, the third tallest building in Stamford, at 22 stories.
High rises Over the past 15 years, Downtown Stamford has experienced a boom in high-rise building construction. •
Park Tower Stamford -- Finished in 2009, the 34-story condominium tower is currently the tallest building in Stamford at tall. The building currently features 170 condominium units and a 6-story parking podium. It was designed by
Costas Kondylis, who was well known for his high-rise residential design. •
Atlantic Station -- Completed in 2017 by
RXR Realty, the 26-story luxury apartment tower features 325 residential units, over of retail, and 333 parking spaces. The tower is currently the second tallest building in Stamford, at tall. A second residential tower is currently under construction adjacent to the current tower. •
One Landmark Square -- Completed in 1973 at a cost of $35 million, the "Landmark" in its name is no exaggeration. When it was built, the , 22-story office building towered over a much lower skyline, and it remains the third-tallest building in the city, the tallest office high-rise, as well as one of the most distinctive buildings in Downtown Stamford. Five smaller buildings designed by
Moshe Safdie were later built around the tower, comprising the Landmark Square office complex.
Victor Bisharat's buildings Many of the most distinctive buildings in Downtown Stamford were designed by the late Victor Bisharat, a Jordanian who received his education at the American University in Beirut, Lebanon and at the University of California at Berkeley. His Stamford buildings were designed for F.D. Rich Co. (For information on Bisharat's buildings on High Ridge Road, see
Arts and culture in Stamford, Connecticut.) • '''Saint John's Towers''' -- The three cylindrical, 17-story towers were finished in 1971. One was demolished in 2019 to make way for a new residential development. •
One Landmark Square -- 22-story building completed in 1973 was the tallest building between
New York and
Boston from 1973 to 2008. •
One Stamford Forum -- Looking like an upside-down
ziggurat above its three-story parking garage, the building has an enclosed arboretum rising from the ninth floor to the penthouse roof, which is covered by 76
acrylic glass domes. The 13-floor structure is 196 feet high and was completed in 1973 as the world headquarters for
GTE Corporation. In the 1990s, the Tresser Boulevard entrance to the building was changed (in a design by Hellmuth, Obata & Kassabaum) from a "formidably stark concrete wall of a parking garage" to "a more inviting entrance ... clad in blue-gray ceramic tiles, with a lobby, canopy, colonnade and small garden". Currently, the building is the headquarters of
Purdue Pharma and
Aircastle Limited. •
Stamford Marriott Hotel & Spa -- The 16 floor, 305-room hotel was completed in 1976 and was the largest hotel in Connecticut at the time. The hotel was expanded to 505 rooms in 1986.
Other buildings •
One Atlantic Street -- Art Deco interiors, with murals in the ground-floor bank, and Art Deco exterior details as well. The red-brick/white marble building at the corner of Broad and Atlantic Streets was finished in 1931 and for a long time was the tallest in Stamford. •
University of Connecticut Campus -- The building with the vast, green glass facade at the corner of Washington and Broad Streets was designed by
Perkins Eastman. •
The "Fish Church", or the First Presbyterian Church of Stamford, was designed by
Wallace K. Harrison, the chief architect of the
United Nations buildings in New York City, and opened in 1958. The fish shape is obvious to anyone who drives by, but the floor plan is also fish-shaped. The stained glass windows in the sanctuary contain more than 20,000 pieces of faceted glass. They depict the story of the Crucifixion and the Resurrection. The -high cross is faced with wood from
Canterbury Cathedral. "Brilliant blues, reds and yellows make up the walls -- and seem to fill the air. 'It really is like being inside a jewel,' says Reverend David R. Van Dyke, a co-pastor. 'When I bring people who haven't been here before, there's an audible gasp.'" (
Life magazine, April 14, 2005) In March 1958, the $1.5 million church was dedicated with capacity crowds filling it for three services. •
Gurley Building (1924), also known as Valeur Building, an eight-story tall, narrow building at northwest corner of Main Street and Atlantic Street intersection (see ). "Sullivanesque"; designed by
Edward B. Stratton and built by
Clinton Cruikshank. •
133 Atlantic Street (c.1861, remodelled in 1935) •
Fidelity Title and Trust Company, 129 Atlantic Street. Built by Clinton Cruikshank. •
119 Atlantic Street (1926), four-story, masonry • '''Weed's Hall''' (1886), 109 Atlantic Street. Narrow five-story building, the only Stamford building with a
cast iron facade. •
Ferguson Library (1910), two-story
Georgian Revival brick building. Designed by
Egerton Swartwout. It had an addition built in 1931, to the rear, which was replaced and further enlarged in 1981. •
15 Bedford Street (1932), Art Deco two-story commercial building. (see ). •
Library Apartments, 65 Bedford Street (1930), three-story; second story "displays window spandrels with triglyph fluting". (see ) ==Entertainment==