According to reports, the city of Balneário Camboriú in Brazil has approved plans for the world’s tallest residential tower, which will reach over 500 metres in height.
Led by Brazilian developer FG Empreendimentos, Triumph Tower will reportedly have 100 floors and reach 544 metres tall (1,785 feet), approximately 72 metres (236 feet) higher than the world’s current tallest residential tower, Central Park Tower in New York.
According to the NSC Total, the municipal government of Balneário Camboriú approved the project in mid-June but has not yet released construction details.
Its height will constitute the tower as a supertall skyscraper – massive skyscrapers that reach over 300 metres.
City of skyscrapers
The tower is set to be located on a 150-thousand-square-metre site in the Barra Sul neighbourhood of Balneário Camboriú, which is a thin peninsula along the city’s southern coastline.
The Brazilian city is known for its skyscrapers. It contains a number of the tallest skyscrapers in South America, several of which were developed by FG Empreendimentos, including Epic Tower and One Tower.
Completed in 2024, the Yachthouse Residence Club by Pininfarina, which is also located in Barra Sul, features Latin America’s third tallest skyscrapers, after Torres Obispado in Mexico and Gran Torre Santiago in Chile.
Located along the southern coast of Brazil, Balneário Camboriú contains the country’s “highest residential property prices per square meter” according to the Rio Times.
Its development has accelerated due to city-sponsored grants in “exchange for compensation” according to a local news outlet.
National tourism to the city as also been increasing, with a 79 per cent increase in those arriving by bus documented from 2022 to 2023.
“The future is great and we are ready to build it,” president of FG Empreendimento Jean Graciola told NSC Total.
According to the outlet, renderings circulating the internet of the skyscraper “do not correspond” to the project and images and more details are forthcoming.
The photography is courtesy Prefeitura Balneário Camboriú via Flickr