London is the capital and largest city of the United Kingdom. It has 133 completed buildings that are at least 100 metres (328 feet) tall as of 2026, 42 of which have a height greater than 150 metres (492 ft). London has one of the largest skylines in Europe; it has the most skyscrapers taller than 150 m (492 ft) in the United Kingdom and in Western Europe, and the third most of any city in Europe overall, after Moscow and Istanbul. London's skyline has undergone immense transformation in the early 21st century. Since 2013, the tallest building in London and the United Kingdom has been The Shard, London's only supertall skyscraper. The pyramid-shaped building in Southwark rises to a height of 306 m (1,004 ft). This restriction was lifted in the 1950s, permitting the construction of high-rises taller than St. Paul's. The destruction during The Blitz allowed more room for modern development. Early skyscrapers were built on the west side of central London, most notably the BT Tower in Fitzrovia in 1965. A concentration of tall buildings arose in the City of London, including office towers such as St Helen's and Tower 42, and Barbican Estate, a three-towered residential complex that is a prominent example of brutalism. The London Docklands in the Isle of Dogs, which had become disused in the 1960s, underwent a significant redevelopment plan in the 1980s, resulting in the financial district of Canary Wharf. Among the first skyscrapers built there was One Canada Square in 1991. At 236 m (774 ft), it surpassed Tower 42 to be London's tallest building; it is currently the city's third-tallest building and still the tallest in Canary Wharf.

thumb|300x300px|[[Canary Wharf from Greenwich Park in 2022]]

Since the 2000s, London has been experiencing a substantial skyscraper boom, which has accelerated in the late 2010s. This initially took place mostly in the City of London and Canary Wharf. The Gherkin, completed in 2004 in the City, is a recognised example of contemporary architecture. Further office skyscrapers in the City of London, such as 20 Fenchurch Street and 122 Leadenhall Street, have been given nicknames due to their distinctive shapes. The City of London's tallest building, 22 Bishopsgate, initially broke ground under the name The Pinnacle in 2008, but construction was halted in 2012. After a redesign, which removed the proposed curved-glass roof, it was completed in 2020. Numerous skyscrapers are planned for the City, including 1 Undershaft, which would be the tallest in the district, owing to high demand for grade-A office space. Canary Wharf has seen a major influx in residential skyscrapers since the 2010s, with the Wood Wharf neighbourhood expanding the skyscraper cluster eastwards.

thumb|300x300px|The City of London behind Canary Wharf in 2024

High-rises have increasingly proliferated across London since the 2010s, particularly in the areas of Vauxhall/Nine Elms, Elephant and Castle, and Stratford. The tallest buildings in each area (One Nine Elms City Tower, Highpoint, and Manhattan Loft Gardens respectively) have been built since 2018. This has been associated with residential regeneration efforts; in Stratford, development was spurred by the 2012 Summer Olympics. The New London Vernacular has influenced the design of these new towers. In the late 2010s and 2020s, this has extended to more areas across inner and outer London, most notably in Lewisham, Croydon, North Acton, and Wembley Park. One Blackfriars, completed in 2019 in the South Bank, will be accompanied by skyscrapers in the Bankside Yards project. Considerable residential high-rise development has also occurred in Barking, Blackwall, Canada Water, Canning Town, Greenwich Peninsula, Paddington, Poplar, Shoreditch, Silvertown, Southwark, Wandsworth, White City, and along City Road.

History

Medieval and early modern period

The history of tall structures in London began with the completion of the White Tower, a part of the Tower of London, in 1098. The first structure to surpass a height of was the Old St Paul's Cathedral. Completed in 1310, it stood at a height of . It regained the title when the spire of Lincoln Cathedral fell in 1549.

Although the spire of the Old St Paul's was destroyed by lightning in 1561, it still stood as the tallest structure in London, St Paul's was severely damaged by the Great Fire of London in 1666. The title of the tallest structure in London passed to Southwark Cathedral, which stands at a height of and no structure in London again rose above 100 metres until 1710, when the current St Paul's Cathedral was completed at , becoming London's tallest building. Though restrictions have long since been eased, harsh regulations remain to preserve protected views, especially those of St Paul's, the Tower of London and Palace of Westminster, as well as to comply with the requirements of the Civil Aviation Authority.

1960s and 1970s

The lifting of height restrictions caused a boom in the construction of tall buildings during the 1960s. St Paul's Cathedral remained as London's tallest building until it was overtaken in 1963 by the Millbank Tower at , which in turn was overtaken by the BT Tower which topped out just one year later in 1964 at and officially opened in 1965 (then known as the Post Office Tower). One of London's first notable tall buildings was the Centre Point, completed in 1966.

Others completed in the 1960s include: the Empress State Building at in 1961, the Shell Centre at in 1961, the London Hilton at in 1963, Portland House at in 1963, and Euston Tower at in 1970, all built on the west side of Central London. In 1969, St. Helen's at was completed in the City of London, along with Britannic House in 1967 at 122 metres (400 ft), but the latter was refurbished in 2000, increased to 127 m in height and renamed Citypoint. Cromwell Tower, completed in 1973, Lauderdale Tower, completed in 1974 and Shakespeare Tower, completed in 1976, all at , were built as part of the Barbican Estate in the northern part of the City of London.

1980s, 1990s and 2000s

The NatWest Tower, later renamed Tower 42, was completed in 1980, which at and 42 storeys, was considered the first "skyscraper" in the City of London. Its height was controversial, being contrary to the previous height restrictions, it was the tallest building in the United Kingdom at the time and also the tallest cantilever building in the world.

Following another over 10-year gap, 8 Canada Square and 25 Canada Square, both standing at about , were completed at Canary Wharf in 2002. Several others of a smaller height followed at Canary Wharf including: Heron Quays, 40 Bank Street in 2003 at , Heron Tower in 2007 at , and the Broadgate Tower in 2008 at . and the RIBA Stirling Prize for Architecture in 2004.

2010s to present

Boris Johnson, who was Mayor of London from 2008 to 2016, approved the construction of more skyscrapers in London.

At the time of its completion in 2010, Strata SE1 was the tallest residential building in London. The Shard topped out in 2012 at London Bridge and at remains London's tallest building. In 2014, the tall 122 Leadenhall Street, nicknamed "the Cheesegrater", was completed in the City of London. In September 2016, a refit was completed of the 111 m King's Reach Tower, originally built in the 1970s, which included an 11-storey height increase to bring it up to tall and it was renamed the South Bank Tower.

One Blackfriars, also located on the South Bank, topped out in 2017 at . The Scalpel, at was completed in the City of London in 2018 and it was designed to protect views of St Paul's Cathedral. Newfoundland Quay, at and Landmark Pinnacle at topped out in Canary Wharf in 2018 and 2019 respectively. One Park Drive at and South Quay Plaza at both also topped out at Canary Wharf in 2019. 22 Bishopsgate, at topped out in the City of London in 2019, after being approved by the current mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, in 2016. It will be built on the site of the aforementioned 1969 St Helen's building which is currently being demolished. 100 Leadenhall, at , and already nicknamed the "Cheesegrater 2", is also planned for the City of London. Spire London, at is planned for Canary Wharf. However, construction was halted after concerns that the building only had one escape stairwell for residents on the upper floors. The tall Aspen at Consort Place (previously called Alpha Square), also at Canary Wharf, opened in 2025.

There is another major skyscraper cluster emerging in the Vauxhall and Nine Elms districts of London. The first skyscraper to appear here was St George Wharf Tower at and which was completed in 2014. The tallest tower in the cluster is the One Nine Elms City Tower completed in 2022. Other notable skyscrapers in the district include One Thames City No. 8 at , and the DAMAC Tower at .

In 2019, Sadiq Khan blocked the construction of the Tulip that would have been built in the City of London. After an appeal was launched by the developers against Khan's decision, UK housing secretary Michael Gove rejected the proposal in November 2021.

Map of tallest buildings

The map below shows the distribution of high-rise buildings taller than 100 m (328 ft) in London. High-rise clusters with two or more buildings taller than 100 m (328 ft) are labelled in bold. The scope of this map excludes several high-rise clusters in Outer London, namely Croydon, Ilford, Tottenham Hale, Walthamstow, and Woodberry Down.

City of London & Shoreditch

The map below shows a portion of the above map in Central London, centered on the City of London. Each marker is numbered by the building's height rank within the map, and colored by the decade of its completion.

Canary Wharf and Isle of Dogs

The map below shows the location of buildings taller than 100 m (328 ft) in Canary Wharf and Blackwall. Each marker is numbered by the building's height rank within the map, and colored by the decade of its completion.

Tallest buildings and structures

This list ranks complete and topped-out skyscrapers and free-standing towers in London that stand at least 100&nbsp;m (328&nbsp;ft) tall as of 2026, based on standard height measurement. This includes spires and architectural details but does not include antenna masts. The "Year" column indicates the year in which a building was completed. If two or more structures are tied in height, the earlier structure is ranked first.<!-- These buildings are listed as taller than 100 m on Emporis or SkyscraperPage, but shorter on the CTBUH database:

- Urbanest King's Cross

- Laurel Point

In addition, the CTBUH likely has the wrong height for the Empress State Building. -->

{|class="wikitable sortable defaultcenter col9left sticky-header"

|-

! scope="col" |Rank

! scope="col" |Name

! scope="col" class="unsortable" | Image

! scope="col" |Location

! scope="col" |Height<br /><small>m (ft)</small>

! scope="col" |Floors

! scope="col" |Year

! scope="col" |Purpose

! scope="col" class="unsortable" | Notes

|- style="background:#c0ffff;"

| 1

| The Shard

| 125px|alt=

| Southwark

|

| 72

| 2013

| Mixed-use

| Tallest building and only supertall skyscraper in the United Kingdom and Western Europe. Tallest building in Europe by roof height outside of Russia. Mixed-use residential, hotel, and office building.

|-

| 2

| 22 Bishopsgate

| 125px|alt=

| City of London

|

| 62

| 2020

| Office

| Tallest building in the City of London.

|- style="background:#c0ffff;"

| 3

| One Canada Square

| 125px|alt=

| Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs

|

| 50

| 1991

| Office

| Tallest building in the Canary Wharf business district. Tallest building and structure in London from 1991 to 2013.

|-

| 4

| Landmark Pinnacle

| 125px|alt=

| Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs

|

| 77

| 2020

| Mixed-use

|Mixed-use residential and hotel building.

|-

| 5

| Heron Tower

| 125px|alt=

| City of London

|

| 46

| 2011

| Office

| Only at roof height, but includes a mast. Also known as Salesforce Tower.

|-

| 6

| 122 Leadenhall Street

| 125px|alt=

| City of London

|

| 52

| 2014

| Office

| Also known as "The Leadenhall Building". Second tallest building in the City of London. Nicknamed "The Cheesegrater" due to its wedge shape.

|-

| 7

| Newfoundland

| 125px|alt=

| Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs

|

| 59

| 2020

| Residential

|

|- style="background:#c0ffff;"

| N/A

| Crystal Palace<br>Transmitter

| 125px|alt=

| Crystal Palace

| 219 ()

| N/A

| 1950

| Transmitter

| Tallest structure in London completed in the 1950s.

|-

| 8

| Aspen at Consort Place

| 125px|alt=

| Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs

|

| 67

| 2024

| Residential

| Previously named Alpha Square.

|-

| 9

| South Quay Plaza 1

| 125px|alt=

| Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs

|

| 68

| 2020

| Residential

|Approved in November 2014. Also known as Valiant Tower.

|-

| 10

| One Park Drive

| 125px|alt=

| Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs

|

| 58

| 2021

| Residential

| Part of the Wood Wharf development as the Wood Wharf A1 building. Approved in July 2015.

|-

| 11

| 8 Bishopsgate

| 125px|alt=

| City of London

|

| 51

| 2023

| Office

| Approved in 2017. Construction commenced in March 2019. Topped out in September 2022.

|-

|12

|25 Canada Square

|125px|alt=

|Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs

|

|42

|2002

|Office

|Also known as the Citigroup Tower. Currently undergoing refurbishment, to be completed in 2025.

|-

| 13

| 8 Canada Square

| 125px|alt=

| Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs

|

| 42

| 2002

| Office

| Also known as the HSBC Tower.

|-

| 14

| One Nine Elms City Tower

| 125px|alt=

| Vauxhall / Nine Elms

|

| 57

| 2023

| Residential

| Tallest building in Vauxhall/Nine Elms.

|-

| 15

| Harcourt Gardens

| 125px|alt=

| Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs

|

| 56

| 2024

| Residential

| Initially rejected on 12 May 2016, but granted planning permission in July 2016.

|-

| 16

| The Scalpel

| 125px|alt=

| City of London

|

| 39

| 2018

| Office

|

|-

| 17

| Wardian London<br>East Tower

| 125px|alt=

| Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs

|

| 55

| 2020

| Residential

| Application in January 2013, approved in November 2014.

|- style="background:#ddffdd;"

| 19

| Tower 42

| 125px|alt=

| City of London

|

| 43

| 1980

| Office

| Tallest structure in London completed in the 1980s. Tallest building in London from 1980 to 1991. Formerly known as the NatWest Tower.

|-

| 20

| Amory Tower

| 125px|alt=

| Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs

|

| 55

| 2021

| Mixed-use

| Formerly known as Meridian Gate and The Madison. Mixed-use residential and office building. Approved in 2015.

|-

| 21

| St George Wharf Tower

| 125px|alt=

| Vauxhall / Nine Elms

|

| 52

| 2014

| Residential

| Tallest building in Vauxhall/Nine Elms from 2014 to 2023. The crown of the building includes a small wind turbine which helps to generate power for the building.

|-

| 22

| The Gherkin

| 125px|alt=

| City of London

|

| 40

| 2004

| Office

| Known officially as 30 St Mary Axe. Formerly known as the Swiss Re Building. The Gherkin is a nickname, a reference to its pickle-like shape.

|- style="background:#ffff99;"

|23

|40 Charter Street

|125px|alt=

|Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs

|

|53

|2027

|Residential

|Updated application approved in February 2022. Topped out in 2025.

|- style="background:#ddffdd;"

| 24

| BT Tower

| 125px|alt=

| Fitzrovia

|

| 37

| 1965

| Communication

| Tallest building in London completed in the 1960s. Tallest building in London from 1965 to 1980. Tallest building in Fitzrovia and the borough of Camden. Also used for offices. Sold in 2024 to MCR Hotels.

|-

| 25

| One Thames City No. 8

| 125px|alt=

| Vauxhall / Nine Elms

|

| 54

| 2022

| Residential

| Planning application in 2014.

|-

| 26

| 100 Bishopsgate

| 125px|alt=

| City of London

|

| 40

| 2019

| Office

|

|-

|27

|DAMAC Tower Nine Elms

|125px|alt=

|Vauxhall / Nine Elms

|

|51

|2022

|Residential

|Topped out in 2020.

|-

| 28

| Wardian London<br>West Tower

| 125px|alt=

| Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs

|

| 50

| 2020

| Residential

| Approved in November 2014.

|-

| 29

| One Blackfriars

| 125px|alt=

| South Bank

|

| 50

| 2019

| Mixed-use

| Nicknamed "The Boomerang". Tallest building in the South Bank.

|-style="background:#ffff99;"

|30

| Opus

| 125px|alt=|| South Bank

| || 50 || 2026 || Residential || Part of the Bankside Yards development.

|-

|31

|1 Leadenhall Street

|125px|alt=

|City of London

|

|32

|2025

|Office

|

|-

| 32

| Broadgate Tower

| 125px|alt=

| City of London

|

| 35

| 2008

| Office

|

|-

| 33

| Principal Tower

| 125px|alt=

| Shoreditch

|

| 50

| 2019

| Residential

|Tallest building in Shoreditch.

|-

|34

|50–60 Charter Street Tower 1

|125px|alt=

|Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs

|

|49

|2024

|Residential

|Part of the Wood Wharf development. Also known as (Wood Wharf J3.

|-

| 35

| 20 Fenchurch Street

| 125px|alt=

| City of London

|

| 36

| 2014

| Office

| Nicknamed "The Walkie-Talkie".

|-

| 36

| One Thames Quay

| 125px|alt=

| Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs

|

| 49

| 2024

| Residential

| A scheme with an increased height of 180&nbsp;m (591 ft) was rejected by Tower Hamlets Council but later approved by the Secretary of State. Topped out in November 2024

|-

|37

|40 Leadenhall Street

|125px|alt=

|City of London

|

|35

|2024

|Office

|Approved in 2015.

|-

| 38

| One Churchill Place

| 125px|alt=

| Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs

|

| 30

| 2004

| Office

|

|-

|39

|River Park Tower

|125px|alt=

|Vauxhall / Nine Elms

|

|43

|2023

|Residential

|Part of the One Nine Elms development.

|-

|40

|College Road Tower A

|125px|alt=

|Croydon

|

|50

|2023

|Residential

|Tallest building in Croydon. Topped out in November 2022. Tallest modular building in Europe. Also known as Enclave: Croydon.

|-

| 41

| 25 Bank Street

| 125px|alt=

| Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs

|

| 30

| 2003

| Office

|

|-

| 42

| 40 Bank Street

| 125px|alt=

| Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs

|

| 30

| 2003

| Office

|

|-

| N/A

| Croydon Transmitter

| 125px|alt=

| Croydon

|

| N/A

| 1964

| Communication

|

|-

| 43

| 10 Upper Bank Street

| 125px|alt=

| Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs

|

| 30

| 2003

| Office

|

|-

| 44

| South Bank Tower

| 125px|alt=

| South Bank

|

| 42

| 1978

| Residential

| Previously known as King's Reach Tower and originally built to a height of . A redevelopment completed in 2016 increased the height of the skyscraper to .

|-

|45

|Carrara Tower

|125px|alt=

|Islington

|

|43

|2020

|Residential

|Also known as 250 City Road Tower 1. Tallest building in Islington.

|-

|46

|Baltimore Tower

|125px|alt=

|Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs

|

|45

|2017

|Residential

|Also known as Arena Tower.

|-

|47

|10 Park Drive

|125px|alt=

|Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs

|

|43

|2019

|Residential

|Part of the Wood Wharf development; also known as Wood Wharf A3.

|-

|48

|Guy's Tower

|125px|alt=

|Southwark

|

|34

|1974

|Hospital

|Second tallest all-hospital building in the world. Tallest structure in London completed in the 1970s. Underwent a renovation in 2015 that increased its height from 143 m (469 ft) to 148.7 m (488 ft).

|-

| 49

| Highpoint

| 125px|alt=

| Elephant & Castle

|

| 46

| 2018

| Residential

|Tallest building in Elephant and Castle. Also known as Castilla or 360 London.

|-

| 50

| Pan Peninsula<br>East Tower

| 125px|alt=

| Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs

|

| 48

| 2008

| Residential

|

|-

| 51

| Strata SE1

| 125px|alt=

| Elephant & Castle

|

| 43

| 2010

| Residential

|Tallest residential building in London at the time of its completion. Contains three wind turbines near its roof. Tallest building in Elephant and Castle from 2010 to 2018.

|-

| 52

| Maine Tower

| 125px|alt=

| Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs

|

| 42

| 2019

| Residential

|Also known as Harbour Central Block D.

|-

| 53

| Manhattan Loft Gardens

| 125px|alt=

| Stratford

|

| 42

| 2018

| Residential

|Also known as The Stratford.

|-

|54

|One Bank Street

|125px|alt=

|Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs

|

|28

|2019

|Office

|Formerly known as Heron Quays West. Application submitted in December 2013.

|-

| 55

| Imperial West<br>Residential Building

| 125px|alt=

| White City

|

| 35

| 2019

| Residential

|Tallest building in White City.

|-style="background:#ffff99;"

|56

| 2 Trafalgar Way<br>Tower 1

|125px|alt=|| Poplar

| || 48 || 2026 || Residential || Part of a new student accommodation development near Blackwall.

|-

|57

|24 Marsh Wall<br>East Tower

|125px|alt=

|Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs

|

|44

|2010

|Residential

|Also known as Landmark East Tower.

|-

| 58

| Charrington Tower

| 125px|alt=

| Blackwall

|

| 44

| 2016

| Residential

|Tallest building in Blackwall.

|-

| 59

| One Bishopsgate Plaza

| 125px|alt=

| City of London

|

| 42

| 2021

| Hotel

|

|-

| N/A

| London Eye

| 125px|alt=

| South Bank

|

| N/A

| 1999

| Observation

| The world's tallest Ferris wheel from 1999 to 2006.

|-

|60

|Atlas

|125px|alt=

|Hackney

|

|40

|2019

|Residential

|Also known as 145 City Road. Replaced Crown House.

|-

| 61

| Saffron Square

| 125px|alt=

| Croydon

|

| 44

| 2016

| Residential

|Also known as Pinnacle Apartments. Tallest building in Croydon from 2016 to 2023.

|-

|62

|101 George Street

|125px|alt=

|Croydon

|

|44

|2021

|Residential

|Was the world's tallest modular building upon completion. Also known as Ten Degrees Croydon.

|-

|63

|Chapter London Bridge

|125px|alt=

|Southwark

|

|40

|2025

|Residential

|Student accommodation tower near London Bridge station. Approved in May 2019, with construction commencing in March 2022.

|-

| 64

| 150 High Street, Stratford

| 125px|alt=

| Stratford

|

| 43

| 2013

| Residential

|Also known as Stratford Halo.

|-

| N/A

| Wembley Stadium

| 125px|alt=

| Wembley

| 133 ()

| 6

| 2007

| Stadium

| Second-tallest stadium in the world.

|-

|65

|Valencia Tower

|125px|alt=

|Islington

|

|37

|2023

|Residential

|Part of the 250 City Road complex.

|-

|66

|22 Ropemaker

|125px|alt=

|City of London

|

|27

|2023

|Office

|Topped out in 2022.

|-

|67

|Cherry Park Building A1

|125px|alt=

|Stratford

|

|37

|2024

|Residential

|Part of the Cherry Park development.

|-

|68

|Keybridge Lofts

|125px|alt=

|Vauxhall / Nine Elms

|

|36

|2020

|Residential

|Was the UK's tallest brick residential tower upon completion. Replaced a former BT building called Keybridge House. Topped out in 2020.

|-

|69

|10 George Street

|125px|alt=

|Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs

|

|36

|2019

|Residential

|Part of the Wood Wharf development. Also known as Vertus or Wood Wharf E2. Application in December 2013, approved in 2014. Topped out in 2019.

|-

| 70

| One West Point Tower 2

| 125px|alt=

| North Acton

|

| 36

| 2022

| Residential

| Tallest building in North Acton. Part of the Portal West development. Also known as Legacy House.

|-

| 71

| CityPoint

| 125px|alt=

| City of London

|

| 36

| 1967

| Office

| Previously known as Britannic House when it was completed in 1967 at a height of 122&nbsp;m (400 ft).

|-

| 72

| Gladwin Tower

| 125px|alt=

| Vauxhall / Nine Elms

|

| 34

| 2019

| Residential

| Also known as Nine Elms Point, Albert Point. Completed in 2020.

|-

|73

|The Stage

|125px|alt=

|Shoreditch

|

|38

|2022

|Residential

|Topped out in 2021.

|-

|74

|Two Fifty One

|125px|alt=

|Elephant & Castle

|

|39

|2018

|Residential

|Formerly known as Eileen House.

|-

| 75

| Willis Building

| 125px|alt=

| City of London

|

| 28

| 2007

| Office

|

|-

| 76

| Sirocco Tower

| 125px|alt=

| Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs

|

| 36

| 2019

| Residential

| Also known as Harbour Central Block C.

|-

| 77

| No.9 Thames City

| 125px|alt=

| Vauxhall / Nine Elms

|

| 36

| 2022

| Residential

| Planning application in 2014. Topped out in 2020.

|-

|78

|One Crown Place South

|125px|alt=

|Shoreditch

|

|34

|2025

|Residential

|Part of the One Crown Place development. Topped out in 2020.

|-

|79

|Euston Tower

|125px|alt=

|Euston

|

|36

|1970

|Office

|Tallest building in Euston.

|-

| 80

|The Founding

|125px|alt=

|Canada Water

|

|35

|2025

|Residential

|Tallest building in Canada Water.

|-

| 81

| One The Elephant

| 125px|alt=

| Elephant & Castle

|

| 37

| 2016

| Residential

| Formerly known as St. Mary's Resiential.

|-

| 82

| Cromwell Tower

| 125px|alt=

| City of London

|

| 42

| 1973

| Residential

|Part of the Barbican Estate.

|-

| 83

| Lauderdale Tower

| 125px|alt=

| City of London

|

| 42

| 1974

| Residential

|Part of the Barbican Estate.

|-

| 84

| Shakespeare Tower

| 125px|alt=

| City of London

|

| 43

| 1976

| Residential

|Part of the Barbican Estate.

|-

|85

|Chelsea Waterfront West Tower

|125px|alt=

|Chelsea Harbour

|

|37

|2019

|Residential

|Tallest building in Chelsea Harbour

|-

|86

|1 Casson Square

|125px|alt=

|South Bank

|

|37

|2019

|Residential

|Part of Southbank Place. Topped out in 2018.

|-

| 87

| Pan Peninsula<br>West Tower

| 125px|alt=

| Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs

|

| 39

| 2008

| Residential

|

|-

| 88

| Alta at Consort Place

| 125px|alt=

| Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs

|

| 36

| 2024

| Residential

|

|-

| 89

| Sky Gardens Nine Elms

| 125px|alt=

| Vauxhall / Nine Elms

|

| 36

| 2017

| Residential

|Also known as Vauxhall Sky Gardens.

|-

|90

|40 Marsh Wall

|125px|alt=

|Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs

|

|40

|2017

|Hotel

|Tallest all-hotel building in the United Kingdom. Also known as Novotel Canary Wharf.

|- style="background:#ddffdd;"

| 91

| Millbank Tower

| 125px|alt=

| Westminster

|

| 33

| 1962

| Office

|Tallest building in London from 1962 to 1965. Tallest building in Westminster.

|-

|92

|25 Churchill Place

|125px|alt=

|Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs

|

|23

|2014

|Office

|Whilst the building's height above ground level is , it's overall height above the promenade level is about .

|-

| 93

| St. Helen's

| 125px|alt=

| City of London

|

| 28

| 1969

| Office

| Formerly known as the Aviva Tower.

|-

| 94

| Centre Point

| 125px|alt=

| West End

|

| 35

| 1966

| Residential

| Originally an office building, it was converted into residential use in 2015.

|-

| 95

| Conington Road

| 125px|alt=

| Lewisham

|

| 34

| 2024

| Residential

| Tallest building in Lewisham.

|-

| 96

| Empress State Building

| 125px|alt=

| Fulham

|

| 31

| 1961

| Office

| Tallest building in Fulham. Originally stood at a height of before a height extension in 2003.

|-

|97

|Stratosphere Tower

|125px|alt=

|Stratford

|

|38

|2017

|Residential

|Formerly known as Broadway Chambers.

|-

|98

|The Eades

|125px|alt=

|Walthamstow

|

|34

|2025

|Residential

|Tallest building in Walthamstow. Redevelopment of The Mall.

|-

| 99

| Chronicle Tower

| 125px|alt=

| Islington

|

| 35

| 2016

| Residential

| Tallest building in Islington from 2016 to 2020. Also known as Lexicon Tower.

|-

| 100

| Rudolf Place

| 125px|alt=

| Vauxhall / Nine Elms

|

| 37

| 2021

| Residential

| Used for student accommodation. Also known as Vega.

|-

| N/A

| ArcelorMittal Orbit

| 125px|alt=

| Stratford

|

| 2

| 2012

| Observation

|A sculpture built in conjunction with the 2012 Summer Olympics.

|- style="background:#ffff99;"

|101

|Hawthorne House

|125px|alt=

|Stratford

|

|36

|2026

|Residential

|

|-

| 102

| Fold Building

| –

| Croydon

|

| 36

| 2022

| Residential

| Also known as Queen's Quarter Building 1. Topped out in 2021.

|-

|103

|TwelveTrees Park Building N01A

|125px|alt=

|West Ham

|

|35

|2025

|Residential

|

|-

| 104

| Insignia Point

| 125px|alt=

| Stratford

|

| 31

| 2018

| Residential

| Also known as East Village E20 or Site N08 Tower 2.

|-

|105

|The Heron

|125px|alt=

|City of London

|

|36

|2013

|Residential

|Also known as Milton Court.

|-

|106

|Manor Road Quarter

|125px

|Canning Town

|

|33

|2024

|Residential

|Tallest building in Canning Town. Topped out in September 2023.

|-

|107

|50-60 Charter Street Tower 2

|125px|alt=

|Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs

|

|34

|2024

|Residential

|Part of the Wood Wharf development. Also known as Wood Wharf J1. Updated application approved in February 2022.

|-

|109

|Cassini Tower

|125px|alt=

|White City

|

|35

|2023

|Residential

|Also known as White City Living-Building E1.

|-

|110

|Sky View Tower

|125px|alt=

|Stratford

|

|35

|2017

|Residential

|Tallest of the Capital Towers development.

|- style="background:#c0ffff;"

| N/A

| St Paul's Cathedral

| 125px|alt=

| City of London

| 111 ()

| N/A

| 1710

| Religious

| Tallest place of worship in London. Tallest structure completed in London in the 1700s.

|-style="background:#ffff99;"

|111

| 2 Trafalgar Way<br>Tower 2

|125px|alt=|| Poplar

| || 36 || 2026 || Residential || Part of a new student accommodation development near Blackwall.

|-

| 113

| 1 West India Quay

| 125px|alt=

| Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs

|

| 36

| 2004

| Office

|

|-

|114

|Enclave: Acton

|125px|alt=

|North Acton

|

|32

|2025

|Residential

|Also known as The Castle.

|-

|115

|Hale Works

|125px

|Tottenham Hale

|

|33

|2021

|Residential

|Tallest building in Tottenham Hale.

|-

|116

|TwelveTrees Park Block S01A

|125px|alt=

|West Ham

|

|33

|2025

|Residential

|Part of the Twelvetrees Park development.

|- style="background:#ddffdd;"

| 117

| Shell Centre

| 125px|alt=

| South Bank

|

| 26

| 1961

| Office

|Tallest building in London from 1961 to 1962.

|-

|118

|99 Bishopsgate

|125px|alt=

|City of London

|

|27

|1976

|Office

|A truck bomb exploded by the Provisional IRA damaged the building in 1993. The building was hence refurbished in 1994, increasing its height slightly from 104 (341 ft) to 106 m (348 ft). Plans for a new 54-storey tower on the site were approved in 2025.

|-

| 119

| One Crown Place North

| 125px|alt=

| Shoreditch

|

| 30

| 2021

| Residential

|

|-

| 121

| Finsbury Tower

| 125px|alt=

| Finsbury

|

| 29

| 2021

| Office

|Tallest building in Finsbury. Also known as HYLO.

|-

|122

|30 Casson Square

|125px

|South Bank

|

|30

|2019

|Residential

|

|-

| 123

| 33 Canada Square

| 125px|alt=

| Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs

|

| 18

| 1999

| Office

|

|-

| 124

| Pioneer Point North

| 125px|alt=

| Ilford

|

| 31

| 2011

| Residential

|Tallest building in Ilford.

|-

| N/A

| Battersea Power Station

| 125px|alt=

| Battersea

|

| 14

| 1955

| Industrial

|

|-

|125

|Stock Exchange Tower

|125px|alt=

|City of London

|

|27

|1970

|Office

|Also known by its address, 125 Old Broad Street.

|-

| 126

| Legacy Tower

| 125px|alt=

| Stratford

|

| 33

| 2018

| Residential

| Also known as Stratford Central.

|-

|127

|Lewisham Exchange Tower

|125px|alt=

|Lewisham

|

|35

|2021

|Residential

|Used for student accommodation.

|-

|128

|Hightail Point

|125px|alt=

|Stratford

|

|31

|2022

|Residential

|

|-

|129

|Cherry Park Building A3

|125px|alt=

|Stratford

|

|30

|2024

|Residential

|

|-

| 130

| No.5 Upper Riverside

| 125px|alt=

| Greenwich Peninsula

|

| 31

| 2019

| Residential

| Tallest building on the Greenwich Peninsula.

|-

| N/A

| Victoria Tower

| 125px|alt=

| Westminster

|

| N/A

| 1858

| Government

| Tallest non-religious building in the world upon completion. Tallest structure completed in London in the 1800s.

|-

| 131

| Westmark Tower

| 125px|alt=

| Paddington

|

| 30

| 2021

| Residential

| Part of the West End Gate mixed-use development. Tallest building in Paddington.

|-

|132

|Hurlock Heights

| 125px|alt=

|Elephant & Castle

|

|31

|2018

|Residential

|Also known as West Grove-The Highwood. Tallest building in the Elephant Park Development.

|-

| 133

| London Hilton<br>on Park Lane

| 125px|alt=

| West End

|

| 29

| 1963

| Hotel

|

|-

|134

|Portland House

|125px|alt=

|Westminster

|

|29

|1963

|Office

|Currently undergoing refurbishment, which is expected to be completed in 2025.

|-

| 135

| Skyline

| 125px|alt=

| Hackney

|

| 31

| 2017

| Residential

|Also known as Woodberry Down-Skylie. Tallest building in Woodberry Down.

|-

|136

|Goodluck Hope - Douglass Tower

|125px|alt=

|Leamouth

|

|30

|2022

|Residential

|Tallest building in Leamouth. Also known as Leamouth Peninsula South-Building B.

|-

| 137

| One Angel Court

| 125px|alt=

| City of London

|

| 26

| 1979

| Office

| Originally known as Angel Court Tower. The building underwent a refurbishment in 2017.

|-

| 138

| 4 Casson Square

| 125px|alt=

| South Bank

|

| 29

| 2019

| Residential

| Topped out in 2018. Part of Southbank Place.

|}

Tallest under construction or proposed

Under construction

This table lists buildings that are under construction in London and are planned to rise at least as of 2026. Under construction buildings that have already been topped out are listed above. The "year" column indicates the estimated year of completion. Buildings on hold are not included.

{|class="wikitable sortable defaultcenter col9left"

|-

!Rank

! Name

!Image

! Location

! Height

<small>m (ft)</small>

! style="width:50px;" | Floors

! style="width:50px;" | Year

! Purpose

! class="unsortable" | Notes

|-

|1

| Cuba Street

|–

|Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs

| || 52 || 2028 || Residential || Updated application approved after initial concerns by the London Fire Brigade suggesting the single staircase serving the upper floors being inadequate during emergency situations. A second staircase was incorporated into the design and approved in March 2022.

|-

|2

| 30 Marsh Wall

|–

| Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs

| || 48 || 2028 || Residential || New student residential tower. Approved 31 March 2022.

|-

|3

| 2 Finsbury Avenue<br>East Tower

| 125px|alt=|| City of London

| || 38 || 2027|| Office || Proposed in 2015, slight design changes, resubmitted application in 2016 and approved in December 2021.

|-

|4

|50 Fenchurch Street

|–

|City of London

|

|36

|2028

|Office

|Approved 14 May 2020.

|-

|5

| The Ayrton

|–

| Paddington

| || 39 || 2029 || Residential || West End Gate scheme on the site of the former Paddington Green Police Station. Approved in March 2023.

|-

|6

|Ferry Island Building 1<br>North Tower

|125px|alt=

|Tottenham Hale

|

|38

|2026

|Residential

|Part of the Heart of Hale development.

|-

|7

|One North Quay

|125px|alt=

|Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs

|

|24

|2027

|Laboratory

|

|-

|8

| Elephant and Castle Town Centre<br>Tower 1 || 125px|alt=|| Elephant & Castle

| || 32 || 2026|| Residential ||Tallest tower of Elephant and Castle Town Centre redevelopment. Application approved in June 2021.

|-

|9

| Sampson House B

|–

| South Bank

| || 34 || 2026|| Residential ||Part of the Bankside Yards development.

|-

|11

| Elephant and Castle Town Centre<br>Tower 3 || 125px|alt=|| Elephant & Castle

| || 35 || 2026|| Residential ||Elephant and Castle Town Centre redevelopment. Application Approved in June 2021.

|-

|13

|100 West Cromwell Road

|–

|Kensington

|

|29

|–

|Residential

|Will be the tallest building in Kensington upon completion.

|-

|14

|Edge London Bridge

|125px|alt=

|Southwark

|

|27

|2026

|Residential

|

|-

|16

|72 Upper Ground

|–

|South Bank

|

|22

|2029

|Office

|Redevelopment of the London Television Centre.

|-

|17

| The Bellamy

|125px|alt=|| Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs

| || 31 || 2026 || Residential || Proposal for a new residential tower in Canary Wharf. Approved in July 2022.

|-

|18

| The Dovetail Building

|–

| City of London

| || 24 || 2029 || Office || Also known as 115–123 Houndsditch. Proposal for a new office development in the City of London. Approved in December 2021.

|-

|19

|Bermondsey Project Building BF-S

|–

|Bermondsey

|

|29

|2027

|Residential

|

|-

|20

|Solaris

|125px|alt=

|White City

|

|32

|2026

|Residential

|

|-

|20

|2 Finsbury Avenue West Tower

|125px|alt=

|City of London

|

|24

|2026

|Office

|

|}

Approved

This table lists buildings that are approved for construction in London and are planned to be at least 100 m (328 ft) tall. A dash indicates information about building is unknown or not yet publicly available. The "year" column indicates the estimated year of completion. Figures denoted with an asterisk (*) are approximates.

{| class="wikitable sortable"

|-

! Name

! Location

! style="width:75px;" | Height

<small>m (ft)</small>

! style="width:50px;" | Floors

! style="width:50px;" | Year

! Purpose

! class="unsortable" | Notes

|-

|1 Undershaft|| City of London || || 74 || 2030

| Office ||Planning application submitted in February 2016. Approved in November 2016. Updated proposal submitted January 2024, which was approved in December 2024.

|-

| 55 Bishopsgate|| City of London || || 63 || 2029 || Office ||Planning application approved in July 2023.

|-

| 100 Leadenhall || City of London || || 56 || 2026 || Office || Planning application approved in July 2018.

|-

| 99 Bishopsgate || City of London || || 54 || 2030 || Office || Planning application approved in January 2025.

|-

| Riverside South Tower 1 || Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs || || 45 || –|| Office ||Built to ground level. On hold.

|-

| Spire London|| Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs|| || 67 || –|| Residential ||Replaces two proposals on this site – Columbus Tower and Hertsmere Tower. Application 8 October 2015, Approved in 2016 Currently on hold.

|-

| Ensign House || Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs || * || 56 || 2026 || Residential || Approved 17 February 2022.

|-

| 4 Portal Way Tower 1 || North Acton || || 58 || – || Residential || Previous application approved July 2016. New proposal approved October 2024.

|-

| One Portal Way Tower 1 || North Acton || || 56 || –|| Residential || Proposal for a mixed use development in North Acton. Approved in October 2023.

|-

| 18 Blackfriars Road "Office Building" || South Bank || || 48 || –|| Office ||This is the third proposal for this development site. Previous proposals included from 2008, and 2016. Approved in May 2024.

|-

| One Portal Way Tower 2 || North Acton || || 51 || –|| Residential || Proposal for a mixed use development in North Acton.

|-

| Vauxhall Cross Tower 1 || Vauxhall / Nine Elms || || 53 || –|| Residential ||Approved in April 2020.

|-

| One Portal Way Tower 3 || North Acton || || 51 || –|| Residential || Proposal for a mixed use development in North Acton.

|-

| One East Point || Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs || || 52 || –|| Residential || Approved in October 2024.

|-

| One Lansdowne Road Tower 1 || Croydon || || 50 || –|| Residential || Approved in December 2024.

|-

| 4 Portal Way Tower 2 || North Acton || || 44 || –|| Residential ||Previous application approved July 2016. 10 Bank Street. Site preparation.

|-

| Wood Wharf B1 || Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs || || –|| –|| Residential|| Application 19 December 2013. Approved in 2014. Approved March 2025.

|-

| 13–14 Appold Street || Shoreditch || || 45 || 2019 || Hotel ||Approved in 2015.

|-

|| One Station Road || Ilford || || 42 || –|| Residential || Approved in 2019 by Redbridge council.

|-

| 99 City Road || Islington || || 35 || –|| Office ||Approved in September 2023.

|-

| One Thames City N10 || Vauxhall / Nine Elms || || 46 || –|| Residential ||As per planning application of 2014.

|-

|1Merchant Square|| Paddington || || 42 || –|| Residential ||Planned to be the tallest building in the City of Westminster. On hold.

|-

| Borough Triangle Tower 2 || Elephant & Castle || || 42 || 2034 || Residential ||

Part of the new Borough Triangle development.

|-

| 60 Gracechurch Street || City of London || || 36 || 2029 || Office || Approved in December 2024.

|-

| 130 Fenchurch Street || City of London || || 35 || 2030 || Office || Approved in October 2025.

|-

| Bermondsey Place Building B4 || Southwark || || 44 || –|| Residential || Formerly known as Malt Street regeneration. The tower is the tallest of a new cluster of buildings, formed as part of the Old Kent Road regeneration scheme.

|-

| Doon Street Tower || South Bank || || 43 || –|| Residential ||On hold.

|-

| Stratford Island Tower 1 || Stratford || || 42 || –|| Residential ||Tallest building as part of redevelopment of Stratford Centre. Work was expected to begin 2017.

|-

| 54 Marsh Wall || Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs || || 39 || –|| Residential ||Proposed 2014. New plans submitted and approved in January 2017.

|-

| Millharbour Village East G1.1 || Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs || || 45 || –|| Residential ||

|-

| 70 Gracechurch Street || City of London || || 34 || –|| Office ||Proposal for a new office development. Approved in February 2021.

|-

| 85 Gracechurch Street || City of London || || 31 || 2030 || Office ||Proposal for a new office development. Initially approved in March 2023. Revised due to the discovery of ancient roman ruins, proposal approved in July 2025.

|-

| 55 Gracechurch Street || City of London || || 30 || –|| Office || Proposal for a new office development in the City of London. Approved in January 2021.

|-

| 12–20 Wyvil Road || Vauxhall || || 37 || 2020 || Residential ||Old design Approved.N ew scheme named Grand South application submitted 2016

|-

| Vicarage Field Tower 1 || Barking || * || 36 || –|| Residential ||Tallest tower of proposed Vicarage Field development in Barking. Approved 16 January 2017.

|-

| Botanical House || Croydon || || 36 || 2027 || Residential || Proposal for a new residential tower in Croydon. Approved in November 2023.

|-

| 1 Selsdon Way || Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs || || 35 || –|| Residential || Approved in January 2025.

|-

| Elizabeth House || South Bank || || 29 || –|| Office || Located in Waterloo.

|-

| Millharbour Village East G1.3 || Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs || || 39 || –||Residential ||

|-

|IQL Park Place Tower 1 || Stratford || || 35 || 2026 || Residential ||Tallest planned building in the Stratford Cross cluster in Stratford.

|-

| One Peninsula Square || Greenwich Peninsula || * || 36 || –|| Residential || Proposal for a new 820-room student residential tower in Greenwich Peninsula. Approved in March 2024.

|-

|Northumberland Development Project Plot 3

|Tottenham

|

|31

|–

|Hotel

|

|-

| Convoys Wharf Tower 1 || Deptford || || 40 || –|| Residential ||

|-

| South Quay Plaza 2 || Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs || || 35 || –|| Residential ||Phase one under way. New office proposal approved October 2024.

|-

| Republic at East India Dock || Blackwall || || 36 || –|| Residential || Proposal for a mixed use development including a new student residential tower. Proposal approved by appeal after initially being rejected.

|-

|Lea Bridge Station Tower 1

|Lea Bridge

|

|29

|–

|Residential

|Approved in 2025.

|-

|Hertford Road Tower 1

|Barking

|

|32

|–

|Residential

|Approved in 2025.

|-

| London House (14-34 London Road) || Barking || || 30 || –|| Residential || Proposal for a new residential development in Barking. Approved September 2025.

|-

| Westferry Printworks Tower 1 || Canary Wharf / Isle of Dogs || || 29 || –|| Residential ||Approved in April 2016 after public inquiry. Demolition of current buildings ongoing.

|-

| One Lansdowne Road Tower 2|| Croydon || || 31 || –|| Residential || Approved in December 2024.

|-

| Leon Quarter || Croydon || || 29 || –|| Residential ||

|}

Tallest unbuilt

This lists proposals for the construction of buildings in London that were planned to rise at least , for which planning permission was rejected or which were otherwise withdrawn. Figures denoted with an asterisk (*) are approximates.

{| class="wikitable sortable"

|-

! Name

! style="width:75px;" | Height

<small>m (ft)</small>

! style="width:50px;" | Floors

! class="unsortable" | Notes

|-

| London Millennium Tower || || 92 ||

|-

| London Bridge Tower (Old Design)

|

|87

|

|-

| The Spark Plug (Battersea Eco-tower) || || 40 ||

|-

|The Tulip |||| 12 || Observation tower in the City of London. Approved 2 April 2019; then refused planning permission by Sadiq Khan on 15 July 2019.

|-

| Minerva Building || || 53 ||

|-

| Columbus Tower (London) || || 65 || Proposal replaced by Hertsmere House.

|-

| Elephant & Castle Tower 1 || || 55 ||

|-

| One Lansdowne Road Tower 1

|

|69

|Approved in 2012. Received funding in November 2015. New plans submitted 2016, Application withdrawn November 2022. Site was sold to a new developer in January 2023, and a new mixed-use development proposed in July 2023.

|-

| 6–8 and 22–24 Bishopsgate Redevelopment (Original Design) || || 50 ||

|-

| New London Bridge House Redevelopment || || 50 ||

|-

| Citypoint (Santiago Calatrava) || || 27 ||

|-

| Ropemaker Place Tower || || 38 ||

|-

| Elephant & Castle Tower 2 || || 35 ||

|-

| King's Cross Towers 1 and 2 || || 44 ||

|-

|Stratford Waterfront Tower 1 || * || 47 ||Two towers originally proposed at 47 stories. New plans will reduce height of towers. Part of the Olympic Park development. Replaced by shorter Ballymore scheme.

|-

|Stratford Waterfront Tower 2

| * || 47 ||Two towers originally proposed at 47 stories. New plans will reduce height of towers. Part of the Olympic Park development.

|-

| The Blade Paddington || || 44 ||

|}

Tallest destroyed or demolished

This lists all demolished buildings and structures in London that stood at least tall.

{|class="wikitable sortable defaultcenter col9left"

|-

! Name

! Image

!Location

! Height

<small>m (ft)</small>

! Floors

! Year completed

! Year demolished

!Purpose

! class="unsortable" | Notes

|- style="background:#fef4f4;"

|Old St. Paul's Cathedral

|frameless|125x125px

|City of London

|

|N/A

|1240

|1666

|Religious

|Destroyed in the Great Fire of London. The current St. Paul's Cathedral stands in its place.

|- style="background:#fef4f4;"

| Drapers' Gardens || frameless|187x187px

|City of London|| || 30 || 1967 || 2007

|Office|| Designed by Swiss-British Architect Richard Seifert. Replaced by a shorter tall office building.

|- style="background:#fef4f4;"

| Southwark Towers || frameless|167x167px

|Southwark|| || 25 || 1976 || 2009

|Office|| Height is 100 m when rounded up to the nearest metre. Replaced by The Shard.

|}

Timeline of tallest buildings and structures

thumb|300px|right|upright|The [[White Tower (Tower of London)|White Tower stood as the tallest structure in London from 1098 until 1310.]]

This lists free-standing structures that have at some point held the title of tallest structure in London.

{| class="wikitable sortable"

|-

! Name

!Image

! Location

! Years as tallest

! Height

<small>m (ft)</small>

! style="width:50px;" | Floors

! class="unsortable" | Reference

|-

| White Tower

|120x120px||Tower Hill || 1098–1310

(212&nbsp;years)

| || <span style="display:none">03.0</span>N/A ||

|-

| Old St Paul's Cathedral

|142x142px

|City of London || 1310–1666

(356&nbsp;years)

| <span style="display:none">07.0</span> || <span style="display:none">08.0</span>N/A ||

|-

| Southwark Cathedral

|173x173px

|Southwark || 1666–1677

(11&nbsp;years)

| || <span style="display:none">04.0</span>N/A ||

|-

| Monument to the Great Fire of London

|120x120px

| City of London || 1677–1683

(6&nbsp;years)

| || <span style="display:none">05.0</span>N/A ||

|-

| St Mary-le-Bow

|106x106px

| City of London || 1683–1710

(27&nbsp;years)

| || <span style="display:none">06.0</span>N/A ||

|-

| St Paul's Cathedral

|80px

| City of London || 1710–1950

(240&nbsp;years)

| || <span style="display:none">07.0</span>N/A ||

|-

| The Shard

|80px|| Southwark || 2012–present

(&nbsp;years)<!-- Use of full date obligatory in template; first day of year used so it will calculate number of years from 2012 to current year -->

| || 87 ||

|}

Skylines

<gallery mode="packed" heights="200">

File:2024--16 September--View from St. Paul's Cathedral - 54000122803.jpg|The City of London skyline as viewed from St Paul's Cathedral, October 2024. The tallest building shown here is 22 Bishopsgate at 278&nbsp;m, which topped out in 2019. Since its construction The Gherkin is no longer visible from this angle. There are currently four towers in this cluster that are above 200&nbsp;m tall with four more approved to be constructed, 1 Undershaft at 290&nbsp;m tall, 55 Bishopsgate at 269&nbsp;m tall, 100 Leadenhall at 249&nbsp;m tall, and 99 Bishopsgate at 240&nbsp;m tall, by 2030.

File:City of London northern cluster 22.10.2022 (1).jpg|The "northern cluster" of the City of London. Some of the smaller skyscrapers shown here include: the Barbican Estate, Finsbury Tower, The Heron, Citypoint, One Crown Place, The Stage, Principal Tower and the Broadgate Tower. Also shown in the distance on the far left are 250 City Road and Lexicon Tower in the London Borough of Islington. Also approved for this cluster is the 2–3 Finsbury Avenue and the 13–14 Appold Street

File:Canary Wharf from Blythe Hill Fields, LB Lewisham 9 May 2021.jpg|The Canary Wharf and Isle of Dogs business district as viewed from Blythe Hill Fields, London Borough of Lewisham, May 2021. The tallest building in this cluster is One Canada Square with the pyramid-shaped roof which was completed in 1991 and stands at 235&nbsp;m. There are seven towers in this cluster that are at least 200&nbsp;m tall with more planned and under construction. However, due to the proximity of London City Airport it is unlikely that any will exceed the height of One Canada Square

File:The Shard and Guys Hospital 27.12.2019.jpg|The skyline of Southwark, prominently featuring The Shard. Completed in 2012 at London Bridge, it is London's tallest building at 309.6 m. Shown here in December 2019 with Guy's Hospital to the right. Two more prominent high-rises will soon join the cluster: Chapter London Bridge a 133 m building that topped out in 2024, and Edge London Bridge at 109 m, now under construction.

File:South Bank 22.10.2022 (4).jpg|The emerging South Bank cluster as viewed from St Paul's Cathedral, October 2022. The two tallest towers here are One Blackfriars which was completed in 2018 at 163&nbsp;m and the South Bank Tower that was originally constructed in 1972 at 111&nbsp;m but was given an 11-storey height increase in 2017 to bring it up to 150&nbsp;m. There are several more towers planned for this cluster ranging from between 100&nbsp;m and 178.5&nbsp;m tall. There is also an emerging cluster at Elephant and Castle shown on the far left which includes notably, Strata SE1 and another emerging cluster in the distance on the right at Vauxhall/Nine Elms

File:London - Vauxhall Skyline - geograph.org.uk - 7764051.jpg|The emerging cluster at Vauxhall and Nine Elms, March 2024. There are currently five towers in this cluster that are between 160&nbsp;m and 200&nbsp;m tall: One Nine Elms City Tower (200m), St George Wharf Tower (181m), One Thames City No. 8 (177m), Aykon London One (168m) and One Nine Elms River Tower (161m). Within five years there will be seven towers in this cluster with heights between 160&nbsp;m and 200&nbsp;m

File:West End from St Paul's Cathedral 22.10.2022.jpg|Looking towards the West End from St Paul's Cathedral, October 2022. Shown here from left to right are Centre Point, completed in 1966, the BT Tower, completed in 1964 and Euston Tower, completed in 1970. These are all considered among the first "skyscrapers" in London. Also seen in the far distance is the One West Point Tower 1 in North Acton, which was completed in 2022 and where there will be an emerging cluster in the years to come

File:Croydon skyline 15.02.2022 (11).jpg|The emerging cluster in Croydon town centre which includes Saffron Square (134m), Queen's Quarter building 1 (114&nbsp;m) and 101 George Street (135.6&nbsp;m). Under construction is the now complete College Road Tower (150&nbsp;m)

File:Lewisham Gateway skyline 27.03.2024.jpg|The emerging cluster in Lewisham also known as Lewisham Gateway, and first Borough of Sanctuary, which includes 209 Connington Road Tower at 117&nbsp;m tall which is the white building in the centre and Lewisham Exchange at 105&nbsp;m tall to the left of it. All of the high-rises shown in this picture are residential with the exception of the grey building shown in the immediate right foreground which was formerly the London offices of Citigroup until they relocated to 25 Canada Square at Canary Wharf in 2001

File:Stratford skyline from Greenwich Peninsula - 2023-04-29 2.jpg|The emerging cluster in Stratford in April 2023 as viewed from Greenwich Peninsula. Stratford has been undergoing regeneration, associated with the 2012 Summer Olympics, which largely took place in Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park to the west of the cluster. Seen on the left is 150 High Street at a height of 135&nbsp;m. The tallest building in the cluster, Manhattan Loft Gardens at 143&nbsp;m, is seen at the back.

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See also

  • Architecture of London
  • List of tallest buildings and structures in Croydon
  • City of London#Skyscrapers and tall buildings
  • List of tallest buildings in the United Kingdom
  • List of tallest structures in the United Kingdom

Notes

Footnotes

: A.This structure was destroyed by the Great Fire of London in 1666, allowing a shorter structure to become the tallest in the city.

: B.The exact height of the Old St. Paul's Cathedral remains unknown. Heights ranging between and have all been reported.

: D.If the Crystal Palace Transmitter is excluded as a "building", then the record was held by the "Post Office Tower" (later The British Telecom Tower) from 1962 to 1980, at a height excluding antenna of and containing 34 floors, and from 1980 to 1991 by Tower 42 at .

Citations

References

  • Info graphic of London's Top 10 Tallest skyscrapers