New York City’s Steinway Tower is the world’s skinniest skyscraper. Here’s a look
- The 84-storey Steinway Tower in Manhattan is also the second-tallest residential tower in the Western Hemisphere
- The building is so skinny that whenever the wind ramps up, the homes on the upper floors sway around by a few feet

One skyscraper stands out from the rest in the Manhattan skyline. It’s not the tallest, but it is the skinniest - the world’s skinniest, in fact.
The 84-storey residential Steinway Tower, designed by New York architecture firm SHoP Architects, has the title of “most slender skyscraper in the world” thanks to its logic-defying ratio of width to height: 23½-to-1.
“Any time it’s 1-to-10 or more that’s considered a slender building; 1-to-15 or more is considered exotic and really difficult to do,” SHoP Architects founding principal Gregg Pasquarelli said. “The most slender buildings in the world are mostly in Hong Kong, and they’re around 17 or 18-to-1.”
The 60 flats in the tower range in cost from US$18 million to US$66 million per unit, and offer 360-degree views of the city. It’s located just south of Central Park, along a stretch of Manhattan’s 57th Street known as “Billionaires Row”.
At 435 metres (1,428 feet), the building is the second-tallest residential tower in the Western Hemisphere, second to the nearby Central Park Tower at 470 metres. For comparison, the world’s tallest tower is Dubai’s Burj Khalifa, which stands at 828 metres.
Steinway Tower is so skinny at the top that whenever the wind ramps up, the luxury homes on the upper floors sway around by a few feet.