Architecture

USA's tallest building approved for Oklahoma City

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Assuming all goes to plan, the Legends Tower will reach a height of 1,907 ft (581 m)
AO
Assuming all goes to plan, the Legends Tower will reach a height of 1,907 ft (581 m)
AO
The Legends Tower will include three smaller towers reaching a height of 345 ft (105 m)
AO
The Legends Tower will include retail areas and entertainment areas, as well as a hotel
AO
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Officials have given the thumbs up for a new tallest skyscraper in the United States – and it's not headed for New York City or Chicago as you might expect, but to a tornado-prone area with a population of only around 700,000 people: Oklahoma City.

We first saw this audacious project proposed as the USA's second-tallest skyscraper. Following this, the designers and developers went back to the drawing board and decided to go one better, updating their plans to make it the tallest building in the country. More details have since emerged.

We now know that the Legends Tower will be located on the site of a parking lot near a railroad track and a U-Haul storage facility. It will reach a symbolic height of 1,907 ft (581 m), to commemorate the year Oklahoma became the USA's 46th state. To put that into perspective, it will be a significant 130 ft (39 m) taller than the USA's current tallest skyscraper, NYC's One World Trade Center, and will be placed at sixth-tallest in the world rankings, just behind China's Ping An Finance Center.

Alongside the main skyscraper, there will be three smaller towers, each rising to 345 ft (105 m). Between all four buildings, they will host 1,776 residential units, as well as a luxury hotel.

The Legends Tower will include three smaller towers reaching a height of 345 ft (105 m)
AO

There are some concerns, however. Building something so tall in a city with a population under 1 million (or around 1.4 million if we include the entire Oklahoma City metropolitan area) doesn't seem to make much financial sense, though developer Scot Matteson recently announced that he has secured funding for the US$1.6 billion project, so presumably someone thinks it does.

Additionally, as the Wall Street Journal reports, in a recent city planning meeting, another more pressing concern was also raised: the weather. Oklahoma City is known to experience a large number of tornadoes, which brings to mind all sorts of nightmarish scenarios when discussing such a tall building. Addressing this, Rob Budetti, managing partner of California studio AO, which is designing the Legends Tower, offered reassurance that engineers will install a chunky concrete core surrounding the elevator shaft for stability, and that the skyscraper's windows will be capable of withstanding the force of a tornado without damage. Indeed, the architect even suggested it will be one of the safer places to be in the event of a tornado.

In the end, the Oklahoma City Planning Commission gave its stamp of approval. According to local newspaper The Oklahoman there are still a few potential hurdles, including a city meeting on June 4 to discuss a zoning change. But all being well, Matteson expects this incredible project to begin construction by July of this year.

Source: AO

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13 comments
Fairly Reasoner
Just because you can, doesn't mean you should.
Douglas Rogers
Reminds me of R H Sailors in Kansas City, which was going to be the world's tallest building.
Smokey_Bear
Nice. It puts them on the map, they will have a decent tourist trap, being the tallest in the US, and you'll be able to see the whole city form the top, should look good.
WillyDoodle
OK then. I may or may not revise my bucket list
Ric
All that money to make one of the largest, ugliest things I’ve ever seen. I hope the next benchmark AI can surpass humans on is taste. Ugh.
Cody
Laughable, This and many other cities have, horrible road conditions, I-40 and surrounding local roads are falling apart.
To plan something like this is just idiotic.
Rebuild the Infrastructure first, There should be 150 million construction workers making our roads gold plated, instead, there are less than 1,000.
akarp
"doesn't seem to make much financial sense" welcome to a broken economic system!!!
NDG
aka The Oklahoma Titanic. First tornado will scare the willies out of everyone! How do they know if it will survive a direct hit by a giant tornado which are getting worse with climate change? Or are they placing their bets on "extremely little likelihood" - a calculated risk?
Troy Ham
This is a great thing, Scot Matteson. I see lots of non-believers in these comments. They are jealous. Godspeed …. and make it happen!
eCoach
The elevators will waste half the usable space and the new handicap rules will demolish some of the artistic design. But go ahead. Each new item begets a load of education and learning. Fact The Empire State Building was built in 1 year.