Rank |
Name |
Image |
Height m (ft) |
Floors |
Year |
Primary Use |
Location |
Notes |
1 |
St Paul's Tower |
 |
101 m (331 ft) |
32 |
2010 |
Residential |
Sheffield City Centre |
The first skyscraper to be constructed in Sheffield, and the tallest building in the city since 2010. Constructed as the centerpiece of the St Paul's Place redevelopment as part of the wider Heart of the City project. |
2 |
Calico Sheffield |
|
85 m (279 ft) |
27 |
2025 (topped out) |
Residential |
Sheffield City Centre |
Student tower on Broad Lane in the north of Sheffield City Centre. Construction began in December 2023; topped out in April 2025. |
3 |
Arts Tower |
 |
78 m (256 ft) |
20 |
1965 |
University |
West End |
The tallest university building in the world at the time of its completion, the Arts Tower remains the tallest university building in the United Kingdom as of 2022. It is owned and operated by the University of Sheffield. Formerly the tallest building in Yorkshire from 1965 to 1973, the last time to date that Sheffield has held this record. The tower contains one of the last working paternoster lifts in the world. |
4 |
Royal Hallamshire Hospital |
 |
76 m (249 ft) |
17 |
1974 |
Hospital |
West End |
Major general hospital operated by the Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, located in close proximity to the University of Sheffield on Glossop Road. Constructed in the 1970s as the combined replacement for two smaller and overcrowded city hospitals, the Sheffield Royal Hospital and Sheffield Royal Infirmary. |
5 |
Sheffield Energy Recovery Facility |
 |
75 m (246 ft) |
— |
2006 |
Industrial |
East End |
Chimney of the new Energy from Waste incinerator managed by Veolia on behalf of Sheffield City Council, constructed on the site of the city's previous incinerator. The facility disposes of the city's waste, feeds electricity back into the National Grid and provides direct heating as part of a local district heating scheme. |
6= |
Velocity Tower |
 |
66 m (217 ft) |
22 |
2009 |
Residential |
Sheffield City Centre |
Originally planned to be constructed up to 36 storeys; the Great Recession interrupted construction at the 22nd floor, from which it never resumed. |
New Era Square |
 |
66 m (217 ft) |
21 |
2018 |
Residential |
Sheffield City Centre |
Centrepiece of Sheffield's new Chinatown development, located on the Inner Ring Road. |
8 |
The Gate |
 |
64 m (210 ft) |
21 |
2020 |
Residential |
Sheffield City Centre |
Construction of an office tower, then known as 1 Furnival Square, commenced in 2007; the Great Recession interrupted construction after only groundworks had been completed. The project was subsequently resurrected as a residential tower of identical design, which was completed in the late 2010s. |
9 |
Sheffield Town Hall |
 |
61 m (200 ft) |
6 |
1896 |
Government |
Sheffield City Centre |
Measured to the top of the Vulcan statue on its roof, the Renaissance Revival style clocktower of the Town Hall was the tallest building in Sheffield from 1896 until the construction of the Arts Tower in 1965. |
10 |
Hollis Croft |
 |
60 m (200 ft) |
18 |
2019 |
Residential |
Sheffield City Centre |
Student accommodation residential tower constructed on the site of abandoned light industry on the north-western side of the city centre. |
11 |
Cathedral Church of St Marie |
 |
59 m (195 ft)[1] |
— |
1850 |
Church |
Sheffield City Centre |
Former tallest building in Sheffield from 1850 until the construction of Sheffield Town Hall in 1896. |
12 |
St John's Church |
 |
58 m (190 ft)[2] |
— |
1879 |
Church |
West End |
|
13 |
Tapton Hill transmitting station |
 |
57 m (187 ft) |
— |
1967 |
Broadcasting |
West End |
Broadcasting tower located in Crosspool, high up in the western hills of Sheffield, owned by Arqiva. The tower relays radio and television signals from the Emley Moor tower over the hills and valleys of Sheffield; it also transmits mobile phone signals, including the city's 5G network. |
14 |
Vita Student Sheffield |
 |
56 m (184 ft) |
16 |
1972 |
Residential |
Sheffield City Centre |
Originally known as Telephone House, constructed by the General Post Office (subsequently passing to British Telecom) to house their telecommunications offices and phone network equipment for the Sheffield area. Vacated by BT in 2012, the building was subsequently acquired by student accommodation provider Vita Student in 2014, who rebranded and refurbished the building to contain rental apartments and student amenities. |
15= |
Queen Anne Court |
 |
55 m (180 ft) |
13 |
1958 |
Residential |
Gleadless Valley |
One of the Herdings Twin Towers (on the right in the photo to the left), and one of many examples of brutalist apartment blocks in Sheffield constructed in the 1950s and 1960s. The roof height is 38 m (125 ft), rising to a total of 55 m (180 ft) when including antennas and other telecommunications equipment fitted to the rooftop spire due to the building's prominent location on a hilltop overlooking the south of Sheffield. Refurbished and cladded in 1998. |
Rotherham Minster |
 |
55 m (180 ft) |
— |
1540 |
Church |
Rotherham |
Tallest building in the Sheffield City Region outside of Sheffield itself, and tallest building in Rotherham by extension. One of the tallest churches in Yorkshire. Extensively refurbished in 1873. |
17 |
Redvers House |
 |
54 m (177 ft) |
14 |
1971 |
Residential |
Sheffield City Centre |
Constructed as an office tower containing the offices of the social services department of Sheffield City Council and its predecessors, with a low-rise podium building at street level providing retail space. The building was refurbished and cladded in 2005. The council vacated Redvers House in 2014, and it was subsequently internally refurbished into a student accommodation building containing rental apartments. |
18 |
Steelworks House |
 |
53 m (174 ft) |
17 |
2022 |
Residential |
Sheffield City Centre |
Student accommodation encompassing the entire block between Rockingham Street, Portobello Street, Broad Lane and Newcastle Street which was formerly occupied by light industry and warehouses. The central tower fronting onto Rockingham Street rises to 53 m (174 ft), with mid-rise blocks surrounding it. |
19= |
Cosmos |
 |
52 m (171 ft) |
17 |
2021 |
Residential |
Sheffield City Centre |
Containing student accommodation, constructed at the head of Fitzwilliam Gate at Moorfoot in the city centre on a site previously occupied by a tiling store. |
Doncaster Minster |
 |
52 m (171 ft) |
— |
1858 |
Church |
Doncaster |
Tallest building in Doncaster, and second tallest building in the Sheffield City Region outside of Sheffield itself. Constructed between 1854 and 1858 on the site of a previous church which had been destroyed by fire. |
21= |
Knight House |
 |
51 m (167 ft) |
17 |
2019 |
Residential |
Sheffield City Centre |
Part of a large redevelopment of student accommodation alongside the Inner Ring Road at Netherthorpe Road, close to the University of Sheffield Arts Tower and surrounding campus. |
iQuarter |
 |
51 m (167 ft) |
16 |
2008 |
Residential |
Sheffield City Centre |
Part of the North Bank redevelopment at the side of the River Don on Blonk Street. Formerly known as the Hancock & Lant Tower, named after the furniture store which previously occupied this site. Part of the furniture store's distinctive façade was incorporated into the street-level structure of iQuarter. |
23 |
Pennine Five |
 |
50 m (160 ft) |
13 |
1975 |
Office |
Sheffield City Centre |
Tallest remaining office building in Sheffield, formerly known as the Pennine Centre. Constructed for HSBC bank for use as their regional headquarters, which they occupied until relocating to a new-build site across the city centre at Charter Square in 2019. The complex was subsequently purchased by RBH Properties and refurbished. |