There is no specified height, it all depends on the design and size of the building and the zoning requirements in the city where it is built. Some LDS churches don't have any spires because they are prohibited by local laws. Check out the "Related Links" below to see examples of various LDS church meetinghouses and their different spires.
Most Church meetinghouses owned by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (the "Mormon" or "LDS" church) have a spire or steeple. Not only do spires or steeples help others recognize the building as a religious building, they also hold symbolism. Steeples and spires point to heaven and represent that the Church is pointing people to heaven, or directing their attention to heaven. On LDS Temples, sometimes there is more than one spire, and sometimes there are none at all. Most temples have a gold statue of the angel Moroni on one of the spires, who is announcing the restoration of the Gospel of Jesus Christ through his trumpet. Photos of various LDS church and temple spires can be seen at the "Related Links" below.
Places of worship can be called by various names depending on the religion, such as church (Christianity), synagogue (Judaism), mosque (Islam), temple (Hinduism), gurdwara (Sikhism), shrine (Buddhism), and pagoda (Buddhism).
Greg Spires's birth name is Gregory Tyrone Spires.
Spires of Spirit was created in 1997.
Jamie Spires was born in 1979.
Cathedral Spires was created in 1996.
The Spires - Houston - was created in 1983.
Greg Spires is 6' 1".
Spires of Spirit has 301 pages.
Roman Catholic and Eastern rites such as the Byzantine Catholic Church and the Maronite rite.
City of a Hundred Spires was created in 2005.