List of tallest buildings in Vancouver

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Vancouver is the most populous city in the Canadian province of British Columbia. With a metropolitan area population of 2,642,825 as of 2021, it is the third largest metropolitan area in Canada. Vancouver's skyline is characterized by its abundance and density of residential towers, unique amongst cities in North America, as well as its position on a peninsula on the Burrard Inlet. As of 2026, Vancouver has 72 buildings that reach a height of 100 m (328 ft), and Greater Vancouver is the metropolitan area with the second most skyscrapers and high-rises in Canada, behind Greater Toronto.

Tallest buildingLiving Shangri-La (2010)
Tallest building height200.9 m (659 ft)
First 150 m+ buildingLiving Shangri-La (2010)
Taller than 100 m (328 ft)72
Quick facts Skyline of Vancouver, Tallest building ...
Skyline of Vancouver
Downtown Vancouver, surrounded by fog
Tallest buildingLiving Shangri-La (2010)
Tallest building height200.9 m (659 ft)
First 150 m+ buildingLiving Shangri-La (2010)
Number of tall buildings (2026)
Taller than 100 m (328 ft)72
Taller than 150 m (492 ft)7
Taller than 200 m (656 ft)1
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Vancouver from the east in 2022
Vancouver's skyline from Granville Island in 2016

One of the earliest tall buildings in the city was the Hotel Vancouver, one of Canada's grand railway hotels. Vancouver underwent a building boom starting in the mid-1960s, with many notable office towers such as TD Tower and the Harbour Centre being added to the skyline in the 1970s. From the 1980s onwards, Vancouver's urban planning in downtown has been highly influenced by the philosophy of Vancouverism, which encouraged mixed-use developments, narrow high-rise residential towers atop a commercial base, and reliance on public transit.[1][2] The majority of high-rise construction since the early 1990s has been residential, and this boom has continued to the present.

The city has 27 protected view corridors which limit the construction of tall buildings that interfere with the line of sight to the North Shore Mountains, the downtown skyline, and the waters of English Bay and the Strait of Georgia.[3] Nevertheless, there are seven buildings taller than 150 m (492 ft) in Vancouver today. The tallest building in the city is the 62-storey, 201 (659) Living Shangri-La, completed in 2010. It took the title from One Wall Centre, another mixed-use skyscraper with hotel and residential components, which was completed in 2001. Living Shangri-La was the first building in Vancouver to surpass 150 metres, marking a trend in increasingly tall buildings since the 2010s. Some notable additions include Paradox Hotel Vancouver (2016), Vancouver House (2019), and The Butterfly (2024), currently the city's second, seventh, and fifth-tallest buildings respectively. A relaxation of the view corridor policy in 2024 will likely encourage further growth across the Downtown Peninsula.[4][5] In 2025, a proposal surfaced for a three-tower complex with a 315 m (1,033) supertall skyscraper,[6] which would become the tallest building in the city and in all of Western Canada if built.

Almost all of the city's buildings that exceed 100 metres in height are located in Downtown Vancouver and the nearby areas that make up the Downtown Peninsula, including Yaletown and Coal Harbour. Shorter high-rises can be found more sparsely in neighbourhoods such as Gastown and Fairview that surround the Peninsula. A growing number of high-rise developments have occurred outside of the peninsula in recent years, including a cluster of high-rises around Marine Drive station in South Vancouver that appeared in the 2010s. The indigenous-led Sen̓áḵw development, currently under construction at the foot of the Burrard Bridge,[7] will extend the skyline to the southwest, while the Oakridge Center redevelopment around Oakridge Park[8] will result in a new high-rise cluster in Oakridge.

History

Number of buildingsYear010203040506070801920194019601980200020202040Buildings taller than 100 m (328 ft)Buildings taller than 150 m (492 ft)Growth of skyscrapers in Vancouver
Number of buildings by height in Vancouver by the end of each year, taking into account demolished buildings. Click on the legend to toggle a specific height on or off. View chart definition.

1900s–1950s: Early development

The third and final Hotel Vancouver.

Vancouver's history of skyscrapers began with the Dominion Building, the city's first high-rise.[9] It was a 13-storey Beaux-Arts style commercial building completed in 1910.[10] It was briefly the tallest building in Vancouver and in the entirety of the British Empire, until the nearby Sun Tower rose in 1912. Commissioned by L. D. Taylor to house his newspaper, The Vancouver World, he intended for the building to be the tallest in the city.[11] These early high-rises were located around the city's Commercial Square (now the Victory Square park), contrasting the heavy stone construction of the turn of the century.[10]

The Edwardian Vancouver Block, at 15 stories tall, was also completed in 1912, featuring a clock tower. Neon lighting would be added to the clock face in 1927, the first neon lighting erected in Vancouver.[12] These early high-rises reflected the city's early economic boom, driven by rapid population growth; between 1901 and 1911, Vancouver's population grew from 26,133 to 100,401.[13] The Sun Tower would be overtaken by Marine Building in 1930, designed in the Art Deco style that was in vogue in North America at the time. The 21-storey, 98 m (321 ft) tall building was named after the marine-themed ornaments that decorate it, such as depictions of sea snails, crabs, and turtles.

Another early high-rise was the Hotel Vancouver, the second building to hold that name; it was an Italian Renaissance style hotel built in 1916. The hotel sat on the site of the original Hotel Vancouver, which had a shingle-style design and was the city's first grand hotel when it was completed in 1888. The first hotel closed in 1913 and was later demolished. Both hotels were built by the Canadian Pacific Railway; a rival company, the Canadian Northern Railway, and later the Canadian National Railway, had planned to build a hotel of its own in the city. The new hotel, located northwest of the Hotel Vancouver, began construction in 1928; however, the Great Depression delayed the completion and opening of the hotel until 1939. Money to finally complete the hotel was provided by the Canadian government in 1937. Fearing the market was not large enough for competing hotels, the railways agreed to a joint CP-CN hotel as a condition of the completion.[14] The second hotel was closed in 1939 to prevent competition with the new hotel. It was used as a barracks during World War II, and subsequently demolished in 1949. The new Châteauesque Hotel Vancouver was the first building to breach 100 m (328 ft) in height. It remained as the city's tallest building for over 30 years, and is now considered one of Canada's grand railway hotels.

1960s–1970s: Office expansion

Vancouver's Harbour Centre, with an elevator visible on the right

Little to no new high-rises were built downtown between the 1940s and the late 1960s, other than the completion of the new BC Electric headquarters (today the Electra condominiums), completed in 1957. From the late 1960s to the early 1980s, Vancouver witnessed a major expansion of skyscraper and high-rise construction downtown, fundamentally reshaping its skyline. These new skyscrapers largely adopted the international and modern styles. Notable new offices included Arthur Erickson Place in 1968, the TD Tower in 1972, and the Royal Centre in 1973. TD Tower, which is connected to the Pacific Centre shopping mall, overtook the Hotel Vancouver to briefly become the tallest building in Vancouver at 127 m (417 ft), before the Royal Centre took the title a year later at a height of 145 m (476 ft). Granville Square, completed in 1973, became a prominent building overlooking Waterfront station; the top of the building houses the Vancouver Harbour Control Tower, the tallest air traffic control tower in the world at 142 m (466 ft) high. Another major development was the Bentall Centre, which initially consisted of four office towers, built between 1967 and 1981.[15]

Harbour Centre became the tallest building in the city at 147 m (482 ft) upon completion in 1977. On top of the office building is a "UFO-shaped" observation tower, featuring a 360-degree viewing deck and a revolving restaurant that offers visitors a view of Downtown Vancouver from above. The building is a prominent landmark on the city's skyline, with the tower and antenna extending the structure's height to 177 m (581 ft). The Vancouver Lookout tourist attraction was opened by Neil Armstrong, whose footprint was imprinted onto cement and was on display on the observation deck, until it was lost during later renovations.[16]

The 1960s would also see an influx of high-rise buildings in the West End neighbourhood, west of downtown. Many Bauhaus-style residential buildings were built between the 1960s and early 1970s.[17] This wave of development was controversial at the time, and the resulting increase in density was met with considerable opposition.[18] However, today the neighbourhood is regarded as one of Vancouver's most desirable areas, in part from the residential towers in the area.[19][20] Two notable hotel skyscrapers were also built in the area: the Coast Plaza Hotel in 1969, and the Empire Landmark Hotel in 1974. The latter overtook Hotel Vancouver as the city's tallest hotel, and had the city's first revolving restaurant on its top floor, Cloud 9, before the Harbour Centre. Both hotels were closed in 2017, and the Empire Landmark Hotel was demolished from 2018 and 2019. It is the tallest voluntarily demolished building in all of Canada.

1980s–1990s: Vancouverism

Coal Harbour's waterfront

In the 1980s, an urban planning paradigm began to emerge in Vancouver which sought to promote a large residential population living near the city centre in mixed-use developments, typically narrow high-rise towers atop a wide-medium height commercial base, as well as an increased reliance on mass transit, and preserving views of Vancouver's surrounding landscape.[21] This philosophy was named Vancouverism, after the city itself.[22] In 1989, the city council designated 26 protected view cones (also called view corridors) to ensure views of the ocean and North Shore Mountains were maintained from certain parts of the city.[23] The view corridors covered much of the Downtown Peninsula, limiting the height that skyscrapers could reach for the decades to come. Some have partly attributed Vancouverism and the growing prevalence of high-rise towers to the increase in immigrants from Hong Kong to the city during the 1980s.[24]

Vancouver's world fair held in 1986, Expo 86, brought renewed attention to the city, and is widely seen as marking a shift in Vancouver's perception from a provincial locale to a city with global clout.[25] Since the 1990s, residential construction has made up a majority of high-rise development in Vancouver, and residential towers began to regularly exceed 100 metres (328 feet). Development was spreading south of downtown, with buildings such as The Pinnacle (1996) and Landmark 33 (1998) in Yaletown. The completion of BC Place and Rogers Arena southeast of downtown around this time would also spur high-rise development nearby. The area of Coal Harbour northwest of downtown was greatly transformed by urban development. An industrial area for much of the 20th century,[26] Coal Harbour is now characterized by high-rise residential towers. Expo 86 would also lead to the completion of Vancouver's rapid transit system, SkyTrain, which would go on to encourage transit-oriented development in Vancouver and its metropolitan area.

2000s–2010s: New heights

Vancouver House, seen under construction in 2018.

The Harbour Centre, which stood as the city's tallest building for 24 years, would be dethroned by One Wall Centre, part of the Wall Centre development, in 2001. The mixed-use hotel and residential skyscraper has a roof height of 149.8 m (491), just 0.2 m shy of the 150 m benchmark. The building's height prompted city planners to negotiate with the developer, which agreed to use a light color of glass for the exterior. During construction, the city discovered a darker tint of glass was being applied instead. The upper floors were initially completed with a more translucent shade of glass, which were ultimately replaced with the same type of glass used on the lower floors.[27] One Wall Centre has the distinction of being the first building in the world to use a tuned liquid column damper to control wind vibrations.[28]

Towards the new century, there was growing concern that the city's approach to Vancouverism, owing to the view corridors established in 1989, would lessen visual interest in the skyline, and failed to represent the city's contemporary image. In response, the city council commissioned a "Skyline Study" in 1997 which concluded that the visual interest of Vancouver's skyline would benefit from the addition of a handful of buildings exceeding current height limits.[29] One of those sites would be the location of Living Shangri-La, Vancouver's current tallest building. Completed in 2010, the skyscraper broke through both the 150 m (492 ft) and 200 m (656 ft) barriers. Like One Wall Centre, it is a mixed-use building with a hotel and residential units.

The 2010s brought further growth in height around the Downtown Peninsula. The city's second tallest building, Paradox Hotel Vancouver, was completed in 2016. Woodward's 34, built in 2010, became the tallest building in Gastown and Downtown Eastside at 122 m (401 ft) tall. The area around the entrance to Granville Street Bridge, on the south of the peninsula, had steadily increased in height from the 2000s. Developments such as The Mark (2013) and The Charleson (2018) added weight to the skyline around it. In 2019, the neofuturist Vancouver House, with its honeycomb texture, would become a distinctive landmark when entering the peninsula from the bridge.

While high-rise development outside of the downtown core had been nearly nonexistent due to zoning restrictions and view cones, this gradually began to change in the 2010s. In South The Marine Gateway development in South Vancouver, around Marine Drive station, was built in the late 2010s, forming a second distinct cluster of high-rise within city limits. In the far east of city limits around Joyce–Collingwood station, a line of high-rises have appeared in the early 21st century, although these towers may be considered a part of the high-rise cluster in Metrotown, in the city of Burnaby.

2020s–present: Beyond downtown

The Sen̓áḵw development on Squamish Nation land, near completion in 2026.

So far, three additional skyscrapers above 150 m (492 ft) have been built on the Downtown Peninsula in the 2020s, that being One Burrard Place (2021), The Stack (2023), and The Butterfly (2024). One Burrard Place was briefly the tallest residential building in Vancouver,[30] before it was overtaken by The Butterfly. The Butterfly's cylindrical form is integrated into a Baptist church at the base,[31] while The Stack is an office building that resembles a series of stacked boxes.[32] These new skyscrapers, as well as Vancouver House and the curved Alberni by Kengo Kuma (2023) are seen as a departure from the standard glass-clad designs of Vancouver's earlier high-rises.[33][34]

The 2020s has seen an acceleration in high-rise development outside of downtown. Sen̓áḵw is a planned development of over 11 residential towers, ranging from 12 to 58 storeys in height, built on land owned by the Squamish Nation around the entrance of the Burrard Bridge, south of downtown. The Squamish Nation won the land back in 2003, and plans to develop the site were approved in 2020.[35] As the land is not subject to the city's zoning laws, the Squamish Nation were able to build at higher densities than normally allowed under the city's zoning. Currently under construction, the towers will extend the downtown skyline to the southwest. The first phase, consisting of three towers, are expected to be built by 2026.[36]

Another indigenous-led project, Jericho Lands, is being planned by the Musqueam First Nation, Squamish Nation, and Tsleil-Waututh First Nation.[37] Occupying the Jericho Hill Grounds in West Point Grey, the site would house 24,000 people across 10 million square feet, in residential towers of up to 32 storeys.[38][39] The development will take place over a 30-year horizon. If built, it would form a new cluster of high-rises west of downtown.

In South Vancouver, the ongoing redevelopment of the Oakridge Park shopping centre will involve the construction of ten residential towers,[40] up to 154.3 m (506 ft) tall, forming another separate cluster to the south of downtown. Nearby, the planned Oakridge Transit Centre development will include 17 buildings between four and 26 storeys.[41][42] Between Oakridge and Marine Gateway, the Cambie Gardens development was built in 2023, including a 28-storey affordable housing tower named Dogwood Gardens.[43][44] Fraser Commons is a standalone development of two 22 and 14-storey towers in the Sunset area, completed in 2022.

In the metropolitan area, significant skyscraper clusters have emerged in the early 21st century, partly driven by transit-oriented development, most notably in Metrotown and Brentwood in Burnaby, but also in Burquitlam and Coquitlam Town Centre in Coquitlam, and in New Westminster, Richmond, and Surrey. The development of these centres has led an increasingly polycentric skyline throughout Metro Vancouver to address the city's high demand for living space.

An aerial view of Oakridge in 2018, before the ongoing redevelopment of Oakridge Park. Marine Gateway is visible in the background to the left.

A number of pro-development policies have been passed in recent years, to address the city's high housing costs by increasing the supply of new homes. The Broadway Plan is a 30-year plan to improve housing, jobs, and amenities around the Broadway extension to the SkyTrain's Millennium Line. It was approved in 2022 and amended in 2024 to further increase the density allowed in the plan.[45][46] Under the plan, Vancouver's main skyline would expand towards the areas of Fairview and Mount Pleasant, helping to increase the availability of housing in the city. In 2024, the city council relaxed its view cone policy, reducing 14 of the 38 view cones and eliminating two entirely. This could potentially unlock 215 million square feet of development and 75,000 units of housing.[47][48] The view cones have been criticized for being arbitrary and contributing to the city's housing crisis.[49]

In 2025, a proposal was revealed for a development at 501-595 West Georgia Street that comprises four towers, three of which are taller than the city's current tallest building, Living Shangri-La. The tallest building would reach a height of 315 m (1,033 ft), becoming Vancouver's first supertall skyscraper.[50][51] It would also be the tallest building in Canada outside of Toronto. The complex will create 1,939 new homes, a 920-room hotel, and 70,130 square feet of conference space.[52] Its curved design, described as being wrapped by a "sculptural exoskeleton", is inspired by sea sponges off the coast of British Columbia, and would be a striking landmark on the skyline if built.[53]

In July 2025, the Shangri-La hotel announced that the city's tallest building, Living Shangri-La, will be rebranded to the Hyatt Vancouver Downtown Alberni, having been acquired by Brookfield Properties.[54][55]

Cityscape

Vancouver from Stanley Park in 2022
Panorama of the Downtown Peninsula in 2019

Map of tallest buildings

This map shows the location of buildings in Vancouver that are taller than 100 m (328 ft). Each marker is coloured by the decade of the building's completion. There are three buildings that exceed this height that are not visible on the map. Two are located near Marine Drive station in southern Vancouver: Marine Gateway North, and Ashley Mar III, while one, The Stories at South Granville Station, is in Fairview.

About OpenStreetMaps
Maps: terms of use
370m
403yds
72
71
70
69
69 Coast Plaza Hotel
69 Coast Plaza Hotel
68
67
67 HSBC Building
67 HSBC Building
66
65
64
63
62
61
60
59
59 Arthur Erickson Place
59 Arthur Erickson Place
58
57
56
55
54
53
52
51
50
49
48
47
47 Hyatt Regency Vancouver
47 Hyatt Regency Vancouver
46
45
45 Hotel Vancouver
45 Hotel Vancouver
44
43
42
41
40
39
38
37
36
35
34
33
32
32 Three Bentall Centre
32 Three Bentall Centre
31
31 Woodward's 43
31 Woodward's 43
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
23 TD Tower
23 TD Tower
22
21
20
20 Telus Garden Residential Tower
20 Telus Garden Residential Tower
19
19 Four Bentall Centre
19 Four Bentall Centre
18
18 Scotia Tower
18 Scotia Tower
17
17 Granville Square
17 Granville Square
16
16 Park Place
16 Park Place
15
15 Bentall 5
15 Bentall 5
14
14 Fairmont Pacific Rim
14 Fairmont Pacific Rim
13
13 Royal Centre
13 Royal Centre
12
12 The Melville
12 The Melville
11
11 MNP Tower
11 MNP Tower
10
10 Harbour Centre
10 Harbour Centre
9
9 Shaw Tower
9 Shaw Tower
8
8 One Wall Centre
8 One Wall Centre
7
7 Vancouver House
7 Vancouver House
6
6 The Private Residences at Hotel Georgia
6 The Private Residences at Hotel Georgia
5
4
4 One Burrard Place
4 One Burrard Place
3
2
2 Paradox Hotel Vancouver
2 Paradox Hotel Vancouver
1
1 Living Shangri-La
1 Living Shangri-La
Buildings taller than 100 m (328 ft) in Vancouver. An asterisk (*) next to the name of the building indicates it is located outside the map.
  •  1950s and before 
  •  1960s 
  •  1970s 
  •  1980s 
  •  1990s 
  •  2000s 
  •  2010s 
  •  2020s 
1
Living Shangri-La
2
Paradox Hotel Vancouver
3
The Butterfly
4
One Burrard Place
5
The Stack
6
The Private Residences at Hotel Georgia
7
Vancouver House
8
One Wall Centre
9
Shaw Tower
10
Harbour Centre
11
MNP Tower
12
The Melville
13
Royal Centre
14
Fairmont Pacific Rim
15
Bentall 5
16
Park Place
17
Granville Square
18
Scotia Tower
19
Four Bentall Centre
20
Telus Garden Residential Tower
21
Alberni by Kengo Kuma
22
Peter Wall Mansion & Residences
23
TD Tower
24
Capitol Residences
25
Patina
26
The Charleson
27
The Stories at South Granville Station*
28
The Mark
29
B6
30
Vancouver Centre II
31
Woodward's 43
32
Three Bentall Centre
33
The Pacific in Vancouver
34
Jameson House
35
The Ritz Coal Harbour
36
320 Granville
37
West One
38
Cathedral Place
39
1335 Howe
40
Marriott Pinnacle Hotel
41
The Exchange
42
Tate on Howe
43
West Pender Place 1
44
Sheraton West Tower
45
Hotel Vancouver
46
Venus
47
Hyatt Regency Vancouver
48
601 West Hastings
49
Residences on Georgia (West)
50
Marine Gateway North*
51
The Pinnacle
52
Callisto
53
Dolce
54
Landmark 33
55
Residences on Georgia (East)
56
Two Harbour Green
57
Board of Trade Building
58
Oceanic Plaza
59
Arthur Erickson Place
60
Quay West Tower I
61
Ashley Mar III*
62
Elan
63
Classico
64
Aquilini Centre West
65
FortisBC Centre
66
Paris Place
67
HSBC Building
68
Canaccord Tower
69
Coast Plaza Hotel
70
Carmana Plaza
71
Guinness Tower
72
Hudson

Tallest buildings

This list ranks completed buildings in Vancouver that stand at least 100 m (328 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 of completion. Buildings tied in height are sorted by year of completion with earlier buildings ranked first, and then alphabetically.

  Was the tallest building in Vancouver upon completion
More information Rank, Name ...
Rank Name Image Location Height
m (ft)
Floors Year Purpose Notes
1Living Shangri-La 1128 West Georgia Street

49°17′08″N 123°07′25″W

200.9 (659)622009 Mixed-use2nd tallest building in British Columbia and 39th tallest building in Canada. Contains a hotel on the first 15 floors and residential units on the rest of the tower. Will soon rebrand to the Hyatt Vancouver Downtown Alberni. Tallest building completed in Vancouver in the 2000s.[56]
2Paradox Hotel Vancouver 1151 West Georgia Street

49°17′12″N 123°07′26″W

187.8 (616)602016 Mixed-useTied with Altus in Burnaby for the third tallest building in British Columbia. Tallest building completed in Vancouver in the 2010s. Mixed-use hotel and residential building.[57]
3The Butterfly 969 Burrard Street

49°16′55″N 123°07′36″W

178.6 (586)572024 ResidentialTallest building completed in Vancouver in the 2020s.[58]
4One Burrard Place– 1281 Hornby Street

49°16′40″N 123°07′47″W

167.6 (550)542021 Residential[59][60]
5The Stack– 1133 Melville Street

49°17′14″N 123°07′22″W

162.3 (532)382023 OfficeTallest office building in Vancouver.[61]
6The Private Residences at Hotel Georgia 667 Howe Street

49°17′02″N 123°07′07″W

158.5 (520)482012 Mixed-use[62]
7Vancouver House 1480 Howe Street

49°16′30″N 123°07′52″W

150.3 (493)492019 ResidentialFeatures a top-heavy design that is unique in Vancouver.[63]
8One Wall Centre 1000 Burrard Street

49°16′50″N 123°07′32″W

149.8 (491)472001 Mixed-useThis building is also known as the Sheraton Wall Centre. Tallest building in Vancouver from 2001 to 2009.[64]
9Shaw Tower 1067 West Cordova Street

49°17′18″N 123°07′04″W

149.0 (488.8)412004 Mixed-useAlso known as Rogers Tower.[65]
10Harbour Centre 555 West Hastings Street

49°17′05″N 123°06′43″W

147.0 (482.3)401977 OfficeTallest building in Vancouver from 1977 to 2001. Tallest office building in the city from 1977 to 2023. Tallest building completed in Vancouver in the 1970s.[66]
11MNP Tower 1021 West Hastings Street

49°17′15″N 123°07′04″W

143.1 (469)362015 OfficeSeeking Platinum LEED certification, will be Gold LEED at least.[67]
12The Melville 1189 Melville Street

49°17′16″N 123°07′25″W

141.4 (464)432007 ResidentialTallest all-residential tower in Vancouver. The building also has the tallest rooftop pool in the city.[68]
13Royal Centre 1055 West Georgia Street

49°17′07″N 123°07′18″W

141.0 (462.6)371973 OfficeTallest building in Vancouver from 1973 to 1977. Also known as the RBC Tower or Royal Bank Tower.[69]
14 Fairmont Pacific Rim 1038 Canada Place

49°17′17″N 123°06′59″W

140.3 (460) 44 2010 Mixed-use [70]
15Bentall 5 550 Burrard Street

49°17′09″N 123°07′05″W

140.1 (460)342007 OfficeAlso known as B5.[71]
16Park Place 666 Burrard Street

49°17′06″N 123°07′09″W

140.0 (459.3)351984 OfficeLargest office building in British Columbia by floor area, with 64,856 square metres (698,104 sq ft). Tallest building completed in Vancouver in the 1980s.[72]
17Granville Square 200 Granville Street

49°17′12″N 123°06′44″W

138.4 (454)301973 OfficeAlso known as 200 Granville Square. The roof of the building features Vancouver Harbour Control Tower, the highest air traffic control tower in the world.[73][74]
18 Scotia Tower 650 West Georgia Street

49°16′54″N 123°07′04″W

138.0 (452.8) 34 1977 Office [75][76]
19Four Bentall Centre 1055 Dunsmuir Street

49°17′11″N 123°07′17″W

138.0 (452.8)351981 Office[77][78]
20Telus Garden Residential Tower 777 Richards Street

49°16′50″N 123°07′04″W

135.6 (445)462016 ResidentialLEED Platinum for Office Building and LEED Gold certification for Residential Tower as part of the new downtown Telus headquarters project.[79]
21 Alberni by Kengo Kuma – 1550 Alberni Street

49°17′23″N 123°07′53″W

133.1 (437) 43 2023 Residential [80]
22 Peter Wall Mansion & Residences – 1310 Richards Street

49°16′28″N 123°07′33″W

127.3 (418) 43 2017 Residential Also known as 1300 Richards Street.[81]
23TD Tower 700 West Georgia Street

49°16′58″N 123°07′09″W

127.1 (417)301972 OfficeThis building is also known as the Toronto Dominion Tower. Briefly the tallest building in Vancouver from 1972 to 1973.[82][83]
24Capitol Residences 833 Seymour Street

49°16′50″N 123°07′11″W

126.2 (414)432011 Residential[84]
25Patina 955 Burrard Street

49°16′56″N 123°07′34″W

126.2 (414)422011 Residential[85][86]
26The Charleson– 499 Pacific Street

49°16′26″N 123°07′37″W

125.0 (410)422018 Residential[87]
27 The Stories at South Granville Station – 1477 West Broadway

49°15′50″N 123°08′17″W

125 (410) 39 2025 Residential [88][89]
28The Mark 1372 Seymour Street

49°16′29″N 123°07′39″W

123.4 (405)412013 Residential[90]
29 B6 – 1090 West Pender Street

49°17′14″N 123°07′13″W

123 (404) 31 2024 Office Also known as Bentall 6.[91]
30Vancouver Centre II– 753 Seymour Street

49°16′53″N 123°07′06″W

122.8 (403)332023 Office[92]
31Woodward's 43 128 West Cordova Street

49°16′59″N 123°06′29″W

122.3 (401)412010 ResidentialThis building is also known as W43 or the W Building.[93]
32Three Bentall Centre 595 Burrard Street

49°17′10″N 123°07′12″W

121.9 (400)321974 OfficeAlso known as the Bank of Montreal Tower.[94][95]
33 The Pacific in Vancouver – 889 Pacific Street

49°16′35″N 123°07′51″W

118.7 (389) 39 2021 Residential [96]
34Jameson House 838 West Hastings Street

49°17′10″N 123°06′56″W

118.6 (389)382011 Mixed-use[97][98]
35The Ritz Coal Harbour 1211 Melville Street

49°17′18″N 123°07′27″W

118.3 (388)372008 Residential[99][100]
36 320 Granville – 320 Granville Street

49°17′08″N 123°06′46″W

117.3 (385) 30 2023 Office [101]
37West One 1408 Strathmore Mews

49°16′22″N 123°07′37″W

117 (384)382002 ResidentialThis building is also known as Beach Crescent - West One.[102]
38Cathedral Place 925 West Georgia Street

49°17′03″N 123°07′12″W

116.4 (382)231991 OfficeTallest building completed in Vancouver in the 1990s.[103]
39 1335 Howe – 1335 Howe Street

49°16′35″N 123°07′47″W

115.3 (378) 40 2022 Residential [104]
40Marriott Pinnacle Hotel 1128 West Hastings Street

49°17′16″N 123°07′14″W

114.3 (375)352000 Mixed-use[105]
41The Exchange– 475 Howe Street

49°17′09″N 123°06′57″W

114.3 (375)312017 Office[106]
42 Tate on Howe – 1265 Howe Street

49°16′38″N 123°07′43″W

114.3 (375) 40 2019 Residential [107]
43West Pender Place 1 1499 West Pender Street

49°17′24″N 123°07′42″W

112.8 (370)362011 Residential[108]
44Sheraton Wall Centre Hotel - West Tower 1088 Burrard Street

49°16′49″N 123°07′38″W

110.9 (364)351994 Hotel[109]
45Hotel Vancouver 900 West Georgia Street

49°17′02″N 123°07′15″W

110.6 (363)171939 HotelTallest building in Vancouver from 1939 to 1972. Tallest building completed in Vancouver in the 1930s.[110]
46Venus 1239 West Georgia Street

49°17′16″N 123°07′32″W

109.4 (359)342000 Residential[111]
47Hyatt Regency Vancouver 655 Burrard Street

49°17′07″N 123°07′14″W

108.8 (357)351973 HotelThis building is also known as the Hyatt Regency Hotel or the Hyatt Regency Vancouver-Royal Centre.[112]
48 601 West Hastings – 601 West Hastings Street

49°17′06″N 123°06′46″W

108.8 (357) 25 2022 Office [113]
49Residences on Georgia (West) 1288 West Georgia Street

49°17′15″N 123°07′36″W

108 (354)361998 Residential[114]
50Marine Gateway North 8400 Cambie Street

49°12′36″N 123°07′00″W

107 (351)302015 ResidentialThe first building in Vancouver exceeding 100 metres (328 ft) in height that is located outside of Downtown Vancouver.[115]
51The Pinnacle 939 Homer Street

49°16′41″N 123°07′11″W

106.1 (348)361996 Residential[116][117]
52Callisto 1281 West Cordova Street

49°17′24″N 123°07′24″W

106.1 (348)352004 Residential[118]
53Dolce 535 Smithe Street

49°16′46″N 123°07′10″W

106.1 (348)312010 Residential[119]
54Landmark 33 1009 Expo Boulevard

49°16′30″N 123°07′03″W

106 (348)351998 ResidentialAlso known as Marina Pointe - Landmark 33.[120]
55Residences on Georgia (East) 1200 West Georgia Street

49°17′13″N 123°07′33″W

106 (348)361998 Residential[121]
56Two Harbour Green 1139 West Cordova Street

49°17′20″N 123°07′12″W

105.1 (345)312008 Residential[122]
57Board of Trade Building 1177 West Hastings Street

49°17′19″N 123°07′18″W

104.2 (342)271968 OfficeAlso known as 1177 West Hastings at Columbia Centre. Tallest building completed in Vancouver in the 1960s.[123]
58Oceanic Plaza 1066 West Hastings Street

49°17′15″N 123°07′08″W

104.2 (342)261977 Office[124]
59Arthur Erickson Place 1075 West Georgia Street

49°17′09″N 123°07′20″W

103.6 (340)271968 OfficeOriginally known as the MacMillan Bloedel Building.[125]
60Quay West Tower I 1033 Marinaside Crescent

49°16′24″N 123°06′59″W

103 (338)352002 ResidentialThis building is also known as Marina Crescent - Quay West I or QuayWest I at Concord Pacific Place.[126][127]
61 Ashley Mar III – 8495 Cambie Street

49°12′31″N 123°07′04″W

103 (338) 31 2025 Residential [128]
62Elan 1255 Seymour Street

49°16′34″N 123°07′35″W

102.7 (337)342008 Residential[129]
63 Classico – 1328 West Pender Street

49°17′20″N 123°07′35″W

102.1 (335) 37 2003 Residential [130]
64 Aquilini Centre West – 89 West Georgia Street

49°16′40″N 123°06′35″W

101.5 (333) 25 2015 Residential [131]
65FortisBC Centre 1111 West Georgia Street

49°17′10″N 123°07′23″W

101.2 (332)241992 OfficeFormerly known as the Terasen Centre and was previously the site of the Rayonier Building (originally known as the Alaska White Pine Building) from 1954 to 1990.[132]
66Paris Place 181 Keefer Place

49°16′49″N 123°06′30″W

100.5 (330)331995 Residential[133]
67HSBC Building 885 West Georgia Street

49°17′02″N 123°07′09″W

100.5 (330)231987 Office[134]
68Canaccord Tower 609 Granville Street

49°17′01″N 123°07′01″W

100.3 (329)241981 OfficeThis building is also known as Canaccord Place or 609 Granville at Pacific Centre.[135]
69Coast Plaza Hotel 1763 Comox Street

49°17′19″N 123°08′19″W

100.2 (329)321969 Hotel[136]
70Carmana Plaza 1128 Alberni Street

49°17′09″N 123°07′30″W

100 (330)341999 Residential[137]
71Guinness Tower 1055 West Hastings Street

49°17′16″N 123°07′06″W

100 (330)251969 Residential[138]
72 Hudson – 610 Granville Street

49°17′00″N 123°06′59″W

100 (330) 34 2006 Residential [139]
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Tallest under construction or proposed

Under construction

The following table ranks skyscrapers that are under construction in Vancouver that are expected to be at least 100 m (328 ft) tall as of 2026, based on standard height measurement. The “Year” column indicates the expected year of completion. Buildings that are on hold are not included.

More information Name, Height m (ft) ...
Name Height
m (ft)
Floors Year Notes
Sen̓áḵw Tower 7 158.6 (520) 53 2026 [140]
Piero Lissoni X Oakridge 137.5 (451) 45 2026 [141]
1515 by Bosa 133 (436) 40 2027 [142]
508 Drake Street 125.2 (411) 39 2026 [143]
Sen̓áḵw Tower 3 120 (390) 41 2026 [144]
Oakridge X Westbank 115.1 (378) 34 2026 [145]
Two Burrard Place 112.2 (368) 35 2026 [146]
Sergio Castiglia X Oakridge 109.6 (360) 36 2026 [147]
1099 Harwood 101.5 (333) 33 2026 [148]
1098 Harwood 101.5 (333) 33 2026 [149]
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Proposed

The following table ranks proposed and approved skyscrapers in Vancouver that are expected to be at least 100 m (328 ft) tall as of 2026, based on standard height measurement. The “Year” column indicates the expected year of completion. A dash "–" indicates information about the proposal is unknown or not publicly available.

More information Name, Height m (ft) ...
Name Height
m (ft)
Floors Year Status Notes
595 West Georgia Street 314.9 (1,033) 68 – Proposed [150]
501 West Georgia Street (South Tower) 271 (889) 80 – Proposed [151]
501 West Georgia Street (North Tower) 238.7 (783) 69 – Proposed [152]
CURV Nelson Street 177.4 (582) 60 – Proposed [153]
1080 Barclay St. 174.5 (573) 60 2028 Proposed [154]
1040 Barclay St. 173 (568) 57 2028 Proposed [155]
Sen̓áḵw Tower 9 170.6 (560) 58 2026 Proposed [156]
1157 Burrard Street 155 (509) 47 – Proposed [157]
Oakridge Centre V 154.3 (506) 52 – Proposed [158]
Sen̓áḵw Tower 10 153.8 (505) 52 – Proposed [159]
1450 West Georgia 151.6 (497) 49 – Proposed [160]
Sen̓áḵw Tower 11 144.5 (474) 48 – Proposed [161]
1444 Alberni East Tower 134.7 (442) 48 – Proposed [162]
Sen̓áḵw Tower 8 132.1 (433) 45 2026 Proposed [163]
Oakridge Centre XIV 128.7 (422) 40 – Proposed [164]
1444 Alberni West Tower 123.5 (405) 43 – Proposed [165]
1166 West Pender Street 121.6 (399) 31 – Proposed [166]
1470-1476 West Broadway 119.2 (391) 34 – Proposed [167]
1650 Alberni 117.3 (385) 43 – Proposed [168]
1684 Alberni Street 117.3 (385) 39 – Proposed [169]
Alberni at Cardero 2 117.3 (385) 38 – Proposed [170]
Alberni at Cardero 1 117.3 (385) 38 – Proposed [171]
4975-4997 Joyce Street 117 (384) 38 – Proposed [172]
Oakridge Centre XII 113 (371) 35 – Proposed [173]
Oakridge Centre VIII 111.4 (365) 34 – Proposed [174]
601 West Pender Street 102.7 (337) 29 – Proposed [175]
526 Granville Street 102.1 (335) 24 – Proposed [176]
625 West Hastings Street 100.6 (330) 28 – Proposed [177]
523 East 10th Avenue 100.3 (329) 19 – Proposed [178]
130 West Broadway (East Tower) 100 (330) 30 – Proposed [179]
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Tallest demolished

This table lists buildings in Vancouver that were demolished or destroyed and at one time stood at least 100 metres (328 ft) in height.

More information Name, Image ...
Name Image Height
m (ft)
Floors Year completed Year demolished Notes
Empire Landmark Hotel 120.1 (394) 42 1973 2019 This building was the tallest free standing hotel in the city. This building was often referred to by its original name, the Sheraton Landmark. The hotel and its restaurant closed on September 30, 2017, and the building was demolished, floor by floor between March 2018 and May 2019.[180][181]
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Timeline of tallest buildings

This is a list of buildings that in the past held the title of tallest building in Vancouver.

More information Name, Image ...
Name Image Address Years as tallest Height
m (ft)
Floors Notes
Dominion Building 207 W. Hastings St. 1910–1912 53.3 (175) 14 [182]
Sun Tower 100 W. Pender St. 1912–1930 84.1 (276) 17 [183]
Marine Building 355 Burrard St. 1930–1939 97.8 (321) 21 [184]
Hotel Vancouver 900 W. Georgia St. 1939–1972 111.0 (364.2) 17 [185]
TD Tower 700 W. Georgia St. 1972–1973 127.1 (417) 30 [83]
Royal Centre 1055 W. Georgia St. 1973–1977 141.4 (464) 37 [186]
Harbour Centre 555 W. Hastings St. 1977–2001 146.6 (481) 28 [187]
One Wall Centre 1000 Burrard St. 2001–2008 149.7 (491) 48 [188]
Living Shangri-La 1120 W. Georgia St. 2008–present 200.9 (659) 62 [56]
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See also

References

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