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Industrialization started in the 1930s in Mongolia (then the Mongolian People's Republic), with large-scale building construction starting in the 1960s-1970s, where the core of Ulaanbaatar was built. By the end of the communist era, Mongolia's tallest building was a 16-floor apartment building in Darkhan, constructed in 1985.[1][2]
Since 1990, there was an increase in 9-12 floor buildings, while 16+ floor buildings started appearing since 2010. Mongolia's building code legislations define high-rise buildings as those 16+ floors in height.[3]
Mongolia's tallest pre-modern structure is Kherlen Bars Khot in Dornod Province.
Rank | Name | Location | Height(m) | Floors | Year | Sources |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Mak Tower | Ulaanbaatar | 203 metres (666 ft) | 40 | 2013-on hold | [7] |
2 | Encanto Trade Center | Ulaanbaatar | 150 metres (492 ft) | 35 | 2017 - 2026 | [8] |
3 | MCS Tower | Ulaanbaatar | 121 metres (397 ft) | 23 | 2013-on hold | |
4 | Altan Joloo Tower | Ulaanbaatar | 115 metres (377 ft) | 21 | 2018 - 2023 | |
5 | International Finance Centre Ulaanbaatar | Ulaanbaatar | 113 metres (371 ft) | 26 | 2016-under construction | |
6 | Eco construction tower | Ulaanbaatar | 82 metres (269 ft)+ | 25 | 2012-on hold | |
7 | Tengis cinema tower | Ulaanbaatar | 73 metres (240 ft)+ | 22 | 2012-... | |
8 | Master engineering LLC tower | Ulaanbaatar | 66 metres (217 ft)+ | 20 | 2014-... | |
9 | Encanto twin tower | Ulaanbaatar | 66 metres (217 ft)+ | 20 | 2014-... |