Actually, Chicago has dozens in the 60-story range and most other cities St. Louis' size or larger have at least one 40 plus story residential tower.
Check out this very interesting website and click on "Full Search Form":
http://skyscraperpage.com
Interesting, albeit somewhat unrelated fact. The following cities have, or will have by 2010, buildings as tall or taller than any building in St. Louis:
Des Moines, Tulsa, Omaha, Mobile, Kansas City, Cincinnati, Jacksonville, Sacramento, Tampa, Columbus, Nashville, Louisville, Minneapolis, Charlotte, Pittsburgh, Indianapolis, Las Vegas, Baltimore, Seattle, Denver, New Orleans and Milwaukee, and most of these cities have at least 3 or 4...
All of these metropolitan areas are roughly the same size or are smaller than St. Louis. Most are considerably smaller. Draw your own conclusions.
Framer wrote:I don't think buildings in Sao Paulo are really all that tall. Certainly not 60 stories. Chicago, I believe, has several 60-story-plus residential buildings. You can check this out at Emporis (sorry, I don't know how to post the link).
Sao Paulo has a dozen or so in the 30-40 story range, but only one over 40 stories. But then again, South America is not exactly the economic dynamo that Asia and Europe are...
http://skyscraperpage.com/diagrams/?
Tysalpha wrote:
And then it's pretty clear there are some 'statement' projects in the list, just to prove they can (Moscow, Dubai, Melbourne).
There are several buildings going up in Dubai taller than the Sears Tower. What is going on in Dubai is much more than just "statement projects". There are actual economics behind it. Where do you think all that $$$ you spend on gas every day is going? Yes, I know Dubai has little oil, but their neighbors do!
