Landmark TLV Tower A, one of the new office towers in central Tel Aviv that opened for occupancy in 2024, has reached full capacity just months after tenants began moving in. Notably, about 40% of the tower’s tenants are cybersecurity companies.
Calcalist has learned that in 2025, the tower’s developers, Melisron and Afi Properties, signed agreements with several companies that together leased approximately 23,000 square meters, more than a fifth of the tower’s total office space.
Landmark, owned by Melisron and Afi Properties, is located north of Ha’arba’a Street near the Sarona complex. It consists of two towers: Tower A, a 41-story office and commercial building now fully leased, with about 100,000 square meters of office space; and Tower B, which will include about 45,000 square meters of office space topped by 116 residential apartments, whose marketing is set to begin soon. Construction of Tower B is scheduled to finish in 2026. The project also includes about 2,000 parking spaces and 6,000 square meters of retail space.
Among the new tenants are:
Cyera, which leased floors 8–10 and half of floor 11 (about 10,000 square meters).
Workday, which leased floor 12 and the other half of floor 11 (over 4,000 square meters).
Sentra, which leased floor 31 (about 2,600 square meters).
Pixellot, which leased half of floor 27 (about 1,300 square meters).
Viola, which leased floor 32 (about 2,600 square meters).
Israel Corporation, which leased floor 26.
Together, tenants signing agreements since the start of 2025 will pay about NIS 380 million in lease commitments.
These deals add to those signed in 2024, when occupancy began. Tenants already moving in include Walmart, which leased more than 4,000 square meters on floor 28 and half of floor 27; and JP Morgan, which will share the 41st floor with venture capital firm Pitango (about 1,300 square meters each).
The largest deal remains Meta’s lease, signed in April 2022, for 20 floors. However, the company later reduced its needs to 13 floors, subleasing the remainder. It eventually reached an agreement with the developers allowing it to give up seven floors. Meta now occupies floors 15–23, floor 7, and half of floors 3–6, which are expected to serve as dining and public areas. The vacated space has been leased to Cyera, Workday, and Tenable (floors 13–14).
Other tech tenants include Cato Networks, XM Cyber, Perion, and Optibus.