Office in Moscow, Russia
55°46′34″N 37°33′13″E / 55.77611°N 37.55361°E / 55.77611; 37.55361Construction started | 2006 |
---|
Completed | 2009 |
---|
Height | 171.5 |
---|
Technical details |
---|
Floor count | 42 |
---|
Floor area | 147,000 m2 (1,580,000 sq ft) |
---|
Lifts/elevators | 30 |
---|
Website |
---|
http://www.nord-star-tower.ru |
References |
---|
[1] |
Nordstar Tower is a skyscraper office building in Moscow, Russia. Construction was begun in 2006 and completed in 2009. There are 42 floors (40 above ground), 30 elevators, and the gross floorspace is 147,000 square metres. Roof height is 171.5 metres.[2][3]
Structure
Reference[4]
- Structural material, concrete
- Facade material, aluminum
- Facade system, curtain wall
References
- ^ "Nordstar Tower". CTBUH Tall Buildings Database. CTBUH. Retrieved 16 July 2011.
- ^ "Nordstar Tower (Moscow, 2009)".
- ^ "Nordstar Tower, Moscow". SkyscraperPage.com. Retrieved 2022-05-02.
- ^ "Nordstar Tower, Moscow | 295198". Emporis. Archived from the original on April 9, 2013. Retrieved 2022-05-02.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
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)
- 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)
- Tricolor: Tower A (194 m)
- Tricolor: Tower A (192 m)
- D1 (191 m)
- Continental (191 m)
- Sparrow Hills: Tower 2 (188.2 m)
- Wellton: Tower 1 (178.7 m)
- Aliye Parusa: Tower 2 (179 m)
- Edelweiss (176 m)
- Kotelnicheskaya Building (176 m)
- Nebo (176 m)
- Headliner: Tower 1 (174.9 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)
- Oruzheyny (165 m)
- Wellton: Tower 3 (162.2 m)
- Well House (162 m)
- Sparrow Hills: Towers 1, 3 (161 m)
- Kudrinskaya Square (160 m)
- Zagorye (157 m)
- Presnya City (156 m)
- Savyolovskiy City (155.6 m)
- Avenue 77 (155 m)
- Dirigible (153 m)
- Gazprom Tower (150.9 m)
|
---|
Saint Petersburg | |
---|
Vladivostok | |
---|
Yekaterinburg | |
---|
Khimki | |
---|
|
|
Under construction |
---|
Moscow | - One Tower (442.8 m)
- Grand Tower (283.4 m)
- Capital Towers (267 m)
- iCity (256.7 m)
- National Space Centre (248 m)
- Silver (182 m)
- City Bay (177 m)
- Headliner: Towers 4, 9 (174.9 m)
- Alcon Tower (168.1 m)
- Paveletskaya City (165 m)
- Zilart (150 m)
|
---|
|
|
Approved |
---|
Moscow | World Trade Center (200 m) |
---|
|
|
- Lists of tallest buildings: Russia; Europe
- Category:Skyscrapers in Russia
|
Authority control databases: Geographic | |
---|
| This article about a Russian building or structure is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |