New York Post

OK, NOW THAT'S A SKYSCRAPER!

Okla. plans US tallest

- By PATRICK REILLY

Plans to build the tallest skyscraper in the United States are shaping up in an unlikely metropolis: Oklahoma City.

Developers at a realestate company are adjusting the already ambitious plans to construct the Boardwalk at Bricktown Tower by a few hundred feet to make the building reach 1,907 feet high — which would make it the tallest in the country, the Oklahoma City Free Press reported.

“The symbolic height honors the year that Oklahoma was admitted as the 46th state of the United States,” Matteson Capital said in a statement.

The firm’s initial applicatio­n had the tallest of the building’s four towers reaching 1,750 feet, which would have made it the second-tallest building in the country behind Manhattan’s Freedom Tower.

Matteson Capital said Monday it intends to request a variance from the city’s zoning board to construct the mammoth project. If approved, the structure would be the sixth-tallest in the world.

What’s inside

Plans for the structure call for three towers, each about 345 feet tall, and a fourth tower jutting 1,907 feet into the sky, dominating Oklahoma City’s otherwise unremarkab­le skyline.

The mixed-use project spans 5 million square feet. Plans include 1,776 residentia­l units, two Hyatt hotels, condos and 110,000 square feet of commercial and community use space.

The top floors of the supertall tower will have a restaurant, a bar and an observatio­n deck, according to Matteson Capital.

However, city officials told the Oklahoma City Free Press that the company would need city officials to rezone the property instead of simply requesting a variance.

Oklahoma City, home to some 680,000 people in the 2020 Census, is one of the fastest-growing cities in America, jumping to the country’s 20th-most populous last year.

If developers get a zoning variance, a planned 1,907-foot skyscraper (left) in Oklahoma City would surpass the 1,776-foot World Trade Center 1 as tallest in the United States — and the sixth tallest in the world.

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