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134-story skyscraper proposed for Oklahoma City | Dump Trucks Charlotte NC

Night time rendering shows four shiny glass towers, with the tallest one in the background, with a massive screen in the foreground.
Rendering of the Boardwalk at Bricktown development, with the proposed skyscraper in the background. Retrieved from AO Architects on December 22, 2023
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A 134-story residential skyscraper has been proposed in downtown Oklahoma City as part of the Boardwalk at Bricktown development, new renderings show.

However, the tower is far from a sure thing. 

Developers Matteson Capital and Thinkbox want to build out the Bricktown entertainment district with housing, businesses, luxury hotels and a variety of other amenities. The new development will go up just a block from a proposed site for a new $900 million arena that will house the NBA's Oklahoma City Thunder, which the city just approved.

Early renderings by Orange, California-based AO Architects released Dec. 14 and shared by KFOR show the overall development: a 22-floor, 480-key Hyatt Dream hotel; two 23-floor apartment buildings with 764 residential units; and a 134-story luxury apartment tower with 1,528 housing units overall including 48 units of affordable housing, plus two floors of retail space. 

The plan for parking structures, hotel and two apartment buildings is moving ahead, and this $700 million first phase of construction could start next year. Greeley, Colorado-based Hensel Phelps is the general contractor, according to the renderings, with engineering support from German firm Siemens and New York City-headquartered Thornton Tomasetti.

Right now, the skyscraper portion is a concept that would move forward “if the market is there,” Kenton Tsoodle, CEO of the Alliance for Economic Development, told Fox 25 News. If the tower is completed as planned, it would become the second-tallest building in the country, behind only New York City's One World Trade Center, and twice the height of Oklahoma City’s current tallest building, the Devon Energy Center, according to The Oklahoman.

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