# Federation Tower

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Complex of two skyscrapers in Moscow, Russia

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Federation Tower Башня Федерация Interactive map of the Federation Tower area General information Status Completed Type Residential building; office building Architectural style Postmodernism Location 12, Krasnopresnenskaya Embankment, Moscow-City, Moscow, Russia Coordinates 55°44′59.17″N 37°32′13.70″E / 55.7497694°N 37.5371389°E / 55.7497694; 37.5371389 Groundbreaking 28 November 2003 Construction started 2005 Completed 7 December 2017 Opened Zapad: 2008 Vostok: 7 December 2017 Cost US$1.2 billion[1] Owner AEON Corporation (Russian) Height Antenna spire 450 m (1,480 ft) (dismantled) Top floor 374 m (1,227 ft) (East Tower) 242 m (794 ft) (West Tower) Technical details Floor count 97 (East Tower) 63 (West Tower) Floor area 439,154 m2 (4,727,010 sq ft) Lifts/elevators 66 Design and construction Architects Sergei Tchoban, Peter Schweger Developer Mirax Group (now Potok Corporation) Structural engineer Thornton Tomasetti Main contractor Renaissance Construction Company

The **Federation Tower** ([Russian](/source/Russian_language): Башня Федерация, [romanized](/source/Romanization_of_Russian): *Bashnya Federatsiya*) is a complex of two [skyscrapers](/source/Skyscraper) built on the 13th lot of the [Moscow International Business Center](/source/Moscow_International_Business_Center) in [Moscow](/source/Moscow), [Russia](/source/Russia). The two skyscrapers are named Tower East or Vostok (Russian: Восток; literally means "East") and Tower West or Zapad (Russian: Запад; literally means "West").

The [supertall skyscraper](/source/Supertall_skyscraper) Tower East (Vostok) is currently the [second-tallest skyscraper in Europe](/source/List_of_tallest_buildings_in_Europe) and [Russia](/source/List_of_tallest_buildings_in_Russia) after the [Lakhta Center](/source/Lakhta_Center), the [tallest building in Moscow](/source/List_of_tallest_buildings_in_Moscow), and the [55th-tallest building in the world](/source/Tallest_building_in_the_world). Zapad is a shorter skyscraper than Vostok and is the eleventh-tallest building in Russia, and the 22nd-tallest building in Europe. The complex stands on the 13th lot, which has an area of 439,154 square meters.

The project was conceived by [German](/source/Germany)-Russian engineer [Sergei Tchoban](/source/Sergei_Tchoban) and German professor and engineer Peter Schweger. The complex was designed by architecture companies nps+partner and Schweger Associated Architects. The complex started construction in 2005, with Zapad completed first in 2008 with a height of 242 meters (794 feet). As a result of the [Great Recession](/source/Great_Recession), construction of the complex stopped until August 2011, and Vostok was completed on 7 December 2017 with a height of 374 meters (1,227 feet). In late 2014, Vostok surpassed the South Tower of [OKO](/source/OKO), which it is also part of the MIBC, as the tallest skyscraper of Russia and Europe. A spire was to be also built which would have extended the complex's height to 450 meters (1,480 feet) as well as provided an observation deck but it was never completed and was dismantled afterward.

The complex is owned by the AEON Corporation, a Russian private international investment group. The complex consists of two towers built on one podium. Tower East is a 97-story structure and Tower West is a 63-story structure. The complex is bounded by a rectangle of 3 alleys & a driveway. All three alleyways are named Krasnopresnenskaya Embankment, but the driveway on its east side is named 3rd Main Street. On 30 July 2023, across the alley from the back entrance, on the first floor, an aircraft (a Ukrainian drone) crashed into Rosbank (whose address is 1st Krasnogvardeisky Direction 19) & exploded, causing a small amount of damage to its facade.[2][3]

## Tower East

### Planning and early development

The higher tower of the complex located in the eastern part of lot number 13 was formerly known as Tower "A". But in November 2006, to avoid name competition with [Naberezhnaya Tower](/source/Naberezhnaya_Tower), it was renamed Tower "Vostok (East)". Tower East is designed to have 95 above-ground and 3 underground floors, and 17 high-speed elevators will be installed there (JP. Kocher). According to the company Potok, which is the builder of the tower, it used grade B90 concrete which is twice as strong as regular concrete and will allow the skyscraper to withstand a direct hit of an aircraft. In early December 2009, the Potok Corporation management (ex-Mirax Group) announced that in the case of financial problems it could reduce the number of floors of Tower East from 95 to 64 floors. However, in March 2010, the company's management stated that Tower East would be completed according to the original project design.

The construction of this tower is the second stage of the entire complex construction, and during the construction of the first tower, "Zapad (West)", its design underwent some significant changes and became radically different from the original version. In the first place, the square footage of the floors changed, and visually the tower became thicker at the base to the extent that a part of the floors, starting with the 11th, protrude a little beyond the 13th lot borderline. The tower core was significantly revised, too, and now has a trapezoidal shape rather than hexagonal as in the earlier design. The load-bearing columns became twice as thick; therefore, the amount of concrete required for the construction of the columns increased 4 times, and, consequently, significantly increased the total mass of the building.

### Construction

Construction started in 2005. During the construction of the foundation slab on 21–24 February 2007, a new record listed in the *Guinness Book of Records* was set: 14,000 cubic meters of concrete were placed then. Somewhat unusual in the construction process was that the first base plate was covered with the second base plate, which resulted in the complex losing one underground level and the construction delayed by at least five months. The extravagance of this decision lies in the fact that, judging by the photographs obtained from the site, the builders began active preparations for the construction of the first underground floor, but suddenly stopped working, dismantled the installed cranes, cut the reinforcement bars previously prepared for the columns and began to place reinforcement for the second base plate. That the construction organizers did not clearly comment on the reasons for this decision was also unusual. The tower was climbed solo by the Frenchman [Alain Robert](/source/Alain_Robert) in September 2007.

In the process of further construction the pace of the tower erection changed over a fairly wide range: the underground and podium parts of the building were being built at an average rate of about two levels a month; after the podium was completed, the construction of standard floors went at a faster rate of four floors per month, while at the technical 33–34 levels of the building the construction of that floor was significantly suspended and lasted more than five months; one of the cranes was replaced with two more powerful ones, and a strong metal outrigger structure was formed, contributing to the greater rigidity of the building and its resistance to wind loads.

As of mid-May 2008, the tower was built to a height of about 170 meters (560 feet). In November 2008, due to the [Great Recession](/source/Great_Recession) and a lack of funding, construction of the skyscraper was suspended.

The building is actively used as a sightseeing object and a high-rise structure for extreme sports lovers (base jumpers, climbers, etc.), as well as a site for shooting films and videos (TV shows, advertising, and movie production). In 2012, the [Moscow 24](/source/Moscow_24_(TV_channel)) TV channel shot a movie about the business complex. Another film dedicated to the skyscraper was made by the [Discovery Channel](/source/Discovery_Channel) TV channel in 2009.

On 5 July 2011, the construction company Potok announced the tower construction to be resumed. The actual growth of the tower was scheduled to begin in September 2011. As of 30 March 2012, the 67th story of Tower East had been completed; the glazing of the tower was being conducted as well.

On 2 April 2012, firefighters and firefighting helicopters struggled to put out a massive blaze that broke out on the 67th floor of the under-construction Federation Tower East. "The fire was visible from much of the Russian capital's western half. Two firefighting helicopters noisily circled the blaze, dumping huge buckets of water on the flames before the Emergencies Ministry said the fire had been stopped from spreading by about 11:30 p.m. (1930 GMT), some three hours after it broke out."[4] "The area affected by the fire has exceeded 300 square meters (3,200 square feet)", Major-General Sergei Anikeyev, deputy head of the city's emergency department, told the news agency Itar-Tass. "The 14 people who were at the top floors when the fire started have been evacuated. No one was hurt," he told Itar-Tass.[5]

On 18 December 2014, Vostok was [topped out](/source/Topping_out) when the skyscraper reached its planned height of 374 meters (1,227 feet). The construction teams, including [Turner](/source/Turner_Construction), celebrated the pouring of the last structural concrete cube, 374 meters above the ground. The topping-out generated excitement in the Russian press, as the tower received the title of being the tallest building in Russia and Europe, surpassing [OKO](/source/OKO)'s South Tower.[6]

On 20 January 2017, Europe's tallest elevator shaft was constructed in Vostok, with the launch of the tallest elevator in Europe taking place simultaneously with the opening of the southern entrance lobby of the tower. According to Russian Construction, the elevator's cabin moves without switches from the second underground level to the 94th story. Schindler freight-passenger elevator will go up at the height of 355 meters above the ground level. Its total path of motion with the consideration of underground floors will amount to 365 meters. The elevator's carrying capacity is 2 tons.[7] During an interview with the director general of the "Federation Tower" Ltd., Mikhail Smirnov by Iterfax-Realty, construction of the skyscraper would finish by the end of March 2017. Earlier, the Moscow State Construction Supervision Committee reported that the tower would be put in operation by July 2017, Interfax reports.[8]

On 6 October 2017, the [Lakhta Center](/source/Lakhta_Center) of [St. Petersburg](/source/Saint_Petersburg) surpassed Vostok's height of 1,227 ft (374 m), making it the tallest building in Russia and Europe.[9]

On 7 December 2017, construction of Vostok was completed, making it the tallest completed skyscraper in Russia and Europe currently.[10]

### Purpose

Vostok would be used for multiple purposes, high rise development designed to house offices, retail areas, a five star hotel, and luxury apartments upon completion. A number of luxurious offices will occupy the penthouse's area of 12,000 square meters from the 90th to 98th stories.[11] The upper levels of the 95-story tower will include the hotel lobby, restaurants, and a public viewing platform. The lower levels will contain retail shops and restaurants as well as the hotel's ballroom, and conference and events center.[6] The building would also feature the highest digital clock in the world.

## Tower West

### Planning and early development

The lower tower of the complex is located on the western part of lot 13 in the MIBC. The tower was formerly known as Tower "B" but in order to avoid name competition with [Naberezhnaya Tower](/source/Naberezhnaya_Tower), it was renamed Tower "Zapad (West)". In November 2006, after the name competition, it was renamed Tower West. Tower West is planned to have 62 stories above ground and four underground floors, with 11 twin and six high-speed elevators.

### Construction

The erection of Tower West was the first stage of the entire Federation complex construction, but the height of the tower was increased in comparison with the original models (originally, Tower West was planned to be half the height of Tower East). The cross-section of the tower's core, originally planned to be hexagonal, was modified after construction began and is now trapezoidal. The core was constructed so it rose above the rest of the structure, which was assembled one or two floors behind. The building was completed in early 2008.

### Purpose

Tower West would include a hotel spa and swimming pool. The 61st floor of the Tower West accommodates the tallest restaurant in [Moscow](/source/Moscow), 'Sixty', run by Ginza Project.[*[citation needed](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Citation_needed)*]

### Awards

- 2009 – The western tower of the Federation business complex was the winner of the World FIABCI competition Prix d'Excellence in the category "Office Property".[*[citation needed](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Citation_needed)*]

- 2011 – The Federation Tower was awarded with the "Records of real estate market" prize in the "Business Center No 1" nomination.[*[citation needed](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Citation_needed)*]

## Notable residents

- Syrian dictator [Bashar Al Assad](/source/Bashar_Al_Assad) and his family are said to have a 2 story penthouse in the complex.[12]

## Construction gallery

		- Tower B June 28, 2006

		- June 28, 2006

		- September 24, 2006

		- August 14, 2007

		- September 11, 2007

		- July 21, 2008

		- September 28, 2009

		- November, 2010

		- August 1, 2011

		- October 20, 2012

		- January 20, 2014

		- April, 2014

		- May, 2015

		- March 22, 2016

		- July, 2016

## See also

- [List of tallest buildings in Russia](/source/List_of_tallest_buildings_in_Russia)

- [List of tallest buildings in Europe](/source/List_of_tallest_buildings_in_Europe)

## References

1. **[^](#cite_ref-1)** ["The Federation Tower – Tallest Building in Europe – Every Record"](https://web.archive.org/web/20170916095822/http://www.every-record.com/federation-tower-tallest-building-europe/). *Every-Record.com*. 1 February 2016. Archived from the original on 16 September 2017. Retrieved 16 September 2017.

1. **[^](#cite_ref-2)** Osborn, Andrew; Harmash, Olena; Jaiswal, Rishabh (30 July 2023). Mallard, William; Feast, Lincoln; Kerry, Frances; Graff, Peter (eds.). [*Russia says it downs Ukrainian drones, Moscow buildings hit*](https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/russia-says-it-brought-down-three-ukrainian-drones-attempting-attack-moscow-2023-07-30/) (Television production). Krasnopresnenskaya Embankment: Reuters. Retrieved 30 July 2023. Ah! Mamochka! [Mummy!]

1. **[^](#cite_ref-3)** Waterhouse, James; Gregory, James (30 July 2023). ["Zelensky after Moscow drone attack: War coming back to Russia"](https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-66352765). *bbc.com*. Ivano-Frankivsk. Retrieved 30 July 2023.

1. **[^](#cite_ref-4)** ["huffingtonpost.com"](http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/04/02/moscow-federation-tower-fire_n_1397623.html). *HuffingtonPost.com*. 2 April 2012. Retrieved 16 September 2017.

1. **[^](#cite_ref-5)** ["msnbc.msn.com"](https://web.archive.org/web/20120502015726/http://worldnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/04/02/10986130-moscow-federation-tower-in-flames?lite). *MSN.com*. 2 April 2012. Archived from [the original](https://worldnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/04/02/10986130-moscow-federation-tower-in-flames?lite) on 2 May 2012. Retrieved 16 September 2017.

1. ^ [***a***](#cite_ref-auto_6-0) [***b***](#cite_ref-auto_6-1) ["News | Federation Towers – Vostok Tower Tops Out | Turner Construction Company"](http://www.turnerconstruction.com/news/item/6baf/Federation-Towers---Vostok-Tower-Tops-Out). *www.TurnerConstruction.com*. Retrieved 26 May 2017.

1. **[^](#cite_ref-7)** ["Europe's highest elevator starts operation in Moscow City"](http://russianconstruction.com/news-1/26227-europes-highest-elevator-starts-operation-in-moscow-city.html). *Construction.RU – Russia-wide construction online journal* (in Russian). Retrieved 26 May 2017.

1. **[^](#cite_ref-8)** [""Federation" complex's second tower to be completed by April"](http://russianconstruction.com/news-1/26393-federation-complexs-second-tower-to-be-completed-by-april.html). *Construction.RU - Russia-wide construction online journal* (in Russian). Retrieved 26 May 2017.

1. **[^](#cite_ref-9)** ["Russian skyscraper 'becomes Europe's tallest building'"](https://www.euronews.com/2017/10/06/russian-skyscraper-becomes-europe-s-tallest-building). *[Euronews](/source/Euronews)*. Retrieved 24 August 2020.

1. **[^](#cite_ref-10)** ["Russia Completes Europe's Tallest Skyscraper – Federation Tower"](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HLjbK106CmU), *Russia Insight*, 7 December 2017, [archived](https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211221/HLjbK106CmU) from the original on 21 December 2021, retrieved 28 December 2017

1. **[^](#cite_ref-11)** ["Penthouse of "Vostok" Tower in Moscow City to host offices"](http://russianconstruction.com/news-1/24249-penthouse-of-vostok-tower-in-moscow-city-to-host-offices.html). *Construction.RU – Russia-wide construction online journal* (in Russian). Retrieved 26 May 2017.

1. **[^](#cite_ref-12)** [https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/22/world/middleeast/assad-syria-exile-luxury.html](https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/22/world/middleeast/assad-syria-exile-luxury.html)

## External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to [Federation Tower](https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Federation_Tower).

- [Official website](http://fedtower.ru/)

- Страница на [facebook.com](https://www.facebook.com/Federation.Tower/)

- [Instagram](https://www.instagram.com/fedtower/) аккаунт

- Panorama 360, официальная [смотровая площадка Москва Сити](https://pnr360.ru/)

Records Preceded by OKO (South Tower) Europe’s tallest building 2014 – 2017 Succeeded by Lakhta Center Russia’s tallest building 2014 – 2017 Tallest building in Moscow 2014 – present Succeeded by Incumbent Notes and references 1. Records for Tower East of the Federation Tower

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v t e Skyscrapers in Russia Completed Moscow Federation: East Tower (373.7 m) OKO: South Tower (354.1 m) Neva Towers 2 (345 m) Mercury City Tower (338.8 m) Eurasia (308.9 m) Neva Towers 1 (302 m) City of Capitals: Moscow Tower (301.6 m) Naberezhnaya Tower C (268.4 m) Triumph Palace (264.1 m) City of Capitals: Saint Petersburg Tower (256.9 m) Evolution Tower (245.9 m) National Space Centre (248.9 m) OKO: North Tower (245 m) Federation: West Tower (243.2 m) Moscow State University (240 m) Imperia Tower (238.7 m) House on Mosfilmovskaya (213 m) Hotel Ukraina (198 m) Sparrow Hills: Tower 2 (188.2 m) Edelweiss (176 m) Kotelnicheskaya Building (176 m) IQ-quarter: Tower 1 (172.8 m) Ministry of Foreign Affairs (172 m) Nordstar Tower (171.5 m) Sberbank City: Tower B (168 m) Swissôtel Krasnye Holmy (165 m) Sparrow Hills: Towers 1, 3 (161 m) Kudrinskaya Square (160 m) Saint Petersburg Lakhta Center (462.5 m) Yekaterinburg Iset Tower (206.5 m) Vysotsky (188.3 m) Under construction Moscow One Tower (442.8 m) Grand Tower (283.4 m) Capital Towers (267 m) iCity (256.7 m) Related List of tallest buildings in Russia Category

v t e Moscow International Business Center Buildings Central Core City of Capitals Grand Tower Imperia Tower Evolution Tower Eurasia Tower Expocentre Federation Tower IQ-quarter Mercury City Tower Naberezhnaya Tower Neva Towers Northern Tower OKO One Tower Tower 2000 Transport Bagration Bridge Delovoy Tsentr (Moscow Central Circle) Delovoy Tsentr (Kalininsko–Solntsevskaya line) Mezhdunarodnaya Delovoy Tsentr (Filyovskaya line) Testovskaya (to Sheremetyevo Airport) Testovskaya

v t e Supertall skyscrapers (300 m/984 ft and taller) Completed Africa Egypt Iconic Tower Americas Chile Gran Torre Santiago Mexico Torres Obispado United States 1 World Trade Center (1970–2001) † 111 West 57th Street 2 World Trade Center (1971–2001) † 270 Park Avenue 3 World Trade Center 30 Hudson Yards 35 Hudson Yards 432 Park Avenue 50 Hudson Yards 53W53 875 North Michigan Avenue Aon Center Bank of America Plaza Bank of America Tower Brooklyn Tower Central Park Tower Chrysler Building Comcast Technology Center Empire State Building Franklin Center JPMorgan Chase Tower One57 One Manhattan West One Vanderbilt One World Trade Center Salesforce Tower St. Regis Chicago The New York Times Building The Spiral Trump International Hotel and Tower Two Prudential Plaza U.S. Bank Tower Wells Fargo Plaza Willis Tower Wilshire Grand Center Asia China Baoneng Center Changsha A9 Financial District Changsha IFS Tower T1 China Merchants Bank Tower Global HQ China Resources Headquarters China World Trade Center Tower III China Zun Chongqing IFS T1 Chongqing World Financial Center CITIC Plaza Citymark Centre Dalian International Trade Center Diwang International Fortune Center Minying International Trade Center T2 East Pacific Center Eton Place Dalian Fortune Center Gate to the East Greenland Hangzhou Center Golden Eagle Tiandi Tower A Golden Eagle Tiandi Tower B Greenland Puli Center Guangdong Business Center Guangxi China Resources Tower Guangzhou CTF Finance Centre Guangzhou International Finance Center Guiyang International Financial Center Tower 1 Hanking Center Heartland 66 Office Tower Hengqin International Finance Center Hon Kwok City Center Huachuang International Plaza Huaguoyuan Tower 1 Huaguoyuan Tower 2 Huijin Center Guangzhou Huiyun Center Jiangxi Nanchang Greenland Central Plaza Jin Mao Tower Jin Wan Plaza 9 Jinan Center Financial City KK100 Leatop Plaza Logan Century Center 1 Longxi International Hotel Minsheng Bank Building Nanjing International Youth Cultural Centre Tower 1 Nanjing Financial City Phase II Plot C Tower 1 One Shenzhen Bay Pearl River Tower Ping An International Finance Centre The Pinnacle Poly Pazhou Riverview Plaza Shanghai Tower Shanghai World Financial Center Shenglong Global Center Shenzhen Center Shenzhen CFC Changfu Centre Shenzhen Urban Construction & Tower Shimao Hunan Center Shanghai Shimao Festival City Shum Yip Upperhills Tower 1 Shun Hing Square Spring City 66 Suning Plaza 1, Wuxi Suning Plaza Tower 1, Zhenjiang Suzhou IFS Tianjin CTF Finance Centre Tianjin Modern City Office Tower Tianjin World Financial Center Wanda Plaza Wenzhou World Trade Center White Magnolia Plaza Wuhan Center Wuhan Greenland Center Wuhan Yangtze River Shipping Center Wuxi IFS Wuxi Maoye City – Marriott Hotel Xi'an Glory International Financial Center Xiangjiang Fortune Finance Center Yantai Shimao No.1 The Harbour Yuexiu Fortune Center Tower 1 Zhongzhou Holdings Financial Center Zhuhai Tower Zhujiang New City Tower Zifeng Tower Hong Kong Bank of China Tower Central Plaza International Commerce Centre International Finance Centre Nina Tower The Center Indonesia Autograph Tower Luminary Tower Japan Abeno Harukas Azabudai Hills Mori JP Tower Kazakhstan Abu Dhabi Plaza Kuwait Al Hamra Tower Arraya Tower Malaysia The Exchange 106 Four Seasons Place Kuala Lumpur Merdeka 118 Oxley Tower 1 Petronas Towers Telekom Tower Philippines Metrobank Center Qatar Aspire Tower Lusail Plaza Towers 3 and 4 Saudi Arabia The Clock Towers Kingdom Centre PIF Tower South Korea Haeundae Doosan We've the Zenith Haeundae LCT The Sharp Lotte World Tower Parc1 Posco Tower-Songdo Taiwan 85 Sky Tower Taipei 101 Thailand Baiyoke Tower II ICONSIAM MahaNakhon Turkey CBRT Tower United Arab Emirates 23 Marina Address Boulevard Address Downtown ADNOC Headquarters Almas Tower Amna Tower Burj Al Arab Burj Khalifa Cayan Tower DAMAC Residenze Elite Residence Emirates Office Tower Etihad Towers Gevora Hotel HHHR Tower Il Primo Dubai The Index Jumeirah Emirates Towers Hotel JW Marriott Marquis Dubai The Landmark Marina 101 The Marina Torch Ocean Heights Princess Tower Rose Tower World Trade Center Abu Dhabi Vietnam Landmark 72 Landmark 81 Europe Poland Varso Tower Russia City of Capitals Eurasia Federation Tower Lakhta Center Mercury City Tower Neva Towers 2 OKO Tower United Kingdom The Shard Oceania Australia Australia 108 Q1 Tower † No longer standing. Under construction Africa Ethiopia Ethiopian Electric Power Headquarters Côte d'Ivoire Tour F Asia China Chongqing Corporate Avenue 1 Evergrande Center Eye of Spring Trade Center Greenland Group Suzhou Center Haikou Tower Knowledge Tower Nanjing World Trade Center Tower 1 Ningbo Center North Bund Centre Shandong IFC South Asian Gate Suzhou Zhongnan Center Tianshan Gate of the World Plots 27 and 28 Wuhan CTF Finance Center Xi'an Greenland Center Xiamen International Centre Xiangmi Lake New Financial Center Other Beyond Office Tower Burj Azizi Burj Binghatti Jacob & Co Residences Highwealth Huiguo 90 Jeddah Tower Legacy Tower One Bangkok Taipei Twin Towers Thamrin Nine Torch Tower North America 520 Fifth Avenue Concord Sky SkyTower at Pinnacle One Yonge One Bloor West Waldorf Astoria Miami South America Senna Tower On hold 2 World Trade Center 45 Broad Street Baoneng Shenyang Global Financial Center Busan Lotte Town Tower Chengdu Greenland Tower Chongqing Tall Tower Dalian Greenland Center Diamond Tower (Jeddah) Dubai Pearl Dubai Towers Doha Forum 66 Gate of Kuwait Goldin Finance 117 Hyundai Global Business Center Sumou Towers Mandarin Oriental Chengdu Marina 106 Namaste Tower Nanjing Olympic Suning Tower One Tower Palais Royale, Mumbai Pentominium Runhua Global Center 1 Ryugyong Hotel Sino-Steel Tower Skycity Square Capital Tower The Stratford Residences Tameer Commercial Tower Tianjin R&F Guangdong Tower Tour Financial Hub Center Tower Infinity VietinBank Business Center Office Tower See also Proposed supertall skyscrapers List of architects of supertall buildings

v t e Timeline of the tallest buildings in Europe Victoria Tower (98.5 m) (1860) Palais de Justice, Brussels (104 m) (1883) Vienna City Hall (105 m) (1892) Terrazza Martini Tower (108 m) (1940) Kotelnicheskaya Embankment (176 m) (1952) Main building of Moscow State University (240 m) (1953) Messeturm (257 m) (1990) Commerzbank Tower (259 m) (1997) Triumph Palace (264 m) (2003) Naberezhnaya Tower (268 m) (2007) Capital City Moscow Tower (302 m) (2009) The Shard (310 m) (2012) Mercury City Tower (339 m) (2012) OKO: South Tower (354 m) (2015) Federation Tower (374 m) (2016) Lakhta Center (462 m) (2018)

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Adapted from the Wikipedia article [Federation Tower](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federation_Tower) by Wikipedia contributors ([contributor history](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federation_Tower?action=history)). Available under [Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International](https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/). Changes may have been made.
