m || 315&nbsp;ft ||1:3.5 scale replica of Eiffel Tower

|-

|Eiffel Tower of Kings Dominion ||1975 ||United States||Doswell, Virginia ||96 m || 315&nbsp;ft ||1:3.5 scale replica of Eiffel Tower

|-

|Cholfirst Radio Tower ||1973 ||Switzerland ||Flurlingen ||96 m || 315&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Sunsphere ||1982 ||United States ||Knoxville ||81.07 m || 266&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Eiffel Tower replica in Bahria Town ||2014 ||Pakistan||Bahria ||80 m || 262&nbsp;ft ||1:4 scale replica of Eiffel Tower

|-

|Torre Sant Sebastia ||1931 ||Spain ||Barcelona ||78 m || 256&nbsp;ft ||Harbour terminal aerial tramway

|-

|Hiratsuka TV Tower ||1972 ||Japan ||Hiratsuka ||70 m || 256&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Facility 4101, Tower 93 || 1975 || Germany || Hürth ||74.84 m || 246&nbsp;ft ||Electricity pylon, which carried from 1977 to 2010 in a height of 27 metres (89&nbsp;ft) an observation deck

|-

|| Morecambe Tower || 1898 || UK || Morecambe || 71 m || 232&nbsp;ft || dismantled during the first world war, built on top of a theatre

|-

|Hot Springs Mountain Tower ||1983 ||United States||Hot Springs Mountain ||65.8 m || 216&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Petřínská rozhledna ||1891 ||Czech ||Prague ||60 m || 197&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Bachtel Tower ||1986 ||Switzerland ||Hinwil ||60 m || 197&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Green Tower ||1998 ||Japan ||Sanbu ||60 m || 197&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Gross Reken Melchenberg Radio Tower ||2002 ||Germany ||Reken ||60 m || 197&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Schomberg Observation Tower ||2006 ||Germany ||Sundern ||60 m || 197&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Aalborgtårnet ||1933 ||Denmark ||Aalborg ||54.9 m || 180&nbsp;ft || dismantled and rebuilt from the ground up in 2005

|-

|Observation Tower Ahlbeck ||1998 ||Germany ||Ahlbeck || 50 m || 164&nbsp;ft ||

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

|| Watkins' Tower || 1891 || UK || London || 47 m || 154&nbsp;ft || never completed & dismantled in 1907 was to be 358 m / 1175&nbsp;ft in height

|-

|Morsbach Observation Tower ||1962 ||Germany ||Morsbach ||45 m || 148&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Joseph's Cross ||1896 ||Germany ||Stolberg ||38 m || 124&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Poppenberg Observation Tower ||1897 ||Germany ||Ilfeld ||33 m || 108&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Lemberg Tower ||1899 ||Germany ||Lemberg Mountain ||33 m || 108&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Wanne Observation Tower ||1888 ||Germany ||Villingen-Schwenningen ||30 m || 98&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Gehrenberg Tower ||1903 ||Germany ||Markdorf ||30 m || 98&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Tower of Unity ||1962 ||Germany ||Heldrastein ||30 m || 98&nbsp;ft ||Former additionally guyed lattice tower, which was transformed into observation tower

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

|Gustav-Vietor-Tower ||1882 ||Germany || Hohe Wurzel (Taunus) ||25 m || 82&nbsp;ft ||demolished in 2006

|-

|Observation Tower at Goetzinger's Height ||1883 ||Germany ||Neustadt/Saxony ||25 m || 82&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Hochfirst Tower ||1890 ||Germany ||Titisee-Neustadt ||25 m || 82&nbsp;ft || Additionally guyed

|-

|Büchenbronn Observation Tower ||1883 ||Germany ||Büchenbronn ||24.75 m || 81&nbsp;ft || Additionally guyed

|-

|Tour du Belvédère ||1898 ||France ||Mulhouse-Belvédère ||20 m || 65&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Salzgitter Bismarck Tower ||1900 ||Germany ||Salzgitter ||17 m || 56&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Gillerberg Observation Tower ||1892 ||Germany ||Hilchenbach ||15 m || 49&nbsp;ft ||

|}

Radio towers carrying aerials

List of radio tower above in height.

indicates a structure that is no longer standing.<br />

indicates a structure that has had a change in height or has been rebuilt.

thumb| [[Star Tower, example of a Landmark tower]]

thumb| [[Moscow Octod Tower, example of a hyperboloid lattice tower]]

thumb| [[Zhuzhou Television Tower, example of a lattice tower with a solid core, nearly a dozen of which were built in China throughout the 90s]]

thumb| [[Sutro Tower, a well-known San Francisco landmark featuring an uncommon three-legged design]]

thumb|The [[Wavre Transmitter features an unusual design that uses a guyed upper section to hold the transmitter in place.]]

thumb| Example of a [[3803 KM tower, a very common four-sided lattice tower design developed in the Soviet Union. About 80 of these were built in nearly every large city from 1956 to 1967.]]

thumb|Example of an [[Annapolis type military-use lattice tower. The US Navy built over 40 of these from 1914 to 1922 and from 1936 to 1938.]]

thumb|Example of a typical commercial-use three-sided lattice tower, thousands of which have been built throughout North America, over 100 of which are on the list. Many different truss patterns are used but the general design is largely similar.

{| class="wikitable sortable" style="font-size:95%;"

|-

!Tower !! Year !! Country !! Town !! Height m !! Height ft !! Design type !! Notable for

|-

| Tokyo Skytree

| 2012

| Japan

| Tokyo

| 634 m

| 2080&nbsp;ft

| solid reinforced concrete core supported by cylindrical lattice frame

| the tallest tower of any type in the world and the tallest land-based lattice tower, tallest structure in Japan

|-

| Kyiv TV Tower

| 1973

| Ukraine

| Kyiv

| 385 m

| 1263&nbsp;ft

| solid steel core supported by a 6-sided lattice frame with 4 legs

| tallest land based lattice tower from 1973 to 2012, tallest structure in Ukraine

|-

| Tashkent Tower

| 1985

| Uzbekistan

| Tashkent

| 374.9 m

| 1230&nbsp;ft

| solid steel core supported by cylindrical lattice frame with 3 steel legs

| more likely to be categorized as a steel tower than a lattice tower, tallest structure in Uzbekistan

|-

| Dragon Tower

| 2000

| China

| Harbin

| 336 m

| 1102&nbsp;ft

| solid core supported by 6-sided lattice frame, 4-sided upper portion

|

|-

| Tokyo Tower

| 1957

| Japan

| Tokyo

| 333 m

| 1093&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 4 legged

| tallest lattice tower in the world from 1957 to 1973

|- style="background:#cedff2;"

| Eiffel Tower

| 1889

| France

| Paris

| 330 m

| 1083&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 4 legged

| tallest lattice tower in the world from 1889 to 1956, has undergone multiple height changes, original height of to tip of flagpole

|-

| WITI TV Tower

| 1962

| United States

| Shorewood, Wisconsin

| 329.4 m

| 1081&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

| tallest land based lattice tower in the United States, second tallest in the world when completed in 1962

|- style="background:#cedff2;"

| St. Petersburg TV Tower

| 1962

| Russia

| Saint Petersburg

| 326 m

| 1070&nbsp;ft

| solid(steel) central core supported by 6-sided lattice frame

| tallest lattice tower in Russia, height increase of in 2011

|-

| WHDH-TV Tower

| 1960

| United States

| Newton, Massachusetts

| 323.8 m

| 1062&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| KCTV Broadcast Tower

| 1956

| United States

| Kansas City, Missouri

| 317.6 m

| 1042&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, pyramid type

| briefly became the tallest lattice tower in the world when completed in 1956 surpassing the Eiffel Tower's original height by 17 feet

| tallest structure in Armenia

|-

| Fazilka TV Tower

| 2007

| India

| Fazilka

| 304.8 m

| 1000&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

| tallest lattice tower in India

|-

| Mumbai Television Tower

| 1972

| India

| Mumbai

| 300 m

| 984&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Sutro Tower

| 1973

| United States

| San Francisco, California

| 297.8 m

| 977&nbsp;ft

| 3 legged guyed upper section and candelabra top

|

|-

| WKRQ Tower

| 1960's

| United States

| Cincinnati, Ohio

| 294.6 m

| 967&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Zhuzhou Television Tower

| 1999

| China

| Zhuzhou

| 293 m

| 961&nbsp;ft

| solid core supported by 6-sided lattice frame

|

|-

| Star Tower

| 1991

| United States

| Cincinnati, Ohio

| 290.8 m

| 954&nbsp;ft

| Landmark tower design

| Last lattice tower above 700 feet built in the United States

|-

| WLWT TV Tower

| 1978

| United States

| Cincinnati, Ohio

| 289.6 m

| 950&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|- style="background:#cedff2;"

| Dudelange Radio Tower

| 1957

| Luxembourg

| Dudelange

| 285 m

| 935&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

| tallest free-standing structure in Luxembourg, rebuilt in 1981 following an aircraft collision

|- style="background:#cedff2;"

| AIR Tower

| 2013

| India

| Amritsar

| 282 m

| 925&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

| The AIR tower was originally intended to be 1000 feet tall. According to some sources it reached this height but others claim it only reached a peak of or so before plans were made to reduce its height to due to a tilt being noticed in the towers angle at the top.. More recent documentation has indicated that the towers height is specifically 282m.. But photos seem to show a more significant portion of the upper section of the tower as having been removed after its initial construction such that its current height is somewhere in the range of 230 to 250 meters tall.

|-

| Shijiazhuang TV-tower

| 1998

| China

| Shijiazhuang

| 280 m

| 919&nbsp;ft

| solid core supported by 8-sided lattice frame with 4 legs

|

|-

| Net 25 Tower

| 1990

| Philippines

| Quezon City

| 276.4 m

| 907&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

| tallest structure in the Philippines

|-

| WCPO TV Tower

| 1965

| United States

| Cincinnati, Ohio

| 276 m

| 905&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Perm TV tower

| 2016

| Russia

| Perm

| 275 m

| 902&nbsp;ft

| Hyperboloid structure

| weight; 657 tons

| ?

| Indonesia

| Jakarta

| 274 m

| 900&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

| tallest lattice tower in Indonesia

|-

| Kaifeng TV Tower

| 1989

| China

| Kaifeng

| 268 m

| 879&nbsp;ft

| solid core supported by 8-sided lattice frame with 4 legs

|

|-

| Daqing Radio and Television Tower

| 1989

| China

| Daqing

| 260 m

| 853&nbsp;ft

| solid core supported by 6-sided lattice frame, 4-sided upper portion

|

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Moscow Octod Tower

| 2006

| Russia

| Moscow

| 258 m

| 846&nbsp;ft

| Hyperboloid structure

| Structure has been partially disassembled

|-

| WTVR TV Tower

| 1953

| United States

| Richmond, Virginia

| 257 m

| 843&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, pyramid type

| second tallest lattice tower in the world when completed in 1953

|-

| Volgograd regional radio and television transmitting center

| 2016

| Russia

| Volgograd

| 256 m

| 840&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| WBNS TV Tower

| 1955

| United States

| Columbus, Ohio

| 255.8 m

| 839&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Grodno TV Tower

| 1984

| Belarus

| Grodno

| 254 m

| 833&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, Top guyed lattice tower, featuring a guyed upper section with four horizontal crossbars

| tallest freestanding structure in Belarus

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Lafayette transmitter, Tower 1

| 1918

| France

| Marcheprime

| 250 m

| 820&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided, Annapolis type military use

| six of the eight towers were built by 1918, the last two were completed in 1920. The retreating German army demolished all but one of the towers in 1944

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Lafayette transmitter, Tower 2

| 1918

| France

| Marcheprime

| 250 m

| 820&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided, Annapolis type military use

| demolished in 1944

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Lafayette transmitter, Tower 3

| 1918

| France

| Marcheprime

| 250 m

| 820&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided, Annapolis type military use

| demolished in 1944

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Lafayette transmitter, Tower 4

| 1918

| France

| Marcheprime

| 250 m

| 820&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided, Annapolis type military use

| demolished in 1944

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Lafayette transmitter, Tower 5

| 1918

| France

| Marcheprime

| 250 m

| 820&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided, Annapolis type military use

| demolished in 1944

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Lafayette transmitter, Tower 6

| 1920

| France

| Marcheprime

| 250 m

| 820&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided, Annapolis type military use

| demolished in 1944

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Lafayette transmitter, Tower 7

| 1920

| France

| Marcheprime

| 250 m

| 820&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided, Annapolis type military use

| demolished in 1944

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Lafayette transmitter, Tower 8

| 1920

| France

| Marcheprime

| 250 m

| 820&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided, Annapolis type military use

| the final tower was dismantled in 1953

|- style="background:#cedff2;"

| Longwave transmitter Junglinster, Tower 1

| 1932

| Luxembourg

| Junglinster

| 250 m

| 820&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided, insulated against ground

| The 2nd & 3rd towers were built at a later date, all three towers were reduced in height in 1983 to

|- style="background:#cedff2;"

| Longwave transmitter Junglinster, Tower 2

| 1954

| Luxembourg

| Junglinster

| 250 m

| 820&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided, insulated against ground

| height since 1983;

|- style="background:#cedff2;"

| Longwave transmitter Junglinster, Tower 3

| 1959

| Luxembourg

| Junglinster

| 250 m

| 820&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided, insulated against ground

| height since 1983;

|-

| Novodnistrovsk TV Tower

| 1987

| Ukraine

| Dunaivtsi

| 250 m

| 820&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Hanoi TV Tower

| 2013

| Vietnam

| Hanoi

| 250 m

| 820&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 4 legged

| tallest lattice tower in Vietnam

|-

| River Road Tower

| 1965

| United States

| Washington, DC

| 246.6 m

| 809&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided candelabra top

|

|-

| Seto Digital Tower

| 2011

| Japan

| Seto

| 244.7 m

| 803&nbsp;ft

| central lattice mast supported by 6 exterior legs

|

|-

| Vitebsk TV Tower

| 1983

| Belarus

| Vitebsk

| 244 m

| 801&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, Top guyed lattice tower, featuring a guyed upper section with four horizontal crossbars

|

|-

| Astara TV Tower

| 1981

| Republic of Azerbaijan

| Astara

| 243.84 m

| 800&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, Top guyed lattice tower, featuring a guyed upper section with four horizontal crossbars

|

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Central tower (Königs Wusterhausen)

| 1925

| Germany

| Koenigs Wusterhausen

| 243 m

| 797&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

| collapsed during storm on November 15, 1972

|-

| Yakutsk TV Tower

| 1982

| Russia

| Yakutsk

| 241.71 m

| 793&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

| antenna; 241.7 metres 793&nbsp;ft, roof; 225.7 m 740&nbsp;ft

|-

| Birobidzhan TV Tower

| 1972

| Russia

| Birobidzhan

| 241 m

| 791&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Kharkiv TV Tower

| 1981

| Ukraine

| Kharkiv

| 240.7 m

| 790&nbsp;ft

| solid steel core supported by 6-sided lattice frame with 3 legs

| Partially destroyed by a Russian airstrike on April 22, 2024. The top half of the tower collapsed, but the lower half supported by the lattice structure remains standing.

|-

| Foshan TV Tower

|

|-

| Tower of Power

| 1988

| Philippines

| Quezon City

| 236.8 m

| 777&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Channel 9 TV Tower

| 1965

| Australia

| Sydney

| 233 m

| 764&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

| dismantled in August 2021

|-

| Wavre Transmitter

| 1983

| Belgium

| Wavre

| 232 m

| 761&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, Top guyed lattice tower, featuring a guyed upper section with four horizontal crossbars

| tallest lattice tower in Belgium

|-

| Hughes Memorial Tower

| 1989

| United States

| Washington, DC

| 232 m

| 761&nbsp;ft

| Landmark tower design

|

|-

| Qingdao TV Tower

| 1994

| China

| Qingdao

| 232 m

| 761&nbsp;ft

| solid central core supported by 6-sided lattice frame, 4-sided upper portion

|

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| WOR TV Tower

| 1949

| United States

| North Bergen, New Jersey

| 231.65 m

| 760&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

| dismantled after being struck by an aircraft in 1956

|-

| Hongguangshan TV Tower

| 2013

| Russia

| Belgorod

| 230 m

| 754&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|- style="background:#cedff2;"

| KQTV Tower

| 1953

| United States

| St. Joseph, Missouri

| 229 m

| 750&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, pyramid type

| height since 2009;

|-

| WIVB TV Tower

| 1948

| United States

| Buffalo, New York

| 226.2 m

| 742&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| TV5 Tower

| ?

| Bangkok

| Thailand

| 225 m

| 740&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

| tallest lattice tower in Thailand

|-

| WTRF-TV Tower

| 1962

| United States

| Bridgeport, Ohio

| 225 m

| 738&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Brasília TV Tower

| 1967

| Brazil

| Brasília

| 224 m

| 735&nbsp;ft

| 6-sided

|

|-

| Millennium Transmitter

| 1969

| Philippines

| Quezon City

| 219.5 m

| 720&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Sahiwal TV Tower

| 1970's

| Pakistan

| Sahiwal

| 219.5 m

| 720&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

| tallest structure in Pakistan

|-

| Crystal Palace Transmitter

| 1950

| UK

| London

| 219 m

| 719&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

| tallest lattice tower in England

|-

| Changchun Radio and Television Tower

| 1981

| Ukraine

| Melitopol

| 216 m

| 709&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Deyang TV Tower

| 1991

| China

| Deyang

| 216 m

| 709&nbsp;ft

| 12-sided, 4 legged

|

|-

| Channel 7/10 TV Tower

| 1965

| Australia

| Sydney

| 216 m

| 708&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

| tallest lattice tower in Australia

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| WBIR TV Tower

| 1956

| United States

| Knoxville, Tennessee

| 215.5 m

| 707&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

| dismantled in August 2023

|-

| WTTG TV Tower

| 1963

| United States

| Washington, DC

| 214.8

| 705&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Mariupol TV Tower

| 1981

| Ukraine

| Mariupol

| 214 m

| 702&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Zlatoust TV Tower

| 1983

| Russia

| Zlatoust

| 213 m

| 699&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Torre TV Bandeirantes

| 1997

| Brazil

| São Paulo

| 212 m

| 696&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided non-tapering, weight; 650 tons

|

|-

| WJLA TV Tower

| 1972

| United States

| Washington, DC

| 210.9

| 692&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| TV Tower Bol d'Air-Ougrée

| ?

| Belgium

| Bol d'Air-Ougrée

| 210 m

| 689&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Cherepovets TV Tower

| 1969

| Russia

| Cherepovets

| 208.5 m

| 684&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| KTWB-TV Tower

| 1979

| United States

| Seattle, Washington

| 208 m

| 682&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Khmelnytsky TV Tower

| 1980

| Ukraine

| Khmelnytskyi

| 208 m

| 682&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Arkhangelsk TV Tower

| 2004

| Russia

| Arkhangelsk

| 208 m

| 682&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Cimişlia TV Tower

| ?

| Moldova

| Cimişlia

| 208 m

| 682&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Novosemeykino Longwave Transmission, Tower 1

| 1943

| Russia

| Novosemeykino

| 205 m

| 673&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided, military use

| demolished in 2010, selfradiating insulated against ground

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Novosemeykino Longwave Transmission, Tower 2

| ?

| Latvia

| Cesvaine

| 204 m

| 669&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Edineţ TV Tower

| ?

| Moldova

| Edineţ

| 204 m

| 669&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Rezeknes TV Tower

| ?

| Latvia

| Rezeknes

| 204 m

| 669&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Valmieras TV Tower

| ?

| Madagascar

| Antananarivo

| 203 m

| 665&nbsp;ft

|

|

|-

| Klaipeda Radio and Television Station

| 1960

| Lithuania

| Klaipeda

| 202 m

| 663&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|- style="background:#cedff2;"

| Daugavpils TV Tower

| 1956

| Latvia

| Daugavpils

| 202 m

| 663&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

| height increased in 1989

|-

| WRC TV Tower

| 1989?

| United States

| Washington, DC

| 201.8 m

| 662&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|- style="background:#cedff2;"

| Brisbane Channel 10 TV Tower

| ?

| Australia

| Brisbane

| 201.8 m

| 662&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Orion Tower

| 2001

| Russia

| Samara

| 201 m

| 660&nbsp;ft

| Hyperboloid structure

|

|-

| WKBN TV Tower

| 1976

| United States

| Youngstown, Ohio

| 200.3 m

| 657&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Gomel TV Tower

| 1957

| Belarus

| Homel

| 200 m

| 656&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Kirovohrad TV Tower

| 1964

| Ukraine

| Kropyvnytskyi

| 200 m

| 656&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Guangdong TV Tower

| 1965

| United States

| Montclair, New Jersey

| 200 m

| 656&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| TV Tower on Mount Papula

| 1966

| Russia

| Vyborg

| 200 m

| 656&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Khust TV Tower

| 1975

| Ukraine

| Khust

| 200 m

| 656&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Olevsk Communication Tower

| 1989

| Ukraine

| Olevsk

| 200 m

| 656&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| VRT Zendmast Genk

| ?

| Belgium

| Genk

| 200 m

| 656&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Ciurel Telecommunications Tower

| ?

| Romania

| Bucharest

| 200 m

| 656&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| TV5 Transmitter Tower

| ?

| Philippines

| Quezon City

| 200 m

| 656&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| St. Petersburg American Tower

| 1985

| United States

| St. Petersburg

| 199.6 m

| 655&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| New Krasnoyarsk TV Tower

| 2013

| Russia

| Krasnoyarsk

| 199.4 m

| 654&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Odessa TV Tower

| 1958

| Ukraine

| Odessa

| 199 m

| 653&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM single platform

|

|-

| Kherson TV Tower

| 1994

| Ukraine

| Kherson

| 199 m

| 653&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Novosibirsk TV Tower

| 1957

| Russia

| Novosibirsk

| 198 m

| 650&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Voronezh TV Tower

| 1958

| Russia

| Voronezh

| 198 m

| 650&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Rádio Transamérica

| ?

| Brazil

| São Paulo

| 198 m

| 650&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Krasnodar TV Tower

| 1959

| Russia

| Krasnodar

| 197 m

| 646&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Türi Radio Mast

| 1937

| Estonia

| Türi

| 196.6 m

| 645&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

| demolished in 1941. At time of completion was the tallest structure in Northern Europe, built by an American company

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Old Yerevan TV Tower

| 1956

| Armenia

| Yerevan

| 196 m

| 643&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

| demolition date unknown

|-

| Chelyabinsk TV Tower

| 1958

| Russia

| Chelyabinsk

| 196 m

| 643&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Penza Television Centre Transmitter

| 1958

| Russia

| Penza

| 196 m

| 643&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Rostov TV Tower

| 1958

| Russia

| Rostov

| 196 m

| 643&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM single platform

|

|-

| Omsk TV Tower

| 1959

| Kazakhstan

| Omsk

| 196 m

| 643&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Pärnu TV Tower

| 1963

| Estonia

| Pärnu

| 196 m

| 643&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Cherkaska TV Tower

| 1964

| Ukraine

| Cherkaska

| 196 m

| 643&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Bilopillia TV Tower

| 1966

| Ukraine

| Bilopillia

| 196 m

| 643&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Trostianets TV Tower

| 1985

| Ukraine

| Trostianets

| 196 m

| 643&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Ivano-Frankivsk TV Tower

| 1965

| Ukraine

| Ivano-Frankivsk

| 195 m

| 640&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Sky Tower West Tokyo

| 1980

| Japan

| Tokyo

| 195 m

| 640&nbsp;ft

| 8-sided non-tapering

|

|-

| Mulhouse-Belvédère Transmission Tower

| 1992

| United States

| Garland, Texas

| 194.2 m

| 637&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Bryansk TV Tower

| 1958

| Russia

| Bryansk

| 194 m

| 637&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Dnipropetrovsk TV Tower

| 1958

| Ukraine

| Dnipropetrovsk

| 194 m

| 637&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM single platform

|

|-

| Lugansk TV Tower

| 1958

| Ukraine

| Lugansk

| 194 m

| 637&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM single platform

|

|-

| Kamenske TV Tower

| 1965

| Ukraine

| Kamenske

| 194 m

| 637&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| KSTW-TV Tower

| 19

| Kazakhstan

| Qaragandy

| 194 m

| 635&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Mykolaiv TV Tower

| 1958

| Ukraine

| Mykolaiv

| 193 m

| 633&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM single platform

|

|-

| Bishkek TV Tower

| 1958

| Kyrgyzstan

| Bishkek

| 193 m

| 633&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Ulaanbaatar Radio Station Tower

| 1967

| Mongolia

| Ulaanbaatar

| 193 m

| 633&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| KEZK-FM Tower

| 1981

| United States

| St. Louis, Missouri

| 192.3 m

| 631&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Tallinn TV Mast

| 1955

| Estonia

| Tallinn

| 192 m

| 630&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

| dismantled in 1984

|-

| Yekaterinburg TV Tower (Old)

| 1955

| Russia

| Yekaterinburg

| 192 m

| 630&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Donetsk TV Tower 1

| 1956

| Ukraine

| Donetsk

| 192 m

| 630&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Baku Communication Tower

| 1956

| Azerbaijan

| Baku

| 192 m

| 630&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

| demolished in 2008

|-

| Irkutsk TV Tower

| 1957

| Russia

| Irkutsk

| 192 m

| 630&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Murmansk TV Tower

| 1957

| Russia

| Murmansk

| 192 m

| 630&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Lviv TV Tower

| 1957

| Ukraine

| Lviv

| 192 m

| 630&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM single platform

|

|-

| Simferopol TV Tower

| 1958

| Russia

| Simferopol

| 192 m

| 630&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM single platform

|

|-

| Ulyanovsk TV Tower

| 1959

| Russia

| Ulyanovsk

| 192 m

| 630&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Zaporizhzhya TV Tower

| 1959

| Ukraine

| Zaporizhzhya

| 192 m

| 630&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM single platform

|

|-

| Lipetsk TV Tower

| 1960

| Russia

| Lipetsk

| 192 m

| 630&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Annunciation TV Tower

| 1964

| Russia

| Blagoveshchensk

| 192 m

| 630&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Abakan TV Tower

| 1965

| Russia

| Abakan

| 192 m

| 630&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Almaty Old TV tower

| ?

| Kazakhstan

| Almaty

| 192 m

| 630&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Pavlodar TV Tower

| ?

| Kazakhstan

| Pavlodar

| 192 m

| 630&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Tomsk TV Tower

| ?

| Russia

| Tomsk

| 192 m

| 630&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Orissaare TV Tower

| 1965

| Estonia

| Orissaare

| 191 m

| 627&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Leipzig Radio Tower

| 2015

| Germany

| Leipzig

| 191 m

| 627&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| LORAN-C transmitter Carolina Beach

| 1952

| United States

| Carolina Beach, North Carolina

| 190.5 m

| 625&nbsp;ft

|

| collapsed caused by Hurricane Helene September 26, 1958

|-

| Stonehenge Tower

| 1990

| United States

| Portland, Oregon

| 190.5 m

| 625&nbsp;ft

| solid steel core supported by 3 legs

| more likely to be categorized as a steel tower than a lattice tower

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Transmitter Sottens, old transmission tower

| 1948

| Switzerland

| Sottens

| 190 m

| 623&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

| demolished in 1989, mediumwave selfradiating tower insulated against ground

|-

| Bratsk TV Tower

| 1963

| Russia

| Bratsk

| 190 m

| 623&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|- style="background:#cedff2;"

| ATV10 Tower

| 1964

| Australia

| Melbourne

| 190 m

| 623&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

| height increase of in 2001

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Cayey Naval Station, Tower 1

| 1919

| United States

| Cayey, Puerto Rico

| 189 m

| 620&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided, Annapolis type military use

| demolished in 1938

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Cayey Naval Station, Tower 2

| 1919

| United States

| Cayey, Puerto Rico

| 189 m

| 620&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided, Annapolis type military use

| demolished in 1938

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Cayey Naval Station, Tower 3

| 1919

| United States

| Cayey, Puerto Rico

| 189 m

| 620&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided, Annapolis type military use

| demolished in 1938

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Cambridge Bay LORAN Tower

| 1948

| Canada

| Cambridge Bay

| 189 m

| 620&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

| demolished in August 2014

|-

| Sottens Radio Tower

| 1989

| Switzerland

| Sottens

| 188 m

| 617&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

| mediumwave, selfradiating tower insulated against ground

|-

| Soinaste Telemast

| 1957

| Estonia

| Tartu

| 186 m

| 610&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Chisinau TV Tower

| 1958

| Moldova

| Chisinau

| 186 m

| 610&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Petrozavodsk TV Tower

| 1959

| Russia

| Petrozavodsk

| 186 m

| 610&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| KIRO TV Tower

| ?

| Macedonia

| Lozovo

| 185 m

| 608&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Semipalatinsk TV Tower

| ?

| Kazakhstan

| Semey

| 185 m

| 608&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Ekibastuz TV Tower

| 1967

| Kazakhstan

| Ekibastuz

| 185 m

| 607&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Vlessart TV Tower

| ?

| Belgium

| Rue Vlessart Airmont Léglise

| 185 m

| 607&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, horizontal bars of frame are fixed at the centre column

|

|-

| Anderlues TV Tower

| ?

| Belgium

| Anderlues

| 185 m

| 607&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Tower at 4800 Reagan Drive

| 2004

| United States

| Charlotte, North Carolina

| 184.4 m

| 605&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Brisbane ABQ TV Tower

| 1959

| Australia

| Brisbane

| 184.3 m

| 605&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

| 27°27′52″S 152°56′51″E

|-

| KWEX TV Tower

| 1998

| United States

| San Antonio, Texas

| 184.1 m

| 604&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| NAA (Virginia), Tower 1

| 1913

| United States

| Arlington, Virginia

| 183 m

| 600&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, military use

| dismantled in 1941, was the first of many US Naval radio transmitting station, it was the tallest lattice tower in the United States when built and second tallest in the world after the Eiffel Tower the site also featured two 450-foot tall lattice towers which were possibly the 3rd and 4th tallest in the world at that time

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| US Naval Communications Station Balboa - Panama, Tower 1

| 1914

| United States (Now Panama)

| Balboa

| 183 m

| 600&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided, Annapolis type military use

| 6 towers on site built by the US Navy, began operations in 1912, tower possibly demolished in 1993, site returned to Panama in 1996 and station decommissioned by 1999

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| US Naval Communications Station Balboa - Panama, Tower 2

| 1914

| United States (Now Panama)

| Balboa

| 183 m

| 600&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided, Annapolis type military use

| demolished by 1999

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| US Naval Communications Station Balboa - Panama, Tower 3

| 1914

| United States (Now Panama)

| Balboa

| 183 m

| 600&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided, Annapolis type military use

| demolished by 1999

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| US Naval Communications Station Balboa - Panama, Tower 4

| 1914

| United States (Now Panama)

| Balboa

| 183 m

| 600&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided, Annapolis type military use

| demolished by 1999

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| US Naval Communications Station Balboa - Panama, Tower 5

| 1914

| United States (Now Panama)

| Balboa

| 183 m

| 600&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided, Annapolis type military use

| demolished by 1999

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| US Naval Communications Station Balboa - Panama, Tower 6

| 1914

| United States (Now Panama)

| Balboa

| 183 m

| 600&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided, Annapolis type military use

| demolished by 1999

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Naval Station Sangley Point, Tower 1

| 1915

| United States (Now Philippines)

| Cavite

| 183 m

| 600&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided, Annapolis type military use

| demolished in 1971, 3 towers on site built by the US Navy

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Naval Station Sangley Point, Tower 2

| 1915

| United States (Now Philippines)

| Cavite

| 183 m

| 600&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided, Annapolis type military use

| demolished in 1971

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Naval Station Sangley Point, Tower 3

| 1915

| United States (Now Philippines)

| Cavite

| 183 m

| 600&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided, Annapolis type military use

| demolished in 1971

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Chollas Heights Naval Radio Transmitting Facility, Tower 1

| 1917

| United States

| San Diego

| 183 m

| 600&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided, Annapolis type military use

| demolished in 1995, 3 towers on site built by the US Navy

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Chollas Heights Naval Radio Transmitting Facility, Tower 2

| 1917

| United States

| San Diego

| 183 m

| 600&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided, Annapolis type military use

| demolished in 1995

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Chollas Heights Naval Radio Transmitting Facility, Tower 3

| 1917

| United States

| San Diego

| 183 m

| 600&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided, Annapolis type military use

| demolished in 1995

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| US Naval Radio Station Pearl Harbor, Tower 1

| 1917

| United States

| Pearl Harbor

| 183 m

| 600&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided, Annapolis type military use

| dismantled in 1936, the transmitters were later used at Lualualei Naval Radio Transmitting Facility

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| US Naval Radio Station Pearl Harbor, Tower 2

| 1917

| United States

| Pearl Harbor

| 183 m

| 600&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided, Annapolis type military use

| dismantled in 1936

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| US Naval Radio Station Pearl Harbor, Tower 3

| 1917

| United States

| Pearl Harbor

| 183 m

| 600&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided, Annapolis type military use

| dismantled in 1936

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| NSS Annapolis, Tower 1

| 1918

| United States

| Annapolis

| 183 m

| 600&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided, Annapolis type military use

| demolished in 1969. The site originally had a total of 9 self-supporting 600-foot tall the most lattice towers of that height ever built in a single location. Four were built in 1918, two more in 1922 and the final three in 1938. The 6 towers built in 1918 & 1922 were demolished in 1969 while the 3 towers built in 1938 remain today. Tied for tallest lattice towers in the United States from 1918 to 1949

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| NSS Annapolis, Tower 2

| 1918

| United States

| Annapolis

| 183 m

| 600&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided, Annapolis type military use

| demolished in 1969

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| NSS Annapolis, Tower 3

| 1918

| United States

| Annapolis

| 183 m

| 600&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided, Annapolis type military use

| demolished in 1969

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| NSS Annapolis, Tower 4

| 1918

| United States

| Annapolis

| 183 m

| 600&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided, Annapolis type military use

| demolished in 1969

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| NSS Annapolis, Tower 5

| 1922

| United States

| Annapolis

| 183 m

| 600&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided, Annapolis type military use

| demolished in 1969

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| NSS Annapolis, Tower 6

| 1922

| United States

| Annapolis

| 183 m

| 600&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided, Annapolis type military use

| demolished in 1969

|-

| NSS Annapolis, Tower 7 on site built by the US Navy, these were later replaced in 1972 with two 1,500-foot tall guyed masts

| 1955

| France

| Mulhouse

| 182.9 m

| 600&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

| demolished in 1998

|-

| TV Tower RTPTS Berezniki

| 1961

| Russia

| Berezniki

| 183 m

| 600&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Tower at 503 Mcarthur Drive

| 2016

| United States

| New Bedford, Massachusetts

| 182.9 m

| 600&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Launch Pad 39b Tower 1

| 2022

| United States

| Titusville, Florida

| 182.9 m

| 600&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Launch Pad 39b Tower 2

| 2022

| United States

| Titusville, Florida

| 182.9 m

| 600&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Launch Pad 39b Tower 3

| 2022

| United States

| Titusville, Florida

| 182.9 m

| 600&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Ryazan TV Tower

| 1956

| Russia

| Ryazan

| 182.5 m

| 599&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Nizhny Novgorod TV Tower

| 1957

| Russia

| Nizhny Novgorod

| 182 m

| 597&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Old Ufa TV Tower

| 1958

| Russia

| Ufa

| 182 m

| 597&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Old Perm TV Tower

| 1959

| Russia

| Kazan

| 182 m

| 597&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Tower(formerly) located on the State Fair of Texas grounds

| ?

| United States

| Dallas, Texas

| 181.5 m

| 596&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

| dismantled in 2016

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Old WBNS TV Tower

| 1948

| United States

| Columbus, Ohio

| 181.3 m

| 595&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

| original WBNS tower, replaced by a taller tower in 1955

|-

| KSTP TV Tower

| 1948

| United States

| Saint Paul, Minnesota

| 181.1 m

| 594&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Old WSTM-TV Tower

| 1953

| United States

| Syracuse, New York

| 181.0 m

| 594&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

| demolished in 2003

|-

| WQED TV Tower

| 1954

| United States

| Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

| 181.1 m

| 594&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided candelabra top

|

|-

| KCTS TV Tower Tower

| 1965

| United States

| Seattle, Washington

| 181.1 m

| 594&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Tower on Mamayev Kurgan

| 1956

| Russia

| Volgograd

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Vladimirskaya TV Tower

| 1956

| Russia

| Vladimirskaya

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Old Krasnoyarsk TV Tower

| 1957

| Russia

| Samara

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Kemerovo TV Tower

| 1958

| Russia

| Kemerovo

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Sochi TV Tower

| 1958

| Russia

| Sochi

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| KRTPTS Eagle's Nest

| 1959

| Russia

| Vladivostok

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Arzamas TV Tower

| 1960

| Russia

| Arzamas

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Tambov TV Tower

| 1960

| Russia

| Tambov

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Yoshkar-Ola TV Tower

| 1960

| Russia

| Yoshkar-Ola

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Astrakhan TV Tower

| 1961

| Russia

| Astrakhan

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Cheboksary TV Tower

| 1961

| Russia

| Cheboksary

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Kurgan TV Tower

| 1961

| Russia

| Kurgan

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Leninsk-Kuznetsky TV Tower

| 1962

| Russia

| Leninsk-Kuznetsky

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Magnitogorsk TV Tower

| 1962

| Russia

| Magnitogorsk

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Novokuznetsk TV Tower

| 1962

| Russia

| Novokuznetsk

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Tula TV Tower

| 1963

| Russia

| Tula

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Khabarovsk TV Tower

| 1964

| Russia

| Khabarovsk

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Syktyvkar TV Tower

| 1964

| Russia

| Syktyvkar

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Donetsk TV Tower 2

| 1964

| Ukraine

| Donetsk

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Yarok TV and Radio Tower

| 1964

| Ukraine

| Yarok

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Kokshetau TV Tower

| 1965

| Kazakhstan

| Kokshetau

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided with lateral supports added in 2002 for vertical stability after washout

|

|-

| Nalchik TV Tower

| 1967

| Russia

| Nalchik

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Andriivka TV Tower

| 1969

| Ukraine

| Andriivka

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Kotovsk Communication Tower

| 1972

| Ukraine

| Vesternychany

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Mezhdurechenskaya TV tower

| 1972

| Russia

| Mezhdurechensk

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Chongqing Radio & TV Tower

| 1973

| China

| Yuzhong, Chongqing CQ

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Kuldiga TV Tower

| ?

| Latvia

| Kuldiga

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Uralsvyazinform tower

| 2003

| Russia

| Perm

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

| Hyperboloid structure

|

|-

| Aktobe TV Tower

| ?

| Kazakhstan

| Aktobe

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Ust-Kamenogorsk TV Tower

| ?

| Kazakhstan

| Oskemen

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Petropavlovsk TV Tower

| ?

| Kazakhstan

| Oskemen

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Makhachkala TV Tower

| ?

| Russia

| Makhachkala

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Tobolsk TV Tower

| ?

| Russia

| Tobolsk

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Tyumen TV Tower

| ?

| Russia

| Tyumen

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Tashkent Old TV Tower

| ?

| Uzbekistan

| Tashkent

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Gyumri TV Tower

| ?

| Armenia

| Gyumri

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| Nagoya TV Tower

| 1954

| Japan

| Nagoya

| 180 m

| 590&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Smolensk TV Tower

| 1957

| Russia

| Smolensk

| 180 m

| 590&nbsp;ft

|

|

|-

| Funabashi Miyama Broadcasting Station A Radio Tower

| 1970

| Japan

| Tokyo

| 180 m

| 590&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|- style="background:#cedff2;"

| KDFW TV Tower

| 1949

| United States

| Dallas, Texas

| 179 m

| 587&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

| current height 149.8&nbsp;m (491&nbsp;ft)

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| WTOB-TV Tower

| 1953

| United States

| Winston-Salem, North Carolina

| 178.61 m

| 586&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

| Removed 1967, more than a decade after the TV station closed. Was lit yearly at Christmas from 1957 to 1966.<!-- Sat -->

|-

| 1230 East Mermaid Lane Tower

| 1957

| United States

| Wyndmoor, Pennsylvania

| 178 m

| 585&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| WTNV Tower

| 1947

| United States

| Jackson, Tennessee

| 176.8 m

| 580&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

| collapsed caused by tornado on May 4, 2003

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| KGO-TV Tower

| 1949

| United States

| San Francisco, California

| 176.8 m

| 580&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

| demolished in 1972 to make way for the Sutro Tower

|-

| Ministry of Defense Building B

| 1996

| Japan

| Tokyo

| 177 m

| 580&nbsp;ft

| 12-sided, built on top of a building

| total height including building is

|-

| Balashikha Tower

| ?

| Russia

| Balashikha

| 176 m

| 577&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided non-tapering

|

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Old WLWT TV Tower

| 1948

| United States

| Cincinnati

| 173.7 m

| 570&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

| dismantled in 2005, replaced by the WLWT TV Tower

|-

| KING TV Tower

| 1928

| United States

| Billings

| 173 m

| 568&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

| demolished in 2020

|-

| Hirano Radio Tower

| 1971

| Japan

| Saitama

| 173 m

| 568&nbsp;ft

| solid central core supported with 4 legs,

| central core possibly made out of concrete?

|-

| Tower at 777 Winks Lane

| ?

| United States

| Bensalem, PA

| 173.1 m

| 568&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| WDET Tower

| 1970

| Canada

| Toronto

| 160 m

| 563&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided non-tapering

|

|-

| Tower at 1230 East Mermaid Lane

| ?

| United States

| Wyndmoor, PA

| 171.3 m

| 562&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Original TCN TV Tower

| 1956

| Australia

| Sydney

| 171 m

| 561&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

| demolished in 1966

|-

| Rimavská Sobota SW Transmitter, Tower 1

| 1956

| Slovakia

| Rimavská Sobota

| 171 m

| 561&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

| 4 identical towers

|-

| Rimavská Sobota SW Transmitter, Tower 2

| 1956

| Slovakia

| Rimavská Sobota

| 171 m

| 561&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Rimavská Sobota SW Transmitter, Tower 3

| 1956

| Slovakia

| Rimavská Sobota

| 171 m

| 561&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Rimavská Sobota SW Transmitter, Tower 4

| 1956

| Slovakia

| Rimavská Sobota

| 171 m

| 561&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Hearst Stations Tower

| 1957

| United States

| Sacramento, California

| 170.2 m

| 558&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Tower at 2740 South Freeway

| 1992

| United States

| Fort Worth, Texas

| 170.1 m

| 558&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| WHHL-FM Tower

| 2008

| United States

| St. Louis, Missouri

| 170.1 m

| 558&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Rimavská Sobota SW Transmitter, Tower 5

| 1956

| Slovakia

| Rimavská Sobota

| 170 m

| 558&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Rimavská Sobota SW Transmitter, Tower 6

| 1957

| Australia

| Sydney

| 170 m

| 558&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| VRT Zendmast Oostvleteren

| 1969

| Belgium

| Oostvleteren

| 170 m

| 558&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| WTVH TV Tower

| 1948

| United States

| Syracuse, New York

| 169.5 m

| 556&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| KSAT TV Tower

| 1957

| United States

| San Antonio, Texas

| 168.9 m

| 554&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Gaocheng TV Tower

| ?

| China

| Gaocheng

| 168 m

| 551&nbsp;ft

|

|

|-

| WWVR Tower

| 1954

| United States

| Terre Haute, Indiana

| 167.6 m

| 550&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Yiye Avila Tower

| 1991

| United States

| Utuado, Puerto Rico

| 167 m

| 548&nbsp;ft

| Landmark tower design

| collapsed caused by Hurricane Maria September 2017

|-

| VRT Zendmast Schoten

| 1969

| Belgium

| Schoten

| 167 m

| 548&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| KNBC Mount Wilson Tower

| 1998

| United States

| Mount Wilson, California

| 166 m

| 545&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| KSEG TV Tower

| ?

| United States

| Sacramento, California

| 166 m

| 542&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| CBC Jarvis St. Tower

| 1952

| Canada

| Toronto

| 164.6 m

| 540&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

| demolished in 2002

|-

| RTBF Profondeville

| ?

| Belgium

| Riviere

| 164 m

| 538&nbsp;ft

|

|

|-

| KCCI TV Tower

| 1985

| United States

| Des Moines, Iowa

| 163.6 m

| 537&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| TV Tower Tournai-Froidmont

| 1967

| Belgium

| Tournai-Froidmont

| 163 m

| 535&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| WJAR TV Tower

| 2013

| United States

| Rehoboth, Massachusetts

| 162.7 m

| 534&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| WRAT Tower

| ?

| United States

| Lake Como, NJ

| 162.5 m

| 533&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|-

| WXRT Tower

| 1971

| United States

| Chicago, Illinois

| 162.2 m

| 532&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Higashiyama TV Tower

| 1969

| Japan

| Nagoya

| 162 m

| 532&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| WOWT TV Tower

| 1949

| United States

| Omaha, Nebraska

| 161.6 m

| 530&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Tower at 2599 Palumbo Drive

| 1991

| United States

| Lexington, Kentucky

| 161.5 m

| 530&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided, 8-sided top

|

|-

| Ishikawa TV Broadcasting Tower

|

| Japan

| Kanazawa

| 162 m

| 530&nbsp;ft

| solid steel core supported by a 8-sided non-tapering lattice

| 36°35'17.37"N 136°36'21.62"E

|-

| Martina Franca Tower 1

| ?

| Italy

| Martina Franca

| 161 m

| 528&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| WIZF Tower

| 1976

| United States

| Cincinnati, Ohio

| 160.9 m

| 528&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| KDNL TV Tower

| 1947

| United States

| Saint Louis, Missouri

| 160.8 m

| 528&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Shukhov radio Tower

| 1922

| Russia

| Moscow

| 160 m

| 525&nbsp;ft

| Hyperboloid structure

|

|-

| Luch Tower 1

| 1954

| Ukraine

| Luch

| 160 m

| 525&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Luch Tower 2

| 1983

| Brazil

| São Paulo

| 160 m

| 525&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

| 23°32'36.94"S 46°40'58.31"W

|-

| Tverskaya TV Tower

| 2005

| Russia

| Tverskaya

| 160 m

| 525&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Torre da TV Bahia

| ?

| Brazil

| Salvador

| 160 m

| 525&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Canal Tower 4 (Tres Cruces)

| ?

| Uruguay

| Montevideo

| 160 m

| 525&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Ural TV Tower

| ?

| Kazakhstan

| Uralsk

| 160 m

| 524&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM

|

|-

| City of Dallas Tower

| 1983

| United States

| Dallas, Texas

| 159.4 m

| 523&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| WSAV TV Tower

| 1956

| United States

| Savannah, Georgia

| 159.1 m

| 522&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Chernihiv TV Tower

| 1959

| Ukraine

| Chernihiv

| 159 m

| 522&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Telecomm Antenna

| ?

| Brazil

| Rio de Janeiro

| 159 m

| 522&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| To Kannondomachi TV Tower

|

| Japan

| Kanazawa

| 159.5 m

| 520&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

| 36°35'22.37"N 136°36'28.83"E

|-

| WLLY Tower

| 1995

| United States

| Mangonia Park, Florida

| 158.2 m

| 519&nbsp;ft

| Landmark tower design

|

|-

| Zendmast Zichtenburg

| 2007

| Netherlands

| The Hague

| 158 m

| 518&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Skytel Tower

| 2004

| United States

| Des Moines

| 157.8 m

| 518&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| WHIO (AM) Tower

| 1948

| United States

| Dayton, Ohio

| 157.6 m

| 517&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

| demolished in 2013

|-

| CFCN TV Tower

| 1960

| Canada

| Calgary

| 157.6 m

| 517&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| RaTel Tower

| 1950

| Ukraine

| Kyiv

| 157 m

| 515&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Houdeng Radio Tower

| ?

| Belgium

| Houdeng

| 156 m

| 512&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

| selfradiating tower insulated against ground

|-

| Tower at 47 S State Avenue

| 1991

| United States

| Indianapolis, Indiana

| 155.4 m

| 510&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Tower at 1220 S Acacia Avenue

| 1994

| United States

| Ripon, California

| 155.4 m

| 510&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Mesquite Tower

| 1990

| United States

| Mesquite, Texas

| 155.3 m

| 509.5&nbsp;ft

| Landmark tower design

|

|-

| KETV TV Tower

| 1957

| United States

| Omaha, Nebraska

| 155.1 m

| 509&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|- style="background:#cedff2;"

| RTS TV Tower

| 1981

| Singapore

| Bukit Batok

| 155 m

| 509&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

| replaced the original tower built in 1963

|-

| Torre Cultura

| 1992

| Brazil

| São Paulo

| 154.8 m

| 508&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided, rotating 180 degrees on its axis 3 times

|

|-

| Telecomm Antenna

| ?

| Brazil

| Rio de Janeiro

| 155 m

| 508&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

| 22°56'59.59"S 43°13'46.44"W

|-

| NOVEC Toren

| 2005

| Netherlands

| Zwolle

| 154.5 m

| 507&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Tower at 4344 Park Heights Avenue

| 1987

| United States

| Baltimore, Maryland

| 154.5 m

| 507&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Tower at 78 Veronica Avenue

| 2013

| United States

| Franklin Township, New Jersey

| 154.5 m

| 507&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Washington Police Department Tower

| ?

| United States

| Washington, DC

| 154.3 m

| 506&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| WSB TV Tower

| 1975

| United States

| Atlanta, Georgia

| 154.2 m

| 506&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Tower at 1420 R.Americo Salgado

| ?

| Brazil

| Cuiaba

| 154.2 m

| 506&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

| 15°35'12.57"S 56° 5'36.58"W

|-

| Old KLDT TV Tower

| 1990

| United States

| Lewisville, Texas

| 153.6 m

| 504&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| WOAI TV Tower

| 2010

| United States

| San Antonio, Texas

| 153.3 m

| 503&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| TV Bandeirantes Antenna

| ?

| Brazil

| Rio de Janeiro

| 153.3 m

| 503&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Tower at 26501 Renaissance Parkway

| 1990

| United States

| Cleveland, Ohio

| 153 m

| 502&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| WRDW TV Tower

| 1998

| United States

| Augusta, Georgia

| 152.7 m

| 501&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Tower at 1060 Gatewood Avenue

| 2019

| United States

| Greensboro, North Carolina

| 152.7 m

| 501&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Original ATN TV Tower

| 1956

| Australia

| Sydney

| 152 m

| 500&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

| demolished in 1973

|-

| Croydon Transmitter

| 1962

| UK

| London, Surrey

| 152 m

| 500&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| IBC Tower

| 1978

| Philippines

| Quezon City

| 152 m

| 500&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Tower at 4802 Lookaway Drive

| 1987

| United States

| Cincinnati, Ohio

| 152.4 m

| 500&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| PTV Television Transmitter

| 1993

| Philippines

| Quezon City

| 152.4 m

| 500&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Tower at 1350 Howell Mill Road

| 1995

| United States

| Atlanta, Georgia

| 152.4 m

| 500&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| WKIX (850 AM) Tower

| 1996

| United States

| Cary, North Carolina

| 152.4 m

| 500&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Tower at 15 Van Dyke Avenue

| 1999

| United States

| New Brunswick, New Jersey

| 152.4 m

| 500&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Tower at 180 Freeman Avenue

| 2000

| United States

| Islip, NY

| 152.4 m

| 500&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Cleveland Buckeye Terminals Tower

| 2000

| United States

| Cleveland, Ohio

| 152.4 m

| 500&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Tower at 1810 Jeffries

| 2000

| United States

| Dallas, Texas

| 152.4 m

| 500&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Susquehanna Radio Corp Tower

| 2001

| United States

| Dallas, Texas

| 152.4 m

| 500&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Tower at 2949 2/3 Carr Street

| 2001

| United States

| Houston, Texas

| 152.4 m

| 500&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Tower at 5109 Carder Road

| 2004

| United States

| Orlando, Florida

| 152.4 m

| 500&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| TV Globo Digital Tower

| 2006

| Brazil

| São Paulo

| 152.4 m

| 500&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided, built on top of a building

| Height confirmed by google earth 3 dimensional building data, location; 23°34'4.36"S 46°39'1.65"W

|-

| Tower at 5320 Shepard Drive

| 2008

| United States

| Houston, Texas

| 152.4 m

| 500&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Tower at 2500 Se Loop 820

| 2011

| United States

| Fort Worth, Texas

| 152.4 m

| 500&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| City of Conroe Fire Dept. Tower

| 2011

| United States

| Spring, Texas

| 152.4 m

| 500&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Tower at 6922 Katy Road

| 2012

| United States

| Houston, Texas

| 152.4 m

| 500&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| San Antonio Police Department Tower

| 2012

| United States

| San Antonio, Texas

| 152.4 m

| 500&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Indian River State College Tower

| 2013

| United States

| Fort Pierce, Florida

| 152.4 m

| 500&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Tower at 19 Oldham Street

| 2017

| United States

| Nashville, TN

| 152.4 m

| 500&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Crown Communications LLC Tower

| ?

| United States

| Monroeville, Pennsylvania

| 152.4 m

| 500&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| RKS Mělník-Chloumek

| ?

| Czech Republic

| Mělník

| 152 m

| 500&nbsp;ft

| 4 sided non-tapering

| used for Mediumwave

|-

| RKS Dobrochov

| ?

| Czech Republic

| Dobrochov

| 152 m

| 500&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided non-tapering

| Mediumwave

|-

| Antena Califormula Broadcasting

| ?

| Mexico

| Tijuana

| 152 m

| 500&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Federal Hill Road Tower

| 1970

| United States

| Pompton Lakes, New Jersey

| 152.1 m

| 499&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| WHBF TV Tower

| 1950

| United States

| Rock Island, Illinois

| 152 m

| 499&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|-

| WAFB TV Tower

| 1951

| United States

| Baton Rouge, Louisiana

| 152 m

| 499&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

| second source lists the tower as being 475&nbsp;ft tall

|-

| Tower at 375 Midland Avenue

| 1981

| United States

| Detroit, Michigan

| 152 m

| 499&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| WMUZ Tower

| 1985

| United States

| Detroit, Michigan

| 152 m

| 499&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| L3Harris Technologies Tower

| 1997

| United States

| Fort Worth, Texas

| 152.2 m

| 499&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided candelabra top

|

|-

| WFNZ-FM Tower

| 2000

| United States

| Charlotte, North Carolina

| 152.2 m

| 499&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Charlotte American Tower

| 2001

| United States

| Charlotte, North Carolina

| 151 m

| 499&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided candelabra top

|

|-

| Tower at 14247 Old St. Augustine Road

| 2002

| United States

| Jacksonville, Florida

| 152 m

| 499&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Cumulus Media Tower

| 2004

| United States

| Shreveport, Louisiana

| 152 m

| 499&nbsp;ft

| Landmark tower design

|

|-

| WPEC TV Tower

| 2008

| United States

| West Palm Beach, Florida

| 152 m

| 499&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| New York AM Radio, LLC Tower 1

| 2009

| United States

| North Bergen, New Jersey

| 152.1 m

| 499&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

| 3 towers

|-

| New York AM Radio, LLC Tower 2

| 2009

| United States

| North Bergen, New Jersey

| 152.1 m

| 499&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| New York AM Radio, LLC Tower 3

| 2009

| United States

| North Bergen, New Jersey

| 152.1 m

| 499&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Tower at 4098 Rolling Stone Lane

| 2012

| United States

| St. Louis, Missouri

| 152.1 m

| 499&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Tower off Schumacher Road

| 2013

| United States

| St. Louis, Missouri

| 152.1 m

| 499&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Tower at 1340 West Outer 21 Road

| 2013

| United States

| St. Louis, Missouri

| 152.1 m

| 499&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| AR & JR Radio Tower

| 2017

| United States

| Austin, Texas

| 152 m

| 499&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided candelabra top

|

|-

| City of Chesapeake Tower

| 2018

| United States

| Chesapeake, Virginia

| 152 m

| 499&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Davidson County Government Tower

| 2019

| United States

| Lexington, North Carolina

| 152 m

| 499&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| City of Jackson Tower

| ?

| United States

| Jackson, Mississippi

| 152 m

| 499&nbsp;ft

| Landmark tower design

|

|-

| Tower at 2060 15th Avenue South

| 1999

| United States

| Nashville, Tennessee

| 151.8 m

| 498&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| 4 Broadcast Place Tower

| 1988

| United States

| Jacksonville, Florida

| 151.6 m

| 497&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Tower at 239 East Prairie Avenue

| 2001

| United States

| St. Louis, Missouri

| 151 m

| 495&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Tower at 4702 Mail Service Center

| 2012

| United States

| Raleigh, North Carolina

| 151 m

| 495&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| WETA TV Tower

| ?

| United States

| Arlington, Virginia

| 151 m

| 495&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Tour Dégueu

| ?

| Belgium

| Leglise-Anlier

| 151 m

| 495&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, Top guyed lattice tower, featuring a guyed upper section with four horizontal crossbars

|

|-

| Tower at 1450 Westpark Way

| 1996

| United States

| Fort Worth, Texas

| 150.6 m

| 494&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided candelabra top

|

|-

| Old Ust-Kamenogorsk TV Tower

| 2005

| United States

| Brookside, Ohio

| 150.3 m

| 493&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| Longwave transmitter Lahti, Tower 1

| 1927

| Finland

| Lahti

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

|

| two towers carrying an antenna for longwave

|-

| Longwave transmitter Lahti, Tower 2

| 1927

| Finland

| Lahti

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

|

|

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| RKS Liblice 1, Tower 1

| 1931

| Czech Republic

| Liblice

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, antenna for longwave

| demolished in 2004

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| RKS Liblice 1, Tower 2

| 1931

| Czech Republic

| Liblice

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, antenna for longwave

| demolished in 2004

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Mannesmann Tower (Vienna)

| 1955

| Austria

| Vienna

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

| demolished in 1987

|-

| Vorkuta TV Tower

| 1958

| Russia

| Vorkuta

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided, 3803 KM design, shortened

|

|-

| Novgorod TV Tower

| 1958

| Russia

| Novgorod

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| Yokohama Media Tower

| 1999

| Japan

| Yokohama

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided non-tapering, built on top of a building

| total height including building is

|-

| Halle Radio Tower

| 2005

| Germany

| Halle

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| WKVG Tower

| 2007

| United States

| Greenville, South Carolina

| 149.9 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

| 3-sided

|

|-

| New Ufa TV Tower

| ?

| Philippines

| Quezon City

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|-

| KBC tower

| ?

| Japan

| Fukuoka

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

| 33°35'45.77"N 130°23'44.05"E

|-

| NHK/Tohoku/East Japan Broadcasting Tower

| ?

| Japan

| Sendai

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

| 4-sided

|

|}

Electrical pylons

List of electrical pylons above

thumb|View of one of the Jiangyin lattice towers, the third tallest set of electrical pylons in the world

thumb|[[Pylons of Messina formerly connected Europe to Africa. An underwater cable is used today.]]

thumb|[[Elbe Crossing 2, the tallest electrical pylons in Germany]]

thumb|[[Chūshi Powerline Crossing, the tallest electrical pylons in Japan]]

thumb|[[400 kV Thames Crossing, the tallest electrical pylons in the United Kingdom]]

{| class="wikitable sortable" style="font-size:95%;"

|-

!Tower !! Year !! Country !! Town !! Height m!! Height ft!! class=unsortable|Remarks

|-

|Yangtze River Crossing Jiangyin 2

|| 2022

|| China

|| Jiangyin

|| 385 m

|| 1263&nbsp;ft

|| Tallest pylons in the world

|-

|| Jintang and Cezi islands Overhead Powerline Tie, East Tower

|2005

|China

|Jiangmen

|215 m

|707&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Yangzi River Crossing of HVDC Xianjiaba – Shanghai || 2009 || China || ??? || 202 m || 663&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Balakovo 500 kV Wolga Crossing, Tower East || ? || Russia || Balakovo || 197 m || 646&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|LingBei-Channel-Crossing || 1993 || Japan || Reihoku || 195 m || 640&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Doel Schelde Powerline Crossing 2 || 2019 || Belgium || Antwerpen || 192 m || 630&nbsp;ft || Second crossing of Schelde River

|-

|400 kV Thames Crossing || 1965 ||UK ||West Thurrock || 190 m || 623&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Elbe Crossing 1 ||1958–1962 ||Germany ||Stade ||189 m || 620&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Kogushi Electric Power Transmission Tower || 1994 || Japan || Okayama || 185 m || 607&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Antwerp Deurganck dok crossing || 2000 ||Belgium || Antwerpen || 178&nbsp;m || 584&nbsp;ft || Crossing for a container quay

|-

|Línea de Transmisión Carapongo – Carabayllo

|2015

|Perú

|Lima

|176 m

|577&nbsp;ft

|Crossing of Rimac River

|-

|Tracy Saint Lawrence River Powerline Crossing ||? ||Canada ||Tracy ||174.6 m || 573&nbsp;ft || tallest electricity pylon in Canada

|-

| Rio Vista Birds Landing Powerline Crossing ||2025||United States ||Rio Vista, California ||172.2 m & 166.1 m || 565&nbsp;ft & 545&nbsp;ft || Tallest electricity pylons in the United States

|-

|Doel Schelde Powerline Crossing || ? ||Belgium ||Antwerp||170 m || 558&nbsp;ft ||

|-

| Sunshine Mississippi Powerline Crossing ||1967||United States ||St. Gabriel, Louisiana ||164.6 m || 540&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Lekkerkerk Crossing 1 ||1970||Netherlands ||Lekkerkerk||163 m || 534&nbsp;ft || Tallest crossing in the Netherlands

|-

|Bosporus overhead line crossing III ||1999 ||Turkey ||Istanbul ||160 m || 525&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Balakovo 500 kV Wolga Crossing, Tower West || ? || Russia || Balakovo || 159 m || 522&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Pylons of Cadiz ||? ||Spain ||Cadiz ||158 m || 519&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Mississippi River Crossing at Montz || 1991 || United States|| Montz || 152.1 m || 499&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Amazonas Crossing of Tucuruí transmission line at Jurupari island || 2012 || Brazil || Almeirim || 150 m || 492&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Maracaibo Bay Powerline Crossing || ? ||Venezuela ||Maracaibo||150 m || 492&nbsp;ft ||Towers on caissons

|}

Wind turbines

thumb|The [[Nowy Tomyśl Wind Turbines]]

Tall wind turbines supported by lattice towers have been built almost exclusively in Germany, one of the first countries in the world to build widespread renewable energy infrastructure, including the worlds first supertall wind turbine currently under-construction in Schipkau, Lusatia.

The total height includes the lattice tower and the wind turbine rotor at peak height.

List of wind turbines with a lattice tower above 150 m / 500&nbsp;ft in height.

{| class="wikitable sortable" style="font-size:95%;"

|-

!Tower !! Year !! Country !! Town !! meters!! feet!! class=unsortable|Remarks

|-

| Schipkau Wind Turbine

| 2026

| Germany

| Schipkau, Lusatia

| 365 m

| 1198&nbsp;ft

| 300 m tall tower, rotor diameter of 126 m, hub diameter of 4 m, currently under construction

|-

| Nowy Tomyśl Wind Turbines

| 2012

| Poland

| Nowy Tomyśl, Poland

| 210 m

| 689&nbsp;ft

| 160 m tall tower, rotor diameter of 100 m

|-

| Fuhrländer Wind Turbine Laasow

| 2006

| Germany

| Laasow, Brandenburg

| 205 m

| 673&nbsp;ft

| 160 m tall tower, rotor diameter of 90 m

|-

| Fuhrländer Wind Turbines Spremberg

| 2009

| Germany

| Spremberg, Brandenburg

| 191 m

| 627&nbsp;ft

| 141 m tall tower, rotor diameter of 100 m, 9 units

|-

| Laubersreuth Fuhrländer Wind Turbines

| 2010

| Germany

| Münchberg, Bavaria

| 191 m

| 627&nbsp;ft

| 141 m tall tower, rotor diameter of 100 m, 2 units

|-

| Ewiger Fuhrmann Vestas V66 Wind Turbine

|

| Germany

| Kreuztal, North Rhine-Westphalia

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

| 117 m tall tower, rotor diameter of 66 m

|-

| Oyten Vestas V-66 Wind Turbines

| 2000/2002

| Germany

| Oyten, Lower-Saxony

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

| 117 m tall tower, rotor diameter of 66 m, 2 units

|-

| Elspe Fuhrländer FL 77 Wind Turbine

| 2001

| Germany

| Elspe, North Rhine-Westphalia

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

| 111.5 m tall tower, rotor diameter of 77 m,

|-

| Melle Südwind S77 Wind Turbines

| 2001/2003

| Germany

| Melle, Lower Saxony

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

| 111.5 m tall tower, rotor diameter of 77 m, 6 units

|-

| Heisberg Südwind S77 Wind Turbine

| 2002

| Germany

| Freudenberg, North Rhine-Westphalia

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

| 111.5 m tall tower, rotor diameter of 77 m,

|-

| Wallmersbach Südwind S77 Wind Turbine

| 2002

| Germany

| Uffenheim, Bavaria

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

| 111.5 m tall tower, rotor diameter of 77 m,

|-

| Achim Vestas V66 Wind Turbines

| 2002

| Germany

| Achim, Lower Saxony

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

| 117 m tall tower, rotor diameter of 66 m, 3 units

|-

| Badbergen Südwind S70\1500 wind turbines

| 2002

| Germany

| Badbergen, Lower-Saxony

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

| 114.5 m tall tower, rotor diameter of 70 m 12 units

|-

| Dinklage Südwind S70\1500 Wind Turbines

| 2002

| Germany

| Dinklage, Lower Saxony

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

| 114.5 m tall tower, rotor diameter of 70 m 5 units

|-

| Beedenbostel Vestas V66 Wind Turbines

| 2002

| Germany

| Beedenbostel, Lower Saxony

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

| 117 m tall tower, rotor diameter of 66 m, 5 units

|-

| Büddenstedt Südwind S77 Wind Turbines

| 2002

| Germany

| Helmstedt, Lower Saxony

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

| 111.5 m tall tower, rotor diameter of 77 m, 2 units

|-

| Schwagstorf Südwind S70\1500 Wind Turbines

| 2002

| Germany

| Ostercappeln, Lower Saxony

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

| 114.5 m tall tower, rotor diameter of 70 m 12 units

|-

| Kamp-Lintfort Südwind S77 Wind Turbines

| 2003

| Germany

| Kamp-Lintfort, North Rhine-Westphalia

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

| 111.5 m tall tower, rotor diameter of 77 m, 2 units

|-

| Wetzdorf REpower MD77 Wind Turbines

| 2003

| Germany

| Wetzdorf, Thuringia

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

| 111.5 m tall tower, rotor diameter of 77 m, 2 units

|-

| Hilgershausen Südwind S77 Wind Turbines

| 2003/ 2004

| Germany

| Felsberg, Hesse

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

| 111.5 m tall tower, rotor diameter of 77 m, 2 units

|-

| Kirchlinteln Vestas V66 Wind Turbines

| 2004

| Germany

| Kirchlinteln, Lower Saxony

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

| 117 m tall tower, rotor diameter of 66 m, 4 units

|-

| Dretzen Fuhrländer FL 77 Wind Turbines

| 2005

| Germany

| Dretzen, Brandenburg

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

| 111.5 m tall tower, rotor diameter of 77 m, 10 units

|-

| Bad Laer Nordex N90 Wind Turbine

| 2005

| Germany

| Bad Laer, Lower Saxony

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

| 105 m tall tower, rotor diameter of 90 m

|-

| Achmer Nordex N90 wind turbines

| 2006

| Germany

| Achmer, Lower-Saxony

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

| 105 m tall tower, rotor diameter of 90 m, 9 units

|-

| Alfhausen Nordex N90 wind turbines

|

| Germany

| Alfhausen, Lower-Saxony

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

| 105 m tall tower, rotor diameter of 90 m, 12 units

|-

| Nike Laakdal Wind Park

| 2006

| Belgium

| Laakdal

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

| 111.5 m tall tower, rotor diameter of 77 m, 6 units

|-

| Voltlage Nordex S77 wind turbines

| 2006

| Germany

| Voltlage, Lower-Saxony

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

| 111.5 m tall tower, rotor diameter of 77 m, 7 units

|-

| Pattensen REpower MD77 Wind Turbine

| 2007

| Germany

| Pattensen, Lower Saxony

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

| 111.5 m tall tower, rotor diameter of 77 m

|-

| Kölkebeck REpower MD77 Wind Turbines

| 2007

| Germany

| Kölkebeck, North Rhine-Westphalia

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

| 111.5 m tall tower, rotor diameter of 77 m, 2 units

|-

| Schorbus REpower MD77 Wind Turbines

| 2007

| Germany

| Schorbus, Brandenburg

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

| 111.5 m tall tower, rotor diameter of 77 m, 2 units

|-

| Illerich Fuhrländer FL 77 Wind Turbines

| 2005

| Germany

| Illerich, Rheinland-Pfalz

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

| 111.5 m tall tower, rotor diameter of 77 m, 2 units

|-

| Glandorf Fuhrländer FL 70 Wind Turbine

| 2003

| Germany

| Glandorf, Lower Saxony

| 149.5 m

| 491&nbsp;ft

| 114.5 m tall tower, rotor diameter of 70 m

|-

| Wustrow Wind Turbine

| 1989

| Germany

| Wustrow, Mecklenburg–Western Pomerania

| 41 m

| 135&nbsp;ft

| First industrial wind turbine in former GDR, Vestas V25-200&nbsp;kW wind turbine with 28.5 m tall tower and rotor diameter of 25 m

|}

Chimneys/Smokestacks

The majority of tall lattice chimneys in the world are located in Japan. Unlike other modern developed countries which use reinforced concrete to build tall chimneys Japan has historically used steel until recently for chimney construction.

List of lattice stacks above 150 m/492&nbsp;ft in height. <br />

indicates a structure that is no longer standing.<br />

{| class="wikitable sortable" style="font-size:95%;"

|-

!Tower !! Year !! Country !! Town !! Height m !! Height ft !! Remarks

|-

| Kashima Power Station, stack 1

| 1971

| Japan

| Kashima

| 231 m

| 758&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Hitachinaka Power Plant Chimney

| 2003

| Japan

| Hitachinaka

| 230 m

| 754&nbsp;ft

| Hyperboloid structure

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Schilling Power Plant Chimney

| 1962

| Germany

| Stade

| 220 m

| 722&nbsp;ft

| Demolished in 2005

|-

| Fina Antwerp Olefins Flare 1

|

| Belgium

| Antwerp

| 211 m

| 694&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Fina Antwerp Olefins Flare 2

|

| Belgium

| Antwerp

| 205 m

| 673&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Fina Antwerp Olefins Flare 3

|

| Belgium

| Antwerp

| 204 m

| 669&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Kashima Kyodo power station

|

| Japan

| Kashima

| 203 m

| 665&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| JFE East Japan Works, stack 1

|

| Japan

| Chiba

| 201 m

| 660&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Anegasaki Power Station, stack 1

|

| Japan

| Anegasaki

| 200 m

| 656&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Anegasaki Power Station, stack 2

|

| Japan

| Anegasaki

| 200 m

| 656&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Anegasaki Power Station, stack 3

|

| Japan

| Anegasaki

| 200 m

| 656&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| West Japan Iron and Steel Works, JFE Steel Corporation

|

| Japan

| Fukuyama

| 200 m

| 656&nbsp;ft

| No. 5 Sintering Plant

|-

| Futtsu Power Station, stack 1

|

| Japan

| Futtsu

| 200 m

| 656&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Futtsu Power Station, stack 2

|

| Japan

| Futtsu

| 200 m

| 656&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Kansaidenryokuhimeji Daini Power Station

|

| Japan

| Himeji

| 200 m

| 656&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Kansaidenryokuhimeji Daiichi Power Station

|

| Japan

| Himeji

| 200 m

| 656&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Kashima Power Station, stack 2

| 1971

| Japan

| Kashima

| 200 m

| 656&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Kashima Power Station, stack 3

| 1971

| Japan

| Kashima

| 200 m

| 656&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Hikari Area Yamaguchi Works

|

| Japan

| Kashima

| 200 m

| 656&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Kimitsu Steel Works

|

| Japan

| Kimitsu

| 200 m

| 656&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Kyushudenryoku Shinkokura Power Station

|

| Japan

| Kitakyushu

| 200 m

| 656&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Tobata Co-operative Thermal Power Co., Ltd.

|

| Japan

| Kitakyushu

| 200 m

| 656&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Nippon Steel Nagoya Works

|

| Japan

| Nagoya

| 200 m

| 656&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Kansai Denryoku Kanagawa Power Station

|

| Japan

| Sennan

| 200 m

| 656&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Sodegaura Power Station, stack 1

|

| Japan

| Sodegaura

| 200 m

| 656&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Sodegaura Power Station, stack 2

|

| Japan

| Sodegaura

| 200 m

| 656&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Stadtwerketurm

| 1967

| Germany

| Duisburg

| 200 m

| 656&nbsp;ft

| Lattice section is only the upper 135 m / 443&nbsp;ft, partially dismantled and no longer in use

|-

| Sinter Plant (Nippon Steel Sumitomo Metal Corp)

|

| Japan

| Kitakyushu

| 198 m

| 649&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| JFE East Japan Works, stack 2

|

| Japan

| Kitakyushu

| 189 m

| 620&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Fina Antwerp Olefins Flare 4

|

| Belgium

| Antwerp

| 185 m

| 607&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Chiba Refinery and Petrochemical Plant, stack 1

|

| Japan

| Ichihara

| 183 m

| 599&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Yokkaichi Kombinato petrochemical processing facilities

|

| Japan

| Yokkaichi

| 182 m

| 598&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| TEPCO Goikaryoku Fuel & Power Station, stack 1

|

| Japan

| Goikaryoku

| 181 m

| 593&nbsp;ft

|

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Sulfuric Acid Workshop Chimney

| 1980

| Ukraine

| Konstantinovka

| 180 m

| 592&nbsp;ft

| demolished in 2018

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| 1st Chimney of SK-46

| 1984

| Ukraine

| Zhovti Vody

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

| demolished in 2015

|-

| 2nd Chimney of SK-46

| 1987

| Ukraine

| Zhovti Vody

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Nippon Steel Co., Ltd. Kyushu Works Steelmaking Department stack 1

|

| Japan

| Kainan

| 180 m

| 590&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Kainan (Hainan) Thermal Power Plant, stack 2

|

| Japan

| Kainan

| 180 m

| 590&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Sakaiko Power Station, stack 1

|

| Japan

| Osaka

| 180 m

| 590&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Sakaiko Power Station, stack 2

|

| Japan

| Osaka

| 180 m

| 590&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Dengan Kaihatsu Takasago Karyoku Power Station

|

| Japan

| Takasago

| 180 m

| 590&nbsp;ft

|

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Yokosuka Thermal Power Station, stack 1

|

| Japan

| Yokosuka City

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

| Demolished in 2020

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Yokosuka Thermal Power Station, stack 2

|

| Japan

| Yokosuka City

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

| Demolished in 2021

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Yokosuka Thermal Power Station, stack 3

|

| Japan

| Yokosuka City

| 180 m

| 591&nbsp;ft

| Demolished in 2021

|-

| Onahama Smelting Co., Ltd

|

| Japan

| Onahama

| 170 m

| 559&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| West Japan Iron and Steel Works, JFE Steel Corporation

|

| Ukraine

| Konstantinovka

| 165 m

| 541&nbsp;ft

| demolished

|-

| Kimitsu Steel Works

|

| Japan

| Kimitsu

| 162 m

| 531&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Osaka Refinery, stack 1

|

| Japan

| Osaka

| 162 m

| 530&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Osaka Refinery, stack 2

|

| Japan

| Osaka

| 162 m

| 530&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Nitric Acid Shop Chimney

|

| Ukraine

| Siverodonetsk

| 155 m

| 509&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| JFE East Japan Works, stack 4

|

| Poland

| Legnica

| 150 m

| 493&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| RK Saltivska Chimney

| 1969

| Ukraine

| Kharkiv

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Weak Nitric Acid Shop of Severodonetsk

|

| Ukraine

| Siverodonetsk

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| West Japan Iron and Steel Works, JFE Steel Corporation

|

| Japan

| Fukuyama

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| TEPCO Goikaryoku Fuel & Power Station, stack 2

|

| Japan

| Goikaryoku

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| COSMO Oil refinery

|

| Japan

| Goikaryoku

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Chiba Refinery, Kyokuto Petroleum or JXTG Nippon Oil & Energy Corporation, stack 1

|

| Japan

| Ichihara

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Chiba Refinery, Kyokuto Petroleum or JXTG Nippon Oil & Energy Corporation, stack 2

|

| Japan

| Ichihara

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Chiba Refinery and Petrochemical Plant, stack 2

|

| Japan

| Ichihara

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Sakaiko Power Station, stack 3

|

| Japan

| Osaka

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Sakaiko Power Station, stack 4

|

| Japan

| Osaka

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Sakaiko Power Station, stack 5

|

| Japan

| Osaka

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Sakaiko Power Station, stack 6

|

| Japan

| Osaka

| 150 m

| 492&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Flarestick 4 of PKN Orlen

| 2009

| Poland

| Plock

| 147 m

| 481&nbsp;ft

|

|}

Oil platforms

List of oil platforms with a steel jacket above 300 m / 1000&nbsp;ft in height.

{| class="wikitable sortable" style="font-size: 90%;"

|-

! Name

! Year

! Built in

! Current location

! Height m

! Height ft

! Type

! Remarks

|-

| Petronius Compliant Tower

| 2000

| United States

| Gulf of Mexico

| 640

| 2,100

| Compliant tower

| Tallest freestanding structure in the world 2000–2008

|-

| Baldpate Compliant Tower

| 1998

| United States

| Gulf of Mexico

| 581.5

| 1,908

| Compliant tower

| Tallest freestanding structure in the world 1998–2000

|-

| Bullwinkle Platform

| 1989

| United States

| Gulf of Mexico

| 529

| 1,736

| Truss tower

| Tallest fixed/rigged freestanding structure built in water

|-

| Benguela-Belize Lobito-Tomboco Platform

|

|

| 214 m

| 702&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| XL Enhanced (XLE), Ultra Harsh Environment jackup

| 2016

|

| 206.8 m

| 678&nbsp;ft

| 4 vessels

|-

| Cat J super-rigs

|

|

| 198 m

| 650&nbsp;ft

|

|}

Pillars of aerial tramways

{| class="wikitable sortable" style="font-size:95%;"

|-

!Tramway!! Year !! Country !! Town !! Height m !! Height ft !! class=unsortable|Remarks

|-

|New Eibsee Aerial Tramway Pylon ||2017||Germany ||Grainau ||127.1 m || 417&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Glacial Aerial Tramway Kaprun III ||1966 ||Austria ||Kaprun ||113.6 m || 372&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Torre Jaume I ||1931 ||Spain ||Barcelona ||107 m || 351&nbsp;ft ||Intermediate stop, also observation tower

|-

|Gant Hohtaelli Aerial Tramway ||? ||Switzerland ||Zermatt || 94 m || 308&nbsp;ft ||

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

|Old Eibsee Aerial Tramway pylon 1 ||1962 ||Germany ||Garmisch-Partenkirchen ||85 m || 279&nbsp;ft || Demolished in 2017 and replaced by a taller single pylon

|-

|3S Aerial Tramway ||2004 ||Austria ||Kitzbühel ||80 m || 262&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Torre Sant Sebastia ||1931 ||Spain ||Barcelona ||78 m || 256&nbsp;ft ||Terminal of harbour aerial tramway of Barcelona Spain

|-

|Wendelstein Aerial Tramway ||1970 ||Germany ||Bischofsmais ||75 m || 246&nbsp;ft ||

|-

|Sandia Peak Tramway ||1965 ||United States||Albuquerque ||70.7 m || 232&nbsp;ft ||inclined in an angle of 18 degree

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

|Old Eibsee Aerial Tramway pylon 2 ||1962 ||Germany ||Garmisch-Partenkirchen ||65 m || 213&nbsp;ft || Demolished in 2017 and replaced by a taller single pylon

|}

Rides

List of amusement park rides that make use of a steel lattice tower above 100 m / 328&nbsp;ft in height.

{| class="wikitable sortable" style="font-size:95%;"

|-

!Tower !! Year !! Country !! Town !! Theme Park !! Height m !! Height ft !! Manufacturer

|-

| Kingda Ka & Zumanjaro: Drop of Doom

| 2005

| United States

| Jackson, New Jersey

| Six Flags Great Adventure

| 139 m

| 456&nbsp;ft

| Intamin

|-

| Top Thrill Dragster

| 2003

| United States

| Sandusky, Ohio

| Cedar Point

| 128 m

| 420&nbsp;ft

| Intamin

|-

| Superman: Escape from Krypton

| 1997

| United States

| Santa Clarita, California

| Six Flags Magic Mountain

| 126.5 m

| 415&nbsp;ft

| Intamin

|-

| Texas SkyScreamer

| 2013

| United States

| Arlington, Texas

| Six Flags Over Texas

| 122 m

| 400&nbsp;ft

| Funtime

|-

| Eclipse

| 2013

| Sweden

| Stockholm

| Gröna Lund

| 121.9 m

| 400&nbsp;ft

| Funtime

|-

| Highlander

| 2019

| Germany

| Sierksdorf

| Hansa-Park

| 120 m

| 394&nbsp;ft

| Funtime

|-

| La Venganza del Enigma

|

| Spain

| Madrid

| Parque Warner Madrid

| 115 m

| 377&nbsp;ft

| S&S Worldwide

|-

| Red Force

| 2017

| Spain

| Catalonia

| Ferrari Land

| 112 m

| 367&nbsp;ft

| Intamin

|-

| Donjon de l'Extrême

|

| France

| Dolancourt

| Nigloland

| 105 m

| 345&nbsp;ft

| Funtime

|}

Monuments

{| class="wikitable sortable" style="font-size:95%;"

|-

!Tower !! Year !! Country !! Town !! Height m !! Height ft !! class=unsortable|Remarks

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Trylon and Perisphere

| 1939

| United States

| New York City

| 186 m

| 610&nbsp;ft

| Monument built for the 1939 New York World's Fair, demolished in 1941

|-

| Ring of Life

| 2012

| China

| Fushun

| 157 m

| 515&nbsp;ft

|

|-

|Torre del Reformador

|1935

|Guatemala

|Guatemala City

| 75 m

| 246&nbsp;ft

|

|-

|Gate Tower Clio

|1990

|Netherlands

|Groningen

| 43 m

| 141&nbsp;ft

|

|-

|Shall we Dance

|2007

|Netherlands

|Doetinchem

| 37 m

| 121&nbsp;ft

|

|-

|Zauberlehrling

|2013

|Germany

|Oberhausen

| 35 m

| 115&nbsp;ft

|

|-

|Mount Gorbea summit cross

|1907

|Spain

|Mount Gorbea

|17.2 m

|89&nbsp;ft

|

|}

Lighthouses

{| class="wikitable sortable" style="font-size:95%;"

|-

!Tower !! Year !! Country !! Town !! meters!! feet

|-

| Recalada a Bahía Blanca Light

| 1906

| Argentina

| Monte Hermoso

| 67

| 220

|-

| Campen Lighthouse

| 1889

| Germany

| Krummhörn

| 65.3

| 214

|-

| Adziogol Lighthouse

| 1911

| Ukraine

| Rybalche

| 64

| 211

|-

| Carysfort Reef Light

| 1852

| United States

| Key Largo, Florida

| 36.6

| 120

|}

thumb|The [[Duga radar array]]

Other uses

{| class="wikitable sortable" style="font-size:95%;"

|-

!Tower !! Year !! Country !! Town !! Height m!! Height ft|| class=unsortable|Remarks

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Sky Ride, East tower

| 1933

| United States

| Chicago

| 191 m

| 628&nbsp;ft

| attraction built for the 1933 World's Fair, demolished on Aug 29 1935

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Sky Ride, West tower

| 1933

| United States

| Chicago

| 191 m

| 628&nbsp;ft

| demolished in 1933

|-

| George Washington Bridge, East tower

| 1931

| United States

| New York

| 184 m

| 604&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| George Washington Bridge, West tower

| 1931

| United States

| New York

| 184 m

| 604&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Meteorological Towers of Høvsøre Wind Turbine Test Centre, Tower 1

| 2004

| Denmark

| Bøvlingbjerg

| 165 m

| 541&nbsp;ft

| used for wind measurements (a measurement tower)

|-

| Meteorological Towers of Høvsøre Wind Turbine Test Centre, Tower 2

| 2010

| Kazakhstan

| Nur-Sultan

| 150 m

| 492 f

| Entertainment Center, glass dome structurally supported by an internal 3-legged lattice structure

|-

| Ivanpah Solar Power Facility, tower 1

| 2014

| United States

| California

| 139.9 m

| 459&nbsp;ft

| Solar power tower

|-

| Ivanpah Solar Power Facility, tower 2

| 2014

| United States

| California

| 139.9 m

| 459&nbsp;ft

| Solar power tower

|-

| Ivanpah Solar Power Facility, tower 3

| 2014

| United States

| California

| 139.9 m

| 459&nbsp;ft

| Solar power tower

|-

| Zeitzeichensender Pragins I

| 1931

| Switzerland

| Prangins

| 125 m

| 410&nbsp;ft

| used to broadcast Time Signal

|-

| Zeitzeichensender Pragins II

| 1931

| Switzerland

| Prangins

| 125 m

| 410&nbsp;ft

| used to broadcast Time Signal

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Oak Ridge DOE Reservation Water Tower

|

| United States

| Tennessee

| 111 m

| 365&nbsp;ft

| Water tank, demolished August 3, 2013 possibly the tallest traditional steel water tower built

|-

| Rattling Brook Power Plant Surge Tank

| 1958

| Canada

| Jackson's Arm

| 94.75 m

| 311&nbsp;ft

| Surge tank, tallest steel plate structure in the world when built

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Canadian Nuclear Laboratories Water Tower

|

| Canada

| Chalk River

| 91.5 m

| 300&nbsp;ft

| Water tank, demolished June 3, 2017

|-

| John Hart Dam Surge Tank 1

| 1947

| Canada

| Vancouver Island

| 90 m

| 295&nbsp;ft

| Surge tank

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| John Hart Dam Surge Tank 2

| 1947

| Canada

| Vancouver Island

| 90 m

| 295&nbsp;ft

| Surge tank, demolished July 25, 2019

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| John Hart Dam Surge Tank 3

| 1947

| Canada

| Vancouver Island

| 90 m

| 295&nbsp;ft

| Surge tank, demolished July 12, 2019

|-

| Parachute Tower Katowice

| 1937

| Poland

| Katowice

| 75 m

| 246&nbsp;ft

| Parachute tower

|-

| Eindhoven Water Towers

| 1970

| Netherlands

| Eindhoven

| 43 m

| 142&nbsp;ft

| Water tower

|}

Wooden lattice towers

thumb| [[Radio Tower Gliwice is the tallest wooden lattice tower in the world.]]

thumb|Comparision of a wooden lattice tower (left) and a steel lattice tower (right) of similiar height for the same use

Existing towers

{| class="wikitable sortable" style="font-size:95%;"

|-

!Tower !! Year !! Country !! Town !! Pinnacle height !! class=unsortable|Remarks

|-

|Radio Tower Gliwice

|1935

|Poland

|Gliwice

|118 m

|Museum on Radio History and Visual Arts

|-

|Randsburg Wash Target Test Towers

|1951

|United States

|Naval Air Weapons Station China Lake

|109.73 m

|Two towers, used for hanging up targets for guided missiles

|-

|Tour du Millénaire

|2001

|Belgium

|Gedinne

|60 m

|interesting design

|-

|Himmelsglück Observation Tower

|2021

|Germany

|Schömberg

|55 m

|observation tower

|-

|Aerial test facility Brück

|1963

|Germany

|Brück

|54 m

|Two towers of different design

|-

| Torre de Herveo

| 1922

| Colombia

| Manizales

| 52 m

| former support structure of aerial tramway

|-

|Observation Tower Blumenthal

|2004

|Germany

|Blumenthal

|45 m

|observation tower

|-

|Copenhagen Zoo Tower

|1905

|Denmark

|Copenhagen

|43.5

|observation tower

|-

|Chuderhüsi Tower

|2001

|Switzerland

|Röthenbach

|42 m

|observation tower

|-

|Teltschik Tower

|2001

|Germany

|Wilhelmsfeld

|41 m

|observation tower

|-

|Veitsch Mount of Olives Pilgrims Cross

|2004

|Austria

|Veitsch

|40.6 m

|observation tower

|-

|Wil Tower

|2006

|Switzerland

|Wil

|38 m

|observation tower

|-

|Raiffeisen Observation Tower

|1990

|Germany

|Aldorf

|35 m

|observation tower

|-

|Oberpfalz Tower

|2000

|Germany

|Platte

|35 m

|observation tower

|-

|Loorenkopf Observation Tower

|1954

|Switzerland

|Zurich

|33 m

|observation tower

|-

|Ossinger Tower

|2013

|Germany

|Ossinger mountain

|32 m

|observation tower

|-

|Eugen-Keidel Tower

|1981

|Germany

|Schauinsland mountain

|31 m

|observation tower

|-

|Atzelberg Tower

|1980

|Germany

|Kelkheim

|30.39 m

|observation tower

|-

|Fire observation Tower Rennbeck

|?

|Germany

|Oer

|30 m

|fire observation tower

|-

|Idarkopf Tower

|1980

|Germany

|Idarkopf

|28 m

|observation tower

|-

|Hohenmirsberg Observation Tower

|2008

|Germany

|Pottenstein

|28 m

|observation tower

|-

|Höhbeck Observation Tower

|2008

|Germany

|Höhbeck

|26 m

|observation tower

|-

|Loth Tower

|2003

|Switzerland

|Magglingen

|25 m

|observation tower

|-

|Salzkopfturm

|1975

|Germany

|Salzkopf

|24 m

|observation tower

|-

|Observation Tower Burgstall

|2000

|Austria

|Kirchberg/Donau

|24 m

|observation tower

|-

|Krawutschke Tower

|1972

|Germany

|Burgberg

|13 m

|observation tower

|}

Destroyed Wooden lattice towers

{| class="wikitable sortable" style="font-size:95%;"

|-

!Tower !! Year !! Country !! Town !! Pinnacle height !! Date of demolition !! class=unsortable|Remarks

|-

|Transmission Tower Mühlacker

|1934

|Germany

|Mühlacker

|190 m

|April 6, 1945

|

|-

|Transmitter Berlin-Tegel

|1933

|Germany

|Berlin

|165 m

|December 16, 1948

|

|-

|Sendeturm Ismaning

|1932

|Germany

|Ismaning

|163 m

|March 16, 1983

|

|-

|Sendeturm Langenberg

|1934

|Germany

|Velbert-Langenberg

|160 m

|October 10, 1935

|destroyed by a tornado

|-

|Sendeturm Wiederau

|1935

|Germany

|Wiederau

|150 m

|October 27, 1953

|

|-

|Sendeturm Hamburg-Billstedt

|1934

|Germany

|Hamburg

|145 m

|September 1949

|

|-

|Transmitter Żórawina

|1932

|Germany

|Żórawina, Poland

|140 m

|Fall 1990

|

|-

|Herstedvester Radio Tower

|1933

|Denmark

|Albertslund

|125 m

|1975

|

|-

|Transmitter Nuremberg-Kleinreuth

|1935

|Germany

|Nuremberg

|124 m

|July 12, 1961

|

|-

|Madona Radio Towers

|1932

|Latvia

|Madona

|116 m

|1944

|

|-

|Transmitter Heilsberg

|1935

|Germany

|Lidzbark Warmiński, Poland

|115 m

|1940

|

|-

|Freiburg-Lehen transmitter

|1933

|Germany

|Freiburg

|107 m

|April 21, 1945

|

|-

|Heiligenstock transmitter

|1934

|Germany

|Frankfurt/Main

|107 m

|March 25, 1945

|

|-

|Transmitter Koblenz

|1934

|Germany

|Koblenz

|107 m

|1965

|

|-

|Transmitter Trier

|1935

|Germany

|Trier

|107 m

|1948

|

|-

|Transmitter Heilsberg

|1930

|Germany

|Lidzbark Warmiński, Poland

|102 m

|1935

|Two towers

|-

|Reichenbach transmitter

|1937

|Germany

|Reichenbach/Oberlausitz

|100 m

|May 7, 1945

|

|-

|Golm transmitter

|1948

|Germany

|Golm

|100 m

|October 25, 1979

|

|-

|Latting Observatory

|1853

|United States

|New York City

|96 m

|1856

|Observation tower, destroyed by a fire

|-

|Stettin Radio Tower

|1934

|Poland

|Szczecin

|93 m

|1945

|

|-

|Utbremen Radio Tower

|1933

|Germany

|Bremen

|90 m

|1939

|destroyed by lightning

|-

|Flensburg Radio Tower

|1928

|Germany

|Flensburg

|90 m

|1957

|

|-

|Pillar of Mittersill goods aerial tramway

|194?

|Austria

|Mittersill

|80 m

|195?

|Aerial tramway support pillar of goods aerial tramway, which never went in service

|-

|Stadelheim Transmitter

|1926

|Germany

|Munich-Stadelheim

|75 m

|1930s

|Two towers

|-

|Chain Home Reception Towers

|1939

|UK

|multiple locations

|73.15 m

|1945–1960

|

|-

|Cricklade Radio Tower

|1967

|United Kingdom

|Cricklade

|73.15 m

|January 26, 2000

|[https://www.rafblakehillfarm.co.uk/blakehill-radio-mast]

|-

|Rottenbuch Radio Tower

|2002

|Germany

|Peiting

|71 m

|2026

|Tower for directional radio and mobile phone services

|-

|Wood Transmitting Tower Zeesen

|1931

|Germany

|Zeesen

|70 m

|1939

|

|-

|Reception Tower Utlandshörn

|1935

|Germany

|Utlandshörn

|65 m

|1977

|

|-

|Towers of South Wellfleet Marconi Wireless Station

|1902

|United States

|South Wellfleet, Massachusetts

|64 m

|1920

|4 towers

|-

|Towers of Königsberg Air Traffic Control Centre

|1926

|Russia

|Kaliningrad

|63 m

|1945

|Two towers

|-

|Palatine Transmitter

|1926

|Germany

|Kaiserslautern

|60 m

|1945

|Two towers

|-

|Huizen transmitter

|1937

|Netherlands

|Huizen

|60 m

|1940

|

|-

|Central mast of Boguchwala transmitter

|1953

|Poland

|Boguchwala

|60 m

|1957

|

|-

|Holmudden Radar Tower[http://www.signalspaning.se/om_tes/]

|1948

|Sweden

|Holmudden

|?

|1958

|

|-

|Wardenclyffe Tower

|1899

|United States

|Shoreham

|57 m

|1917

|

|-

|Wiesbaden Bismarck Tower

|1910

|Germany

|Wiesbaden

|50 m

|1918

|

|-

|Sahlenburg Marine Radio Station

|1937

|Germany

|Cuxhaven

|50 m

|1967/1970

|Three towers, two demolished in 1967, third tower demolished in 1970

|-

|Stolp transmitter

|1938/1939

|Poland

|Dębnica Kaszubska

|50 m

|1955

|7 towers

|-

|Jelenia Góra transmitter

|1957

|Poland

|Jelenia Góra

|47 m

|1967

|

|-

|Towers of triangle antenna Langenberg

|1935

|Germany

|Velbert-Langenberg

|45 m

|April 12, 1945

|Three towers

|-

|Goethe Tower

|1931

|Germany

|Frankfurt-Sachsenhausen

|43 m

|October 12, 2017

|Destroyed in a fire

|-

|Kisbér Nokia Cellphone Transmission Tower

|2002

|Hungary

|Kisbér

|40 m

|2015

|Replaced by a steel tower

|-

|Bayreuth transmitter, T-antenna

|194?

|Germany

|Bayreuth

|40 m

|1954

|2 towers in a distance of 70 metres

|-

|Augsburg-Hochzoll transmitter

|194?

|Germany

|Augsburg

|40 m

|1952

|2 towers

|-

|Kempten-Engelshalde Transmitter

|1951

|Germany

|Kempten

|40 m

|1956

|Two towers

|-

|Heusweiler Mast 1

|1935

|Germany

|Heusweiler

|35 m

|March 17, 1945

|

|-

|Schneeberg Air Force Tower

|1938

|Germany

|Bischofsgrün

|35 m

|1942

|

|-

|Heusweiler Mast 2

|1935

|Germany

|Heusweiler

|31 m

|March 17, 1945

|

|-

|Holzbergturm

|2005

|Germany

|Malente

|28 m

|2017

|observation tower

|}

Tallest lattice towers, by design type

List of the tallest lattice towers by common(min 5) design types.

{| class="wikitable sortable" style="font-size: 90%;"

|-

! design Type

! total built

! Name

! Year

! Built in

! City/location

! Height m

! Height ft

! Remarks

|-

| Compliant tower(Oil Platform)

| 5

| Petronius Compliant Tower

| 2000

| United States

| Gulf of Mexico

| 640

| 2,100

| tallest lattice tower of any type,

|-

| Additionally supported by a solid core, Concrete

| unknown >10

| Tokyo Skytree

| 2012

| Japan

| Sumida, Tokyo

| 634

| 2,080

| tallest lattice tower of any type built on land

|-

| Self-supported steel truss of any type

| unknown

| Bullwinkle Platform

| 1989

| United States

| Gulf of Mexico

| 529

| 1,736

| tallest fixed/rigged freestanding steel-only truss structure built on land or sea

|-

| Additionally supported by a solid core, Steel

| unknown >10

| Kyiv TV Tower

| 1973

| Ukraine

| Kyiv

| 385

| 1,263

|

|-

| Hydro Pylons

| thousands

| Jintang and Cezi islands Overhead Powerline Tie, East & West towers

| 2019

| China

| Jintang Island

| 380

| 1,247

| tallest pylons in the world

|-

| 4-sided steel lattice tower(land-based)

| thousands

| Tokyo Tower

| 1957

| Japan

| Tokyo

| 333

| 1,093

|

|-

| 3-sided steel lattice tower

| thousands

| WITI TV Tower

| 1962

| United States

| Shorewood, Wisconsin

| 329.4

| 1,081

|

|-

| Landmark tower

| 10

| Star Tower

| 1991

| United States

| Cincinnati, Ohio

| 290.8 m

| 954&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Hyperboloid structure

| >10

| Perm TV Tower

| 2016

| Russia

| Perm

| 275 m

| 902&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Top guyed lattice tower, featuring a guyed upper section with four horizontal crossbars

| 5

| Grodno TV Tower

| 1984

| Belarus

| Grodno

| 254 m

| 833&nbsp;ft

| tallest freestanding structure in Belarus

|-

| Annapolis type

| 40~

| Lafayette transmitter, Towers 1-8

| 1918

| France

| Marcheprime

| 250 m

| 820&nbsp;ft

| demolished in 1944 & 1953

|-

| Non-tapering

| unknown >100

| Noble Lloyd Noble(Oil Platform)

|

|

|

| 214 m

| 702&nbsp;ft

| all lattice towers above this height use a tapering design

|-

| 3803 KM design

| 83

| Edineţ TV Tower & Rezeknes TV Tower

| ?

| Latvia

| Edineţ & Rezeknes

| 204 m

| 669&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Wooden lattice tower

| unknown >100

| Transmission Tower Mühlacker

| 1934

| Germany

|

| 190 m

| 623&nbsp;ft

| demolished in 1945, tallest structure ever built out of wood

|}

Unique lattice tower designs. Minimum height of 120 m / 400&nbsp;ft. <br />

indicates a structure that is no longer standing.

Hyperboloid structures

{| class="wikitable sortable" style="font-size:95%;"

|-

!Tower !! Year !! Country !! Town !! Height m !! Height ft !! Remarks

|-

| Perm TV tower

| United States

| Mangonia Park, Florida

| 158.2 m

| 519&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Mesquite Tower

| 1990

| United States

| Mesquite, Texas

| 155.3 m

| 509.5&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Cumulus Media Tower

| 1989

| United States

| Bloomington, Illinois

| 152 m

| 418&nbsp;ft

|

|}

Blaw-Knox towers

{| class="wikitable sortable" style="font-size:95%;"

|-

!Tower !! Year !! Country !! Town !! Height m !! Height ft !! Remarks

|-

| Lakihegy Tower

| 1946

| Hungary

| Szigetszentmiklós-Lakihegy

| 314 m

| 1030&nbsp;ft

| The current tower is a rebuild of the original tower which was constructed in 1933 but destroyed at the end of World War II.

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Liblice Blaw-Knox Radio Mast

| 1936

| Czech Republic

| Liblice

| 280.40 m

| 920&nbsp;ft

| demolished on October 17, 1972

|-

| WSM Tower

| 1932

| United States

| Nashville, Tennessee

| 246 m

| 808&nbsp;ft

| The first Blaw-Knox tower ever built, originally 267&nbsp;m (874&nbsp;ft) in height

|-

| WLW Tower

| 1934

| United States

| Cincinnati, Ohio

| 227 m

| 747&nbsp;ft

| Originally 253&nbsp;m (831&nbsp;ft) in height

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| Vakarel Blaw-Knox Radio Mast

| 1937

| Bulgaria

| Elin Pelin

| 215

| 705&nbsp;ft

| demolished on September 16, 2020

|-

| WBT Tower 1

| 1934

| United States

| Charlotte, North Carolina

| 130 m

| 426&nbsp;ft

| Three towers in total, one original, two reproductions from the original plans after the originals were destroyed by Hurricane Hugo in 1989.

|-

| WBT Tower 2

| 1989

| United States

| Charlotte, North Carolina

| 130 m

| 426&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| WBT Tower 3

| 1989

| United States

| Charlotte, North Carolina

| 130 m

| 426&nbsp;ft

|

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| WADO Tower

| 1934

| United States

| Carlstadt, New Jersey

| 129 m

| 424&nbsp;ft

| Demolished on October 17, 1999

|- style="background:#d3d3d3;"

| LVRTC Riga Blaw Knox Radiator

| 1947

| Latvia

| Riga

| 125 m

| 410&nbsp;ft

| Demolished in 2010

|-

| WFEA Tower

| 1931

| United States

| Manchester, New Hampshire

| 121 m

| 396&nbsp;ft

|

|}

Top guyed lattice towers

{| class="wikitable sortable" style="font-size:95%;"

|-

!Tower !! Year !! Country !! Town !! Height m !! Height ft !! Remarks

|-

| Grodno TV Tower

| 1984

| Belarus

| Grodno

| 254 m

| 833&nbsp;ft

| Tallest freestanding structure in Belarus

|-

| Vitebsk TV Tower

| 1983

| Belarus

| Vitebsk

| 244 m

| 801&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Astara TV Tower

| 1981

| Republic of Azerbaijan

| Astara

| 243.84 m

| 800&nbsp;ft

|

|-

| Wavre Transmitter

| 1983

| Belgium

| Wavre

| 232 m

| 761&nbsp;ft

| Tallest lattice tower in Belgium

|-

| Tour Dégueu