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Moscow skyscraper now Europe's tallest

Moscow is reclaiming bragging rights for having Europe's tallest building after losing the distinction for a few months to London.
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The Mercury City Tower, primarily owned by billionaire Igor Kesaev, is one of the buildings forming the Moscow International Business Centre.

Moscow is reclaiming bragging rights for having Europe's tallest building after losing the distinction for a few months to London.

The mixed office and residential tower called Mercury City has topped out at 338 metres (1,109 feet), officials of its development company said Thursday.

The tower, sheathed in copper-coloured glass, actually became Europe's tallest in September, while still under construction, when it exceeded London's 310-metre (1,017-foot) Shard, according to the construction information company Emporis.

Mercury City's reign is likely to be almost as short. It's next-door to the under-construction Federation Tower, which is to reach 506 metres (1,660 feet) when it's completed next year. Both are in a sprawling development called Moscow City that also holds two other buildings that once were Europe's tallest.

The complex is an eye-catching demonstration of Moscow's transformation from drab shabbiness to swaggering prosperity, driven largely by oil and natural gas revenues.

Mercury City "distinctly shows the activity of Russian business ... it demonstrates that all of Russia is on a level with countries of the eurozone, continuing its planned development and moving forward," said Igor Kesayev, director of the Mercury.

There are nearly 60 buildings in North America, Asia and the Middle East that are taller, topped by Dubai's Burj Khalifa - about 2.5 times taller than Mercury City at 828 metres (2,717 feet).