177,150 tall buildings 177k tall buildings 53,770 companies
EN Metric Sign in
Section 02 — Explore

Browse the
database.

Cities, countries, rankings and statistics — everything that's hard to find on the map.

Search for buildings
Featured ranking

2025 — Year in review

19 new supertalls completed. 4 records broken.

Read the report →
Section 03 — Services

Data services
for pros.

Custom research, bulk exports and API access for architects, developers and journalists.

Trusted by

CNN · The Guardian · Reuters · New York Times

Over 200 organizations use SKYDB data.

See services →
Section 04 — Community

Built by
people who care.

412 selected professionals keep the database accurate.

Spotlight

Editor of the Year

Marshall Gerometta — heights matter, and he knows it.

Read interview →
Section 05 — About

#1 database
about tall buildings

Independent. Open. Built since 1998, for the love of tall buildings.

Since 1998

28 years of excellence

From a hobby project to the most cited tall-structure source on the web.

Our story →
SKYDB

Definitionsno specific standardattributesidentificationreference point

base of a structure

The lower reference point when measuring a structure's height.

The base of a structure is the starting point for all cumulative height measurements. It is defined as the sidewalk level at the ambient plain directly in front of the lowest exposed point where a structure's perimeter meets the ground.

Sidewalk level is taken instead of the actual entrance level, because in many cases there is a stairway or other elevation differential between the sidewalk and the entrance. When the entrance leads onto a sunken plaza or a man-made elevation such as a staircase, a line should be drawn perpendicular from the entrance to the sidewalk level before this height differential comes into play. The only exception would be if the lowest entrance leads out onto naturally sloping ground which continues further down to the sidewalk; in this case the entrance level itself would form the base.

The ambient plain may be elevated above grade level in special cases, such as highly developed urban districts where all surrounding streets are elevated above ground (e.g. at La Défense near Paris or Illinois Center in Chicago). Normally if a structure fronts on a body of water, the lowest surrounding built walkway is used as a reference point instead of water level (which may fluctuate too much to get a constant measurement).

Related

Illustrations

1 file
SKYDB