^^ cool pics, but i think they show that the 380' height figure listed in the title of this thread is almost certainly wrong. it's a floor or two away from being topped out and it looks to be about the same height as several surrounding buildings known to be in the 200'- 300' range.
also, 27 story residential towers (where ~10' floor-to-floors are the norm) are rarely ever 380' tall without some sort of ornamental crown/spire (which this building does not have).
using google earth, i measured the width of the plot that the building is being built on as ~185' wide. using that figure, i scaled the image below to the same 185' width and got a height figure of ~277'. now, there is
some perspective distortion in the image below, but not a ton, and certainly nowhere remotely close to enough to make up for a roughly 100' difference.
my guess is that the 380' figure came from an elevation drawing that had the top of the building called out at +380' and grade listed at +100'. this kind of mistake unfortunately happens a lot because some architects like to list grade as +100' when it really should be more helpfully listed as 0'.